A new tool that can help predict the location of virus mutations that lead to HIV-drug resistance has been developed by scientists.

The main reason for the short-term effectiveness of the drug has to do with the evolution of the drug within the body, said the study's author, Yi Mao, a postdoctoral fellow at the National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis.
In the study, Mao used a mathematical modelling technique called elastic network modelling to examine the physical properties and interactions of the proteins.
The model reveals where mutations are occurring during the evolution of the HIV-virus proteins and how these mutations help the virus survive.
"With this kind of knowledge, better strategies for designing anti-HIV drugs could be developed," stated Mao.
The study was published in the journal BMC Structural Biology.
Advertisement