Scientists have found that the human form of immune-system protein, cyclophilin A, changes the shape of HIV particles to make them more infectious
Scientists have found that the human form of immune-system protein, cyclophilin A, changes the shape of HIV particles to make them more infectious.
Cyclophilin A is found in HIV-1 when the virus attacks human and monkey cells, researchers at University College of London said.The researchers, who infected cells from Old World monkeys with HIV-1, found that cyclophilin A changed the shape of the virus particles, reports the latest issue of New Scientist.
This trick made the virus vulnerable to attack by TRIM5-alpha, part of the monkeys' innate immune system, which stops it in its tracks, but it was a different story when they infected human cells with HIV-1.
They found that the human form of cyclophilin A still changed the shape of the virus particles, but only to make them more infectious.
HIV-1 has the ability to tolerate cyclophilin A activity when it gets into human cells and the virus is using cyclophilin A to help it replicate, leading researcher Greg Towers was quoted as saying.
The changes to HIV-1 that allowed it to infect human cells might have occurred long before it actually crossed over to humans, according to Towers.
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"The more we understand, the more likely we are going to be able to design improved therapeutics," Towers said.
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