New way to combat flu virus identified



New way to combat flu virus identified
Researchers, including Indian-origin scientists, have discovered a new way to combat flu by identifying chemical agents that block the virus's ability to replicate itself in cell culture.
WASHINGTON: Researchers, including Indian-origin scientists, have discovered a new way to combat flu by identifying chemical agents that block the virus's ability to replicate itself in cell culture.

These novel compounds show promise for a new class of antiviral medicines to fight much-feared pandemic influenzas such as the looming "bird flu" threats caused by the H5N1 influenza A virus and the new H7N9 virus responsible for a 2013 outbreak in China.

Researchers said that some flu strains have developed resistance to Tamiflu, the sole orally available anti-flu drug.

Eddy Arnold from the Rutgers University and his collaborators have been working to create drugs beyond Tamiflu, especially ones that target different parts of the virus, using an approach that helped in the development of powerful anti-AIDS drugs.

By synthesizing chemical compounds that bind to metal ions in a viral enzyme, the researchers could halt that enzyme's ability to activate a key step in the virus's replication process.

Arnold said his team's compounds "really gum up" the targeted enzyme of influenza virus.

The search for these binding compounds relies on technology that reveals the structure of this enzyme in extremely fine detail.

Researchers Joseph Bauman and Kalyan Das first produced high-resolution images of an H1N1 flu enzyme, and Bauman and postdoctoral researcher Disha Patel screened 800 small molecule fragments for binding.

The researchers in Arnold's lab worked with Edmond LaVoie, professor and chair of medicinal chemistry in the Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy, to modify those compounds, making them more potent and selective in blocking the flu enzyme's activity.

Working with virologist Luis Martinez-Sobrido at the University of Rochester, they were able to detect antiviral activity of the compounds in cells.

The enzyme that the scientists are attacking is especially crafty, Arnold noted, because it steals material from human cells to disguise the invading flu virus in a process called "cap-snatching."

These "caps" are a small chemical structure that prime the process for reading genetic information.

"What we're doing by blocking or inhibiting this enzyme is to interfere with flu's ability to disguise itself," he said.

The study was published in the journal ACS Chemical Biology.

New x-ray vision maps internal structure of objects



LONDON: Scientists have developed a new kind of 'x-ray vision' that is able to peer inside an object and map the three-dimensional distribution of its nano-properties in real time.

Researchers from the University of Manchester, working with colleagues in the UK, Europe and the US, said the novel imaging technique could have a wide range of applications across many disciplines, such as materials science, geology, environmental science and medical research.

"This new imaging method - termed Pair Distribution Function-Computed Tomography - represents one of the most significant developments in X-ray micro tomography for almost 30 years," said Professor Robert Cernik in Manchester's School of Materials.

"Using this method we are able to image objects in a non-invasive manner to reveal their physical and chemical nano-properties and relate these to their distribution in three-dimensional space at the micron scale.

"Such relationships are key to understanding the properties of materials and so could be used to look at in-situ chemical reactions, probe stress-strain gradients in manufactured components, distinguish between healthy and diseased tissue, identify minerals and oil-bearing rocks or identify illicit substances or contraband in luggage," Cernik said.

In a study published in the journal Nature Communications, researchers explain how the new imaging technique uses scattered x-rays to form a three-dimensional reconstruction of the image.

"When x-rays hit an object they are either transmitted, absorbed or scattered," explained Cernik.

"Standard x-ray tomography works by collecting the transmitted beams, rotating the sample and mathematically reconstructing a 3D image of the object.

"This is only a density contrast image, but by a similar method using the scattered X-rays instead we can obtain information about the structure and chemistry of the object even if it has a nanocrystalline structure.

"By using this method we are able to build a much more detailed image of the object and, for the first time, separate the nanostructure signals from the different parts of a working device to see what the atoms are doing in each location, without dismantling the object," Cernik said.

Tooth implant restores vision in blind man in UK



LONDON: Toothy vision! A 43-year-old blind man in the UK has had his sight miraculously restored after a pioneering surgery that involved implanting one of his teeth into his eye.

Ian Tibbet, a factory worker, lost his vision after a piece of scrap metal from an oven struck him in the right eye during a workplace accident.

Ian's sight remained fine for the first few years but then he began to suffer recurrent problems. Eventually, in 1998, he lost the sight in his right eye and had to stop working. A year later he lost the vision in his left eye too.

Ian has now been able to see his kids for the first time, thanks to a revolutionary procedure, the 'Mirror' reported.

During the technique osteo-odonto-keratoprosthsesis, one of Ian's front teeth and a part of jaw was removed and used as a lens holder in his right eye.

"It was an incredible moment - I never thought I would ever be able to see my own children," said Ian.

The revolutionary tooth transplant, carried out by Professor Christopher Liu at the Sussex Eye Hospital in Brighton, began when one of Ian's teeth was removed and it acted as a cradle for a false lens.

The tooth was then inserted into his cheek for three months to enable it to grow new tissue and blood vessels.

The doctors then inserted the tooth, complete with the fitted lens into Ian's right eyeball.

Within weeks of the final operation, his sight returned.