Portion of virus that causes pink eye isolated
April 16th, 2010 - 12:56 pm ICT by ANIWashington, April 16 (ANI): Researchers have been able to determine the part of viral keratoconjunctivitis which causes pink eye, making it possible to come up with a remedy for the problem in future.
Experts have been unsuccessful in finding out an effective treatment for the adenovirus infection that can force some individuals into isolation for up to two weeks.
The virus is resilient and can remain infectious for up to 30 days on a plastic surface. Infection with the adenovirus causes inflammation, which results in red, irritated eyes, blurry vision and discharge.
Now, however, researchers in the Howe Laboratory, Department of Ophthalmology of the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary and Harvard Medical School, and in the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, have new knowledge on the virus that causes pink eye.
James Chodosh, Eye and Ear cornea surgeon and senior author of the paper, said: “We were interested in understanding what part of the human adenovirus causes inflammation. We found that it is the protein coating around the virus that is most inflammatory in the eye.
“This is important because without inflammation, there would be no discharge from the eye, and therefore no transmission. Now that we know what causes the inflammation, we hope to find a way to block it.”
The research team used a unique mouse model of adenovirus keratitis to study the role of viral components in the cornea and determine which viral part(s) induce an innate immune response.
The authors found that neither viral DNA nor viral gene expression was necessary for inflammation. In contrast, viral capsid, the protein coat of the virus, induced inflammation similar to intact virus.
Mice lacking the toll-like receptor 9 molecule, which acts as a pathogen DNA-sensing molecule within the cell, developed clinical inflammation upon adenovirus infection similar to wild type mice.
Virus associated inflammation in the mouse cornea could be blocked by a treatment with a peptide containing components of the adenoviral capsid. Adenovirus infection of the cornea induces inflammation principally through contact between the viral capsid and the host cell.
Chodosh concluded: “Our study provides new insights into how the innate immune system in the eye responds to a clinically important viral pathogen. With the new understanding, we are a step closer to developing a treatment for this common - and highly contagious - eye condition.” (ANI)
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