Genes & cells: Drug candidate may stop MERS: Chemical disrupts assembly centers of coronaviruses.

Science news Pub Date : 2014-06-28 Epub Date: 2014-06-17 DOI:10.1002/scin.5591851308
Meghan Rosen
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Abstract

Brain’s support cells adjust hunger Astrocytes have role in controlling appetite in mice BY MEGHAN ROSEN An experimental drug that shuts down construction of virus-making factories within human cells could become a new weapon against MERS and similar respiratory diseases. The chemical, called K22, halts growth of coronaviruses, including the strains that cause MERS and SARS, researchers report May 29 in PLOS Pathogens. K22 is the latest in a slew of drug candidates to counter coronaviruses, for which no proven drug treatments exist. But K22 stands out from the crowd, says Stanley Perlman, a virologist and pediatric infectious disease physician at the University of Iowa in Iowa City. K22 hits a part of the viral life cycle that no drug candidate has tackled before. “The ideal drug may be something like this,” Perlman says. Still, moving the chemical from the lab to the clinic could take years of testing
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基因和细胞:候选药物可能阻止MERS:化学物质破坏冠状病毒的组装中心。
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Hands-free Chemistry: New tricks and tech may help turn the tide for automated molecular synthesis. Genes & cells: Drug candidate may stop MERS: Chemical disrupts assembly centers of coronaviruses. Genes & cells: MERS outbreak picks up pace: In recent weeks, virus infected hundreds, including two U.S. cases. Body & brain: Camels are likely source of MERS: Most animals tested in Saudi Arabia had signs of infection. Science news top 25.
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