Health & Medicine - Posted by Jo Kelly-Leeds on Thursday, October 18, 2012 11:34 - 0 Comments    
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

Design anti-viral drugs to shut the ‘suitcase’

Researchers at the University of Leeds have identified a crucial "self-packing" stage in the life cycle of simple viruses like polio and the common cold that could open a new front in the war on viral disease. (Credit: Veer)

U. LEEDS (UK) — Researchers say they may have discovered how a RNA virus particle packs itself into its own “suitcase”, possibly opening a chink in the armor of many viruses.


“If we can target this process, it could lead to a completely new class of anti-virals that would be less likely to create resistant viruses than existing drugs, which tend to target individual proteins,” says Peter Stockley, lead researcher and a professor at the University of Leeds.

Straight from the Source

Read the original study

DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1204357109

A number of important viruses like the common cold and polio have RNA (ribonucleic acid) instead of DNA as their genetic material. The observations reveal that the viruses’ RNA initially has a much greater volume than the virus particles created after they are packed inside their protein shell.

“We realized that the RNA genome must have to be intricately folded to fit into the final container, just like when you pack to go on holiday and need to fold your clothes to fit into the space in your suitcase,” says Roman Tuma from the University of Leeds’ Faculty of Biological Sciences, a co-author of the study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

When the team added proteins to the viral RNA they saw an immediate collapse in its volume.

“It seems that viral RNAs have evolved a self-folding mechanism that makes closing the ‘viral suitcase’ very efficient. It’s as though ‘the suitcase and the clothes’ work together to close the lid and protect the content,” Tuma says.

“The viral RNAs, and only the viral RNAs, can do this trick of folding up to fit as soon as they see the ‘suitcase’ coming. That’s the important thing. If we can interfere in that process we’ve got a completely novel drug target in the lifecycle of viruses,” according to Stockley.

“At the moment there are relatively few antiviral drugs and they tend to target enzymes that the virus encodes in its genome. The problem is that the drugs target one enzyme initially and, within the year, scientists are identifying strains that have become resistant. Individual proteins are extremely susceptible to this mutation.

“A fundamental process like the one we’re looking at opens the possibility of targeting the collective behavior of essential molecules, which could be much less susceptible to developing resistance,” explains Stockley.

The same phenomenon is seen in both bacterial and plant viruses.

“While we have not proved it yet, I would put money on animal viruses showing the same mechanism too,” adds Stockley.

The team used sophisticated instrumentation custom built at Leeds that allowed them to make the first ever single-molecule measurements of viral assembly. This allowed researchers to observe individual viral particles one at a time.

“The specific collapse, which can only be seen in such assays, was totally unexpected and overturns the current thinking about assembly,” says Stockley.

“We’re now perfectly positioned to pursue questions about how this mechanism works in other viruses and we’re already thinking about ways to start designing new antiviral drugs that would target this newly recognized feature of viral lifecycles,” says Stockley.

Wellcome Trust funded the work.

Source: University of Leeds

Please wait

Leave a Comment

Comment

Research news from leading universities

Daily E-News


Follow Futurity

RSS feedsFacebookTwitter

Week's Most Discussed

  • Loading...

Media Partners

Alltop logo EarthSky logo Pulse logo Flipboard logo The Conversation logo

Browse By School