Washington, October 18: Researchers have decoded the atomic structure of a key human enzyme, potentially opening the way towards less toxic HIV drugs.
“Many anti-HIV drugs are designed to stop the process of DNA replication,” says Whitney Yin, assistant professor of chemistry and biochemistry at the University of Texas-Austin (UT-A).
“That turns out to be a great thing to do to help cure virus infections, because it stops the processes of viral replication,” adds Yin.
“At the same time, however, when you target such a critical process in viruses, you may also target human enzymes that perform similar functions in normal cells, and this is what causes harmful drug side effects.”
Yin and her graduate student, Young-sam Lee, have unravelled the atomic structure of an enzyme, known as pol gamma, that is responsible for DNA replication in human mitochondria.
When mitochondria (cell’s powerhouse) are working normally, they produce most of the energy that sustains human cells.
When pol gamma comes into contact with certain anti-retroviral drugs (for treating HIV), however, it can incorporate the drug into mitochondrial DNA, and thus interfere with the normal replication process. The effects can range from simple nausea to bone marrow depletion to organ failure, according to an UT-A release.
“Patients who are taking this class of anti-HIV drugs have suffered these drug toxicities for a long time,” says Yin.
“Dosages and combinations of drugs can be chosen so they don’t kill you, but they still can’t be used at their most effective concentrations against HIV,” adds Yin.
“However, in large part because combination therapies have become more successful and patients are living longer, toxicity has become more of an issue than before.”
Their work was published this week in Cell.
—IANS