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by Staff Writers Odense, Denmark (SPX) Oct 10, 2014
The battle against AIDS cannot be won in the laboratory alone. To fight the potentially deadly virus that 34 million people are suffering from we need help from computers. Now research fron University of Southern Denmark turns computers into powerful allies in the battle. Effective treatment of HIV-virus is a race against time: Many of the drugs that have been potent killers of HIV-virus, have today lost their power, because the virus has become resistant to them. As a result science must constantly develop new drugs that can attack the virus in new ways. Now researchers from the University of Southern Denmark present a method to speed up the important development work up with an order of several hundred percent. It now takes not years, but months or even only weeks to find new compounds that have the potential to become a new HIV drug. Finding suitable compounds that can specifically inhibit the HIV virus, is crucial in AIDS research, explains postdoc Vasantanathan Poongavanam from Department of Physics, Chemistry and Pharmacy, University of Southern Denmark: "HIV is a retrovirus that contains enzymes which make it able to copy itself with the help of host genetic material and thus reproduce. If you can block these enzymes' ability to replicate itself, the virus cannot reproduce."
The needle in the haystack "It takes enormous amounts of time and resources, to go through millions and millions of compounds. With the techniques used today, it may take years to carry out a screening of possible compounds". In addition, it takes time to turn an effective compound into a safe pharmaceutical agent that can get on the market. "Today, it generally takes nearly 14 years from the time you find a drug candidate to get it on the market. Anything that can shorten that time is an important improvement", says Vasanthanathan Poongavanam. Until now, researchers have been hampered by slow computers and inaccurate prediction models when they ask computers to identify compounds that may be effective against HIV. Now the SDU researchers have managed to develop an effective model at a time when significantly more powerful computers have become available. "Our work shows that computer based predictions are a extremely fast, accurate and promising methodology in the drug discovery projects", says Vasanthanathan Poongavanam.
14 new compounds found "It took us only a few weeks to find these 14 very interesting compounds, whereas before it would have taken years", explains Vasanthanathan Poongavanam. The 14 compounds have now been taken over by Italian researchers who continue working with them at the University of Cagliari. The next step is to carry out advanced experiments on these compounds. If they are positive, the compounds may go on the market as a drug against HIV. Binding free energy based structural dynamics analysis of HIV-1 RT RNase H-inhibitor complexes. Vasanthanathan Poongavanam, Jogvan Haugaard Magnus Olsen, Jacob Kongsted. DOI: 10.1039 / C4IB00111G.
Related Links University of Southern Denmark Epidemics on Earth - Bird Flu, HIV/AIDS, Ebola
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