I am looking for a "good virus" or good Jinn. No luck yet. If you find one,
lemme know. Meantime enjoy this new discovery. Haruna.
In a breakthrough that could eventually help tame one of the deadliest
viruses known to man, researchers have laid bare the key to _Ebola's power_
(http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=new-clues-to-ebolas-feroc) : a lone protein that
resides on its surface. The discovery paves the way for new treatments that
target and destroy the designated culprit, rendering impotent a virus that,
though rare, can kill up to 90 percent of the people it infects.
The so-called Ebola virus glycoprotein, or "spike protein," was first
discovered a decade ago and has been a target for scientists attempting to _design
vaccines_ (http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=an-uncertain-defense) and
therapies to prevent it from infecting cells. But, until now, researchers did not
understand the protein's structure—and thus, the best way to attack it.
"It's the only thing that the virus puts on its surface that is absolutely
critical for attaching to a host and driving into that host for infection,"
says Erica Ollmann Saphire, an immunologist at The Scripps Research Institute
in La Jolla, Calif., and a co-author of the study appearing today in _Nature_
(http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v454/n7201/full/nature07082.html) .
Researchers discovered that the compound is wrapped in benign carbohydrates
that mask the virus's deadliness, allowing it to elude immune system scouts.
(The human immunodeficiency virus, HIV, that causes AIDS also has this
trait.) The good news: the discovery could pave the way for drugs designed to see
through that protective coating—and trigger the immune system to attack.
"The structure of the glycoprotein shows us the very few sites on its
surface that are not cloaked by carbohydrate," Ollmann Saphire explains. "These
[sites] are the chink in the armor, or the Achilles' heel, that we can target
antibodies against."
"We now have a much better handle on how in the world this virus gets into
cells," Ollmann Saphire says. "We also have new maps we can use to develop
strategies to fight against it."
_Ebola_ (http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=shaking-the-ebola-tree) is an
incurable disease that was first discovered in 1976 in western Sudan and the
eastern part of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (then known as Zaire). It
_seems to have arisen_
(http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=experts-where-did-viruses-come-fr) in the _rain forests of Africa_
(http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=ebola-epidemic-wiping-out) and parts of the western Pacific. A
person acquires the virus through contact with the bodily fluids of someone
already infected. It can take from two days to three weeks for symptoms of Ebola
to appear. The disease presents itself with a fever, muscle aches and a cough
before progressing to severe vomiting, diarrhea and rashes, along with
kidney and liver problems. Death generally occurs as the result of either one or a
combination of:dehydration, massive bleeding due to leaky blood vessels,
kidney and liver failure. The World Health Organization has documented 1,850
cases of Ebola (mostly in sub-Saharan Africa) since its discovery; only 600 (32
percent) of the victims survived.
Researchers made their latest finding by studying the bone marrow of a lucky
survivor of a 1995 Ebola outbreak in Kikwit, a city in the southwestern part
of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. They found the glycoprotein
attached to an antibody (a protein unleashed by the immune system to fight viruses)
in the marrow, the soft core of bones where red blood cells are manufactured.
According to Ollmann Saphire, there is a receptor located deep in the
bowl-shaped structure of Ebola's glycoprotein that latches onto the surface of host
cells and tricks a protein there into granting the virus entry. Once inside
the cells, the fast-acting Ebola co-opts their machinery to make millions of
copies of itself and floods the person's bloodstream.
Judith White, a microbiologist at the University of Virginia, says that
arming researchers with the protein structure that Ollmann Saphire's group has
described will allow them to "nip [the virus] in the bud," by beating down
Ebola before it enters its host. (Most antivirals target viruses such as HIV
after they're already inside a host cell.)
"For those of us in the trenches trying to study the virus entry, and the
immune reactions to the virus, and how to prevent virus entry, and how to come
up with better immune therapies," she says, "this gives us all new eyes to
[solving] those problems."
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