Complete structure of HIV’s outer shell revealed
January 20th, 2011 - 2:22 pm ICT by ANILondon, Jan 20 (ANI): Scientists have determined the structure of the protein package that delivers the genetic material of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) to human cells.
The study was carried out by researchers at The Scripps Research Institute and the University of Virginia.
The work is the culmination of studies carried out over the last decade looking at different portions of the cone-shaped container, or the capsid. The final piece of the puzzle details the structure of the two ends of the cone.
A detailed description of the complete HIV capsid will provide a roadmap for developing drugs that can disrupt its formation and thus prevent infection by HIV.
HIV binds to receptors on human cells and then delivers the capsid inside them. Once inside a cell, the capsid comes apart, releasing its precious cargo-the virus’s genetic material.
HIV then sabotages the cell machinery to make many copies of its genes and proteins. As new viruses are made, the genetic material is packaged into spherical immature capsids that HIV uses to escape from the infected cell. But before these newly released viruses can infect other cells, the immature capsid undergoes a dramatic rearrangement to form the mature, cone-shaped shell.
If formation of the mature capsid is disrupted, the virus is no longer infectious. Thus, new drugs targeting capsid formation could provide valuable additions to the arsenal of existing drugs against HIV.
“This paper is a real milestone for research from our group,” said the study’s senior author Mark Yeager, a Scripps Research professor and staff cardiologist and chair of the Molecular Physiology and Biological Physics Department at The University of Virginia School of Medicine.
The finding has been published in Nature. (ANI)
- New insight into multitalented protein sheds light on HIV mysteries - Oct 15, 2010
- Single drug may fight HIV, multiple viral ailments - Aug 11, 2011
- Study offers potential new targets for novel anti-HIV drugs - Mar 26, 2011
- Virus that piggybacks on AIDS virus to beat disease developed - Mar 28, 2011
- Insight into structure of HIV protein may help design drugs - Jun 10, 2010
- Cancer drug successfully purges hidden HIV virus - Mar 09, 2012
- Protein knocks out HIV by starving it of raw materials - Feb 13, 2012
- Israeli scientists find HIV cure: Journal - Sep 05, 2010
- How HIV reactivates after entering a dormant state - Feb 27, 2011
- Study finds enzyme that aids in the release of HIV particles - Mar 12, 2011
- Discovery suggests new way to prevent HIV from infecting human cells - Dec 23, 2010
- How 'silent HIV virus' attacks immune system - Sep 21, 2010
- New finding could lead to novel HIV treatments - Aug 25, 2010
- Scientist unravels how HIV hijacks body defences - Jan 01, 2012
- New genetic strategy makes T-cells resistant to HIV infection - Jan 27, 2011
Tags: biological physics, capsid, capsids, genes and proteins, human cells, human immunodeficiency virus, immunodeficiency virus hiv, last decade, london jan, mark yeager, molecular physiology, new drugs, new viruses, outer shell, physics department, piece of the puzzle, precious cargo, scripps research institute, staff cardiologist, structure of hiv