Islamabad, Jan
4 : Gladstone Institutes scientist Nevan Krogan, PhD, has identified
how HIV -- the virus that causes AIDS -- hijacks the body's own defenses to
promote infection. This discovery could one day help curb the spread of the
HIV/AIDS pandemic.
Dr. Krogan conducted this research in his laboratory
at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) -- a leading medical
school with which Gladstone is affiliated -- where Dr. Krogan is an associate
professor of cellular and molecular pharmacology and an affiliate of the
California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences (QB3). Since joining Gladstone
as an associate investigator in June, Dr. Krogan has served as a unique,
collaborative bridge between the two institutions in the field of systems
biology, an area in which scientists perform advanced, computational analysis of
large-scale data sets that are drawn from complex biological systems.
In
his companion papers being published in Nature, Dr. Krogan describes how HIV
commandeers restriction factors -- a class of human proteins that have evolved
to block viruses such as HIV -- to weaken the body's defenses and enhance the
virulence of HIV infection.
"One of the keys to HIV's success is how
quickly it can evolve new attack strategies -- and the way in which it uses our
own proteins against us is a prime example of that," said Dr. Krogan. "However,
now that we've shed light on this complex process, we are one step closer to
developing new drugs that will help us pull ahead in this evolutionary arms
race."
AIDS has killed more than 25 million people around the world since
first being identified some 30 years ago. In the United States alone, more than
one million people live with HIV/AIDS at an annual cost of $34 billion. Dr.
Krogan's experiments show promise for the development of more effective
antiretroviral therapies for people with HIV. Further, they have laid the
foundation for future research at Gladstone.
In his experiments, Dr.
Krogan performed a two-part investigation of protein interactions. First, he
conducted a systematic, global analysis of all potential interactions that occur
between proteins made by the body (human proteins) and proteins made by the
virus (HIV proteins). Second, he whittled down these ~500 interactions to the
one that appeared most likely to fuel HIV infection: the interaction between the
human protein CBFß and the HIV protein Vif.
Normally during HIV
infection, a restriction factor called APOBEC3G acts as a molecular roadblock,
preventing the virus from reaching its target -- the CD4 T white blood cells
that are a major component of the immune system. But Dr. Krogan found that when
the HIV protein Vif binds to the human protein CBFß, Vif is strengthened and
APOBEC3G degrades. This degradation weakens ABOBEC3G's ability to stop HIV and
the virus is free to infect the CD4 T cells.
"This is the first
comprehensive look at how HIV interacts globally with components of the cell,"
said Judith H. Greenberg, PhD, acting director of the National Institutes of
Health's National Institute of General Medical Sciences, which partially
supported this research through its AIDS-related structural biology program.
"The work is a good example of how biophysical studies can improve our
understanding of disease and point the way to the exploration of potential
therapeutic targets."
Other groups at UCSF who participated in this
research include the labs of John Gross, PhD, Andrej Sali, PhD, Alan Frankel,
PhD, Alma Burlingame, PhD, Charles Craik, PhD, Ryan Hernandez, PhD, and Tanja
Kortemme. Funding came from a wide variety of sources, including QB3, the Host
Pathogen Circuitry Center at UCSF, the Searle Scholars Program, the W.M. Keck
Foundation and the National Institutes of
Health.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Global view of how HIV/AIDS hijacks cells during infection
Global view of how HIV/AIDS hijacks cells during infection
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