Guest guest Posted March 4, 2005 Report Share Posted March 4, 2005 Why is HCV So Resilient? by C. Article Date: 03-02-05 One of the reasons it's so challenging to treat people with hepatitis C successfully is due to the virus' resilience in the body. While our immune systems are inherently designed to fight off foreign substances like bacteria and viruses almost as soon as they enter the body, hepatitis C (HCV) has a built-in evasive mechanism that helps protect it from an otherwise devastating and irreparable blow. It's like a military submarine that sends out decoys to throw off an impending torpedo. As a result, HCV is able to successfully replicate, or make copies of itself. Because of its seemingly omnipotent nature, HCV can persist in the body for decades after an initial infection, sometimes causing so much damage to a person's liver that their only option in the end is a liver transplant operation. Uncovering HCV's Resilience So, why is the hepatitis C virus able to evade the immune system? Scientists at two universities in Texas think they may have found the answer. In a study published online in the journal The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,1 researchers explain how HCV is able to shut down two key elements of the immune response through a protein the virus uses called NS3/4A protease. Essentially, HCV is able to circumvent the immune response by preventing the production of signaling molecules in the immune system, which signal other immune cells to go after foreign invaders in the body. In an additional paper,2 the same scientists described the process by which the hepatitis virus blocks signaling molecules in the immune system from calling up other immune system cells to launch an attack against HCV. In the second study, the scientists showed that certain liver cells allow HCV replication to occur due to an abnormal inactivation of an immune system signaling molecule known as retinoic acid-inducible gene I (RIG-I). Blocking HCV Replication Through Medicine This research comes on the heels of preliminary results of clinical trials testing the effectiveness of medications that target HCV's ability to circumvent an immune attack. It's been suggested that these drugs called protease inhibitors block hepatitis C's ability to make copies of itself once it infects the liver particularly by blocking the virus' immune system evasion.3,4 The medications work similarly to protease inhibitors for HIV. Those drugs block the activity of a protein that the AIDS virus uses to make copies of itself.5 " At least one protease inhibitor has had extraordinary activity against hepatitis C in human clinical trials, but we're going to need to improve on it in a number of ways, including reducing the potential for the virus to become resistant to it, " said Stanley Lemon, MD, a senior author on the paper, and director of the Hepatitis C Research Center at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. " A better understanding of how NS3/4A does its work in blocking the immune response will help make that possible, " said Lemon, who is also Professor and Dean of Medicine in the departments of Microbiology & Immunology and Internal Medicine. An 'Impressive' Drug in This Class One experimental medication in this class has been named BILN 2061.6 The medication, given to patients orally, has shown an " impressive " ability to reduce levels of the hepatitis C virus, according to experts.7 Youla Tsantrizos, PhD, a senior research scientist at pharmaceutical manufacturer Boehringer-Ingelheim, Ltd., wrote: " Oral administration of BILN 2061 to patients infected with the hepatitis C genotype 1 virus resulted in an impressive reduction of viral RNA levels, establishing proof-of-concept for HCV NS3 protease inhibitors as therapeutic agents in humans. " 7 1. Foy E, Sumpter R Jr, Loo YM et al. Control of antiviral defenses through hepatitis C virus disruption of retinoic acid-inducible gene- I signaling. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2005 Feb 22;102(8):2986-91. Epub 2005 Feb 14. 2. Sumpter R Jr, Loo YM, Foy E et al. Regulating intracellular antiviral defense and permissiveness to hepatitis C virus RNA replication through a cellular RNA helicase, RIG-1. J Virol 2005 Mar;79(5):2689-99. 3. Lemon SM, Yi M, Li K. " Strong reasons make strong actions " – The antiviral efficacy of NS3/4A protease inhibitors. Hepatology 2005 Feb 18;41(3):671-4. [Epub ahead of print]. 4. Hinrichsen H, Benhamon Y, Wedemeyer H et al. Short-term antiviral efficacy of BILN 2061, a hepatitis C virus serine protease inhibitor, in hepatitis C genotype 1 patients. Gastroenterology 2004 Nov;127(5):1347-55. 5. AIDSInfo. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Protease Inhibitors. Available at: http://aidsinfo.nih.gov/other/cbrochure/english/cbrochure_en.html#05. Accessed March 2, 2005. 6. Lamarre D, PC, M et al. An NS3 protease inhibitor with antiviral effects in humans infected with hepatitis C virus. Nature 2003 Nov 13;426(6963):186-9. Epub 2003 Oct 26. 7. Tsantrizos YS. The design of a potent inhibitor of the hepatitis C virus NS3 protease: BILN 2061—from the NMR tube to the clinic. Biopolymers 2004;76(4):309-23. is a long-time health journalist and an editor for Priority Healthcare. His credits include coverage of health news for the website of Fox Television's The Health Network, and articles for the New York Post and other consumer and trade publications. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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