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Новая молекула для борьбы с туберкулёзом
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27.02.2015


Молекула экспериментального вещества, ранее смоделированная с помощью методов вычислительной биологии, была синтезирована в лаборатории Васу Наира. Согласно данным опубликованной в "Bioorganic and Medicinal Chemistry Letters" статьи, препарат специфически связывается с некоторыми аминокислотными последовательностями и магнием внутри микобактерий и подавляет ДНК-зависимую РНК-полимеразу - белок, синтезирующий бактериальную РНК. В результате происходит ингибирование бактериального роста и деления.
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Источник: "Researchers Discover Potential Treatment for Drug Resistant TB" | http://www.dddmag.com/news/2015/02/researchers-discover-potential-treatment-drug-resistant-tb |
Researchers at the University of Georgia have developed a new small molecule drug that may serve as a treatment against multi-drug resistant tuberculosis, a form of the disease that cannot be cured with conventional therapies. They describe their findings in a paper published recently in Bioorganic and Medicinal Chemistry Letters.
Nine million people contracted tuberculosis in 2013, and 1.5 million died from the disease, according to the World Health Organization. While standard anti-TB drugs can cure most people of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection, improper use of antibiotics has led to new strains of the bacterium resistant to the two most powerful medications, isoniazid and rifampicin.
"Multi-drug resistant TB is spreading rapidly in many parts of the world," said Vasu Nair, Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar in Drug Discovery in the UGA College of Pharmacy and lead author of the paper. "There is a tremendous need for new therapies, and we think our laboratory has developed a strong candidate that disrupts fundamental steps in the bacterium's reproduction process."
Just like other living organisms, the genetic information contained in M. tuberculosis undergoes a complex process known as transcription in which the bacterial enzyme, DNA-dependent RNA polymerase, or RNAP, produces TB RNA. This molecule is involved in processes that produce critical bacterial proteins that the organism needs to survive.
The compound Nair and his colleagues developed works by binding to magnesium and specific amino acids found within the bacterium, interrupting the production of RNA.
"The compound we developed strongly inhibits the growth of the bacterium and renders it incapable of reproducing and spreading infection," said Nair. "More importantly, the compound shows very low levels of cytotoxicity, which means that it is not harmful to the body."
The research team members also performed extensive studies to determine if their newly developed compound had an appropriately long half-life and could be cleared from the body through normal biochemical mechanisms.
"All our tests were very favorable," Nair said. "The half-life is a little over 14 hours, and all traces of the drug are expected to be cleared through normal bodily functions."
While Nair and his colleagues were pleased with their new compound, they were surprised to discover through preliminary experiments that it also exhibited strong anti-HIV properties, opening the door for dual therapeutic applications.




 
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