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Multitasking
may be Achilles heel for hepatitis C
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Despite its tiny
genome, the hepatitis C virus packs a mean punch. The virus is a
microcosm of efficiency, and each of its amino acids plays
multiple roles in its survival and ability to sidestep attack.
But new research from Rockefeller University suggests that this
fancy footwork and multitasking could be the key to bringing down
the virus. The work, which focuses on a once-ignored protein,
provides insights on how drug therapy for sufferers of the
disease might be improved.
The protein, NS2, which is one
of the 10 proteins that make up the hepatitis C virus, gained
momentum as a plausible drug target in 2006, when Charles M.
Rice, head of the Laboratory of Virology and Infectious Disease,
and his team solved the structure of its protease domain. The
domain spans the second half of NS2 and acts like a molecular
scissor, cleaving itself from its neighbor, NS3. (At first, the
10 proteins that make up the virus are strung together in a
continuous chain, which is later cleaved by various enzymes.) By
that time, it’s also known to aid in the production of
infectious virus particles.
Now Rice and his team have
dissected the nooks and crannies of this protease domain down to
the amino acids that make them up, and have mapped which amino
acids are responsible for churning out infectious particles, and
distinguished them from those involved in the cleaving process.
During the researchers’ meticulous poking and prodding,
deleting and replacing, one amino acid in particular caught their
attention: the protein’s very last one.
“When
we changed or deleted the terminal leucine — leucine 217 —
infectious virus production shut down,” says graduate
student Thomas Dentzer, who led the research. “But what
really intrigued us was leucine 217’s position.”
After
the protease makes its cut, leucine 217 remains in a protein fold
that makes up the protease’s active site. Although the
active site isn’t involved in making infectious virus
particles, Dentzer and Rice — who is also Maurice R. and
Corinne P. Greenberg Professor in Virology and scientific
director of the Center for the Study of Hepatitis C at
Rockefeller — showed that it is essential for the
protease’s cleaving activity. With both functions mapping
to this tiny region of NS2, the researchers suggest that drugs
targeting this area might be able to pack a double punch against
the virus.
Since the hepatitis C virus has an uncanny
ability to mutate and evade detection just when the body’s
immune forces are closing in, punching several phases of the
virus’s life cycle simultaneously may be a better approach
than dealing one phase a forceful blow. “A double punch may
give the immune system time to attack the virus before it
mutates,” says Dentzer. “So this is a good
therapeutic target to explore.”
The fact that this
amino acid is exposed on the virus’s surface makes the
finding all the more exciting and suggests that it is involved in
protein-protein interactions during the life cycle of the virus.
“We not only have a target that can weaken the virus, but a
target that is also accessible,” says Rice. “It is a
lead that can really help us move forward.”
Source: Rockefeller
University
Permalink:
http://www.sflorg.com/comm_center/unv_medical/p950_230.html
Time Stamp:
11/21/2009 at 1:09:18 AM UTC
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