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  • Change the shape, defeat the virus! : Antiviral study | Hand, foot, and mouth disease

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Plant ABC transporters

Change the shape, defeat the virus! : Antiviral study | Hand, foot, and mouth disease
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Change the shape, defeat the virus! : Antiviral study | Hand, foot, and mouth disease

bioxone September 23, 2020September 23, 2020

-Shristi Sharma, Team bioXone

Researchers from Duke University have found a drug against enterovirus 71, a virus that causes hand, foot, and mouth disease in infants and young children. While many patients recover in a week after sustaining fever and rashes, some even face paralysis and brain edema in severe cases.

The drug compound in interest is a small molecule that shows an affinity towards the virus’s RNA (genetic material). Hereby, binding to it, changes its shape in 3D, giving access to Human repressor proteins that block the ‘reading out’ of the virus’s replication instructions; rendering it harmless for the human host.

There is no FDA approved drug for the disease in the market. Most researchers have mainly targetted protein binding elements, and completely overlooked the potential of small molecules that target RNA.

Hence, the future of drugs may rest upon antiviral treatments, such as binding fragments of compounds that could render the viruses incapable of causing diseases.

Source: Jesse Davila-Calderon, Neeraj N. Patwardhan, Liang-Yuan Chiu, Andrew Sugarman, Zhengguo Cai, Srinivasa R. Penutmutchu, Mei-Ling Li, Gary Brewer, Amanda E. Hargrove, Blanton S. Tolbert. IRES-targeting small molecule inhibits enterovirus 71 replication via allosteric stabilization of a ternary complex. Nature Communications, 2020; 11 (1) DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-18594-3

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Tagged 3d and mouth disease antivirals diseases drug enterovirus 71 foot hand RNA shape Small molecules virus

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Plant ABC transporters

bioxone September 23, 2020

–Dr. Ayan Raichaudhuri & Anuska Sen, Team BioXone The ATP-binding cassette (ABC) protein superfamily present in most eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms, form one of the largest protein families known, the majority of whose members are membrane proteins (ABC “transporters”). These transporters use ATP to pump molecules across a membrane and so are known to be […]

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Disease resistance in rice accomplished using bacterial seed endophyte!

bioxone January 14, 2021January 14, 2021

Ayooshi Mitra, Amity University Kolkata The production of cereal crops is deeply threatened, throughout the world by seed-borne bacterial diseases. Locally occurring disease resistance remains unclear in different crops. In this study conducted by Matsumoto et. al, it has been observed that under the same pathogen pressure, rice plants of the same cultivar can be distinguished […]

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Can marine phytoplankton grow under extremely low light condition?

bioxone September 27, 2020September 27, 2020

–Shrayana Ghosh, Amity University Kolkata. The earlier belief that phytoplankton in the artic marines are unable to grow until the snow and ice cover melts due to insufficient transmission of sunlight is now being challenged by a possible theory that suggests that marine algae may be capable of growing under extremely low irradiance also highlighting […]

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15000-year-old Microbes discovered in Tibetan glacier ice

bioxone July 30, 2021July 29, 2021

Srabani Roy Chowdhury (MAKAUT, WB) Glacier ice provides microbiological information that helps in predicting future climate changes and study paleo-climatic history. According to microbiologists, the bacteria and their phages (or bacteria infecting viruses) found in the Tibetan glacier ice are likely to be originated from soil or plants. These identified microbes are said to represent […]

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