PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Mutation breaks HIV's resistance to drugs

Doctors can improve treatment programs using this knowledge

2012-09-13
(Press-News.org) The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) can contain dozens of different mutations, called polymorphisms. In a recent study an international team of researchers, including MU scientists, found that one of those mutations, called 172K, made certain forms of the virus more susceptible to treatment. Soon, doctors will be able to use this knowledge to improve the drug regiment they prescribe to HIV-infected individuals.

"The 172K polymorphism makes certain forms of HIV less resistant to drugs," said Stefan Sarafianos, corresponding author of the study and researcher at MU's Bond Life Sciences Center. "172K doesn't affect the virus' normal activities. In some varieties of HIV that have developed resistance to drugs, when the 172K mutation is present, resistance to two classes of anti-HIV drugs is suppressed. We estimate up to 3 percent of HIV strains carry the 172K polymorphism."

HIV is a retrovirus, meaning it uses an enzyme called reverse transcriptase to create copies of its own genetic code. These copies are inserted into the victim's own genes where the virus highjacks the host's cellular machinery in order to reproduce itself. Two classes of drugs, nucleoside (NRTIs) and non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs), can stop this process in its tracks.

However, some HIV strains have developed resistance to NRTIs and NNRTIs. The 172K polymorphism suppresses this resistance and allows both classes of drugs to fight HIV more efficiently. The mutation is believed to be the first of its kind that blocks resistance to two families of drugs.

"Clinical doctors use a database of HIV mutations and the drugs they are susceptible to when they prescribe treatments to an HIV-infected patient," Sarafianos said. "Our finding will be integrated into this database. Once that happens, when doctors learn that their patients have HIV strains that carry the 172K polymorphism, they will know that the infections can be fought better with NRTIs and NNRTIs."

One of Sarafianos' colleagues at the AIDS Clinical Center in Japan found the 172K polymorphism by accident. The mutation was first discovered in a patient, and the researchers were able to recreate it in the laboratory.

###The study "HIV-1 Reverse Transcriptase Polymorphism 172K Suppresses the Effect of Clinically Relevant Drug Resistance Mutations to Both Nucleoside and Nonnucleoside RT Inhibitors," was published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry. The lead author was Atsuko Hachiya of the AIDS Clinical Center at Japan's National Center for Global Health and Medicine in Tokyo. Stefan Sarafianos is associate professor of molecular microbiology & immunology in the MU School of Medicine and associate professor of biochemistry in the College of Arts and Science. Sarafianos also is associated with the Bond Life Science Center.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

UMD study shows exercise may protect against future emotional stress

2012-09-13
Moderate exercise may help people cope with anxiety and stress for an extended period of time post-workout, according to a study by kinesiology researchers in the University of Maryland School of Public Health published in the journal Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise. "While it is well-known that exercise improves mood, among other benefits, not as much is known about the potency of exercise's impact on emotional state and whether these positive effects endure when we're faced with everyday stressors once we leave the gym," explains J. Carson Smith, assistant ...

Snakes minus birds equals more spiders for Guam

Snakes minus birds equals more spiders for Guam
2012-09-13
HOUSTON -- (Sept. 13, 2012) -- In one of the first studies to examine how the loss of forest birds is effecting Guam's island ecosystem, biologists from Rice University, the University of Washington and the University of Guam found that the Pacific island's jungles have as many as 40 times more spiders than are found on nearby islands like Saipan. "You can't walk through the jungles on Guam without a stick in your hand to knock down the spiderwebs," said Haldre Rogers, a Huxley Fellow in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Rice and the lead author of a new study this ...

Under-twisted DNA origami delivers cancer drugs to tumors

2012-09-13
Scientists at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden describe in a new study how so-called DNA origami can enhance the effect of certain cytostatics used in the treatment of cancer. With the aid of modern nanotechnology, scientists can target drugs direct to the tumour while leaving surrounding healthy tissue untouched. The drug doxorubicin has long been used as a cytostatic (toxin) for cancer treatment but can cause serious adverse reactions such as myocardial disease and severe nausea. Because of this, scientists have been trying to find a means of delivering the drug to the ...

Daily disinfection of isolation rooms reduces contamination of healthcare workers' hands

2012-09-13
CHICAGO (September 13, 2012) – New research demonstrates that daily cleaning of high-touch surfaces in isolation rooms of patients with Clostridium difficile (C. difficile) or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) significantly reduces the rate of the pathogens on the hands of healthcare personnel. The findings underscore the importance of environmental cleaning for reducing the spread of difficult to treat infections. The study is published in the October issue of Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, the journal of the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology ...

Cloned receptor paves way for new breast and prostate cancer treatment

2012-09-13
Researchers at Uppsala University have cloned a T-cell receptor that binds to an antigen associated with prostate cancer and breast cancer. T cells that have been genetically equipped with this T-cell receptor have the ability to specifically kill prostate and breast cancer cells. The study is being published this week in PNAS. Genetically modified T cells (white blood corpuscles) have recently been shown to be extremely effective in treating certain forms of advanced cancer. T cells from the patient's own blood cells are isolated and equipped by genetic means with a ...

Boiling water without bubbles

2012-09-13
EVANSTON, Ill. --- Every cook knows that boiling water bubbles, right? New research from Northwestern University turns that notion on its head. "We manipulated what has been known for a long, long time by using the right kind of texture and chemistry to prevent bubbling during boiling," said Neelesh A. Patankar, professor of mechanical engineering at Northwestern's McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science and co-author of the study. This discovery could help reduce damage to surfaces, prevent bubbling explosions and may someday be used to enhance heat transfer ...

Canada Pharmacy Directory Offers Free Feature Listing for a Limited Time

2012-09-13
Canada Pharmacy Directory is announcing for a limited time a free 6-month feature listing in their online search directory. The feature listings are available for an annual rate of $2499 per year. With a purchase of a 1 year plan, the feature listing is extended at no charge to 18 months. "Our feature listing is the most sought after plan because it provides front page exposure that generates the most visibility for our online pharmacy operators, " says Andy Chandler of CanadaPharmacyDirectory.com. "With any search directory, the higher position you are ...

Sinusitis linked to microbial diversity

Sinusitis linked to microbial diversity
2012-09-13
A common bacteria ever-present on the human skin and previously considered harmless, may, in fact, be the culprit behind chronic sinusitis, a painful, recurring swelling of the sinuses that strikes more than one in ten Americans each year, according to a study by scientists at the University of California, San Francisco. The team reports this week in the journal Science Translational Medicine that sinusitis may be linked to the loss of normal microbial diversity within the sinuses following an infection and the subsequent colonization of the sinuses by the culprit bacterium, ...

Novel non-antibiotic agents against MRSA and common strep infections

2012-09-13
Menachem Shoham, PhD, associate professor of biochemistry at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, has discovered novel antivirulence drugs that, without killing the bacteria, render Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA) and Streptococcus pyogenes, commonly referred to as strep, harmless by preventing the production of toxins that cause disease. The promising discovery was presented this week at the Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy in San Francisco. MRSA infections are a growing public health concern, causing ...

Official US poverty rate remains high, middle class incomes decline

2012-09-13
Data released by the U.S. Census Bureau today show that, after increasing since 2008, the poverty rate for the U.S. remained stable at 15 percent between 2010 and 2011. Poverty is greatest among children (21.9 percent), compared with seniors (8.7 percent) and working-age adults (13.7 percent). While poverty remained unchanged, the median annual household income declined for the second year in a row, to $50,054, down 1.5 percent from 2010. In Washington state, the estimated poverty rate increased from 11.5 percent (774,000 residents) to 12.5 percent (854,000 residents) ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

What your sweat can reveal about your health

Groundbreaking research compares prompt styles and LLMs for structured data generation - Unveiling key trade-offs for real-world AI applications

Beat the bugs, enjoy the beats

Genome advancement puts better Wagyu marbling on the menu

Developing a new electric vehicle sound

Elephant seals recognize their rivals from years prior

Fossils reveal anacondas have been giants for over 12 million years

Sylvester researchers lead major treatment overhauls for acute myeloid leukemia

New global guidelines streamline environmental microbiome research

Small changes make some AI systems more brain-like than others

Asia PGI and partners unveil preview of PathGen: New AI-powered outbreak intelligence tool

Groundbreaking technique unlocks secrets of bacterial shape-shifting

Studies reevaluate reverse weathering process, shifts understanding of global climate

What time is it on Mars? NIST physicists have the answer

Findings suggest red planet was warmer, wetter millions of years ago

Renewable lignin waste transformed into powerful catalyst for clean hydrogen production

UTEP researcher finds potential new treatment for aggressive ovarian cancer

Everyday repellent, global pollutant

Iron fortified hemp biochar helps keep “forever chemicals” out of radishes and the food chain

Corticosteroid use does not appear to increase infectious complications in non-COVID-19 pneumonia

All life copies DNA unambiguously into proteins. Archaea may be the exception.

A new possibility for life: Study suggests ancient skies rained down ingredients

Coral reefs have stabilized Earth’s carbon cycle for the past 250 million years

Francisco José Sánchez-Sesma selected as 2026 Joyner Lecturer

In recognition of World AIDS Day 2025, Gregory Folkers and Anthony Fauci reflect on progress made in antiretroviral treatments and prevention of HIV/AIDS, highlighting promising therapeutic developmen

Treatment and prevention of HIV/AIDS: Unfinished business

Drug that costs as little as 50 cents per day could save hospitals thousands, McMaster study finds

Health risks of air pollution from stubble burning poorly understood in various parts of Punjab, India

How fast you can walk before hip surgery may determine how well you recover

Roadmap for reducing, reusing, and recycling in space

[Press-News.org] Mutation breaks HIV's resistance to drugs
Doctors can improve treatment programs using this knowledge