«We were 100 per cent successful in curing HBV (hepatitis B virus) infection in hundreds of tests in preclinical models," said Marc Pellegrini, who led a team at Melbourne’s Walter and Eliza Hall Institute, Australia’s oldest medical research facility.
The team, whose findings were published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) journal this week, used birinapant, a
«Birinapant enabled the destruction of hepatitis
According to the World Health Organisation, more than 350 million people are affected by chronic hepatitis B, mostly in developing countries in
Pellegrini said the drug restores apoptosis; a biological mechanism that clears damaged cells, which are affected by both, cancer and hepatitis.
«Normally, [healthy] liver cells would respond to infection by switching on a signal that tells the cell to destroy itself ‘for the greater good’, preventing further infection. However our research showed that the virus commandeers the liver cells’ internal communications, telling the cells to ignore the infection and stay alive. Birinapant flips the cell survival ‘switch’ used by the virus, causing the infected cell to die.»
The Australian team believes that targeting the cell, and not the virus itself, is not only more effective, but also avoids the emergence of
«It is relatively easy for an organism to adapt to a drug, but it is very difficult to adapt to a change in the host cell. The virus relies on the survival mechanisms of the host, so if it can’t exploit them, it dies. Such a monumental change in the virus’ environment may be too big a hurdle for it to adapt to.»
Pellegrini believes birinapant and similar medicines could be used to combat numerous other illnesses.
«Pathogens that infect and reside inside host cells, including viral diseases such as HIV, herpes simplex and dengue fever, and bacterial infections such as tuberculosis, could all potentially be cured in a similar way," he said.
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