Accidental Discovery Could Lead to Cure for AIDS Virus 51
sydlexius writes "A press release from Sandia tells of the discovery of niobium HPA, a chemical that bonds to viruses. Many scientists have been interested in the properties of various HPAs (heteropolyanions), however this is the first such case that is stable in basic and neutral solutions. The Albuquerque Tribune covers the story here. For subscribers of Science Magazine, you can find an article in this month's issue (Abstract)."
Re:ACK (Score:1)
some goofs (Score:1, Informative)
Hence, this drug blocks those viruses, not HIV itself.
Re:some goofs (Score:3, Informative)
"Once such compounds bind with an AIDs virus, the virus is no longer capable of entering a cell to damage it."
Re:some goofs (Score:1)
Re:some goofs (Score:5, Informative)
More accurate to say that AIDS is a disease resulting from HIV infection. HIV is itself a virus (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) which attacks the key cells of the human immune system, leaving it open to all kinds of infection -- viral, bacterial, fungal, and parasitical. Drugs which fight these opportunistic infections can (and do) help AIDS patients quite a bit, but it is indeed possible -- and more useful in the long run -- to develop drugs which fight HIV directly. We have plenty such drugs, but none of them work as well or as long as they should. This may be the best of the bunch, if we're lucky.
[rant] I'm consistently amazed at the basic lack of understanding of infectious disease displayed any time a subject like this comes up. People seem to have a quasi-magical conception of pathogens roughly equivalent to believing that stars are holes poked in the roof of the sky, through which the Divine Light shines through. [/rant]
Re:some goofs (Score:2)
Re:some goofs (Score:2, Informative)
Re:some goofs (Score:5, Informative)
Several years after AIDS was identified as a syndrome sweeping across the population, a retrovirus was found, followed shortly by two others. These are HIV 1, HIV 2 and HIV 3. I can't recall which is common - one tends to be found in Africa, and the other in America. They are, all three of them, very closely related, and differ only slightly in symptoms.
HIV produces a mild flu-like disease. Most people don't even remember it after it happens, and they seldom have to miss work. Their body starts an immune response to the retrovirus, and the infection is beaten back. Like all viruses, however, including those causing Chicken Pox or coldsores, once you are infected, the virus stays with you. The immune response continues, and six months later is easily detectable by doctors - which is why you should always be tested several months *after* you have been exposed to HIV. There is a much more expensive and less reliable DNA test for earlier diagnosis.
The virus sits inside you and can spread to others. Eventually it enters a secondary phase where it starts reproducing inside the cells that compose your immune system response. These cells are destroyed by HIV's life cycle, more HIV enters the bloodstream, and your T count goes down. Eventually, you do not have enough T cells to fight off other dieases, as they have all been ripped apart by HIV using them as virus factories, and you die. Most modern defintions of AIDS include HIV infection and a lowered T cell count. You generally do not get AIDS until several years after you have been infected by HIV, thus allowing you to spread it around.
So influenza viruses cause influenza. Smallpox viruses cause smallpox. Common cold viruses cause the common cold. But HIV viruses cause AIDS.
No. There is no such thing as an "influenza virus that causes influenza". Influenza A is currently in common in A(H1N1) and A(H3N2) variants. Influenza B is also common. They cause a variety of ailments including Croup, Bronchitis, and the classic Flu. It depends on where and how it hits your body. (Strep A on your skin is an itchy red spot you might not notice. In your lungs, it will kill you. Same goes for Anthrax).
Smallpox viruses cause smallpox.
I don't know much about smallpox. They don't teach it anymore. :) From what I understand, that's a good thing. (Sidenote: the Rotary Club is working on Polio Plus, to wipe out a range of dieases around the world in the same way that smallpox has almost totally been eradicated).
Common cold viruses cause the common cold.
Colds are caused by entire classes of viruses - Rhinoviruses and Coronaviruses mostly. There is no medical term "Cold virus", afaik.
It's weird how everyone becomes so picky when it comes to AIDS and HIV but not for other diseases. I wonder why.
People who are HIV positive are perfectly healthy people. They will die eventually, yes, just like you and I. They can spread the virus, but not through common contact. They can lead normal lives for years.
People with AIDS are undergoing a progressive breakdown of their immune system. Somebody coughing on them can kill them. They are often suffering from a variety of infections and cancers, and gather more as time goes by.
There is a substantial difference.
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Evan (don't they teach this in high school?)
Re:some goofs (Score:2)
Re:some goofs (Score:2)
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Evan (no reference)
Re:some goofs (Score:1)
Re:some goofs (Score:1)
A disease usually has one or a few symptoms that can clearly be traced to one causitive entity. The disease that HIV causes could be called immune system destruction. Since the person doesn't die directly from this, but usually from the other opportunistic diseases that typically arise from advanced HIV infection, as well as the image stamp ("first meme") problem, then AIDS is probably what the terminal symptomology will still be called.
Syndromes often become diseases, but not the other way around.
Re:some goofs (Score:2)
There is a common set of things that define a syndrome - I've seen the bulleted list of around five or six points (varies from class to class and which texts are being used), and been tested on them. Like any other convention, there's a bit of wiggle room, but there is a semi-standard set of points for what makes up a "syndrome".
(BTW - not to you, but to the other person who replied... I'd suggest the use of some paragraphs in your posts. My eyes glazed over a quarter of the way though that).
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Evan (no reference)
Re:some goofs (Score:1)
Sexual intercourse, blood tainting (have an HIV infected person bleed on you and you have an open sore/cut, etc), anything that exposes you to fluids from inside their body.
So, the next time you have intercourse with a girl you meet, ask her if she has been tested for HIV or AIDS. You wouldn't, unless both of you were smart. If she leads a lifestyle that includes sleeping around with a few guys here and there, she can easily be infected and spread the virus for years without realizing it. Even if she/YOU were tested within 6 months, who's to say the last person you slept with didn't have it, and your just spreading it until you have your next test?
Safe sex, along with a very strict knowledge about your partners activity, is the only way to keep from acquiring it. Education is knowledge.
Re:some goofs (Score:1)
people with HIV arnt allways going to die,
there are a number of ppl whos can carry the
virus and not end up with AIDS..
A lot of reserch has gone into this area
Recent Slashdot link [slashdot.org]
Re:some goofs (Score:2)
It's just that most people with HIV will wind up developing AIDS at some point.
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Evan
Re:some goofs (Score:1)
Interestingly, you wouldn't encounter that much general nit picking on biology/medicine websites. Maybe people visiting those sites concentrate more on facts that have any relevance. Where as on Slashdot someone can indeed get modded up while showing off their "impressive" (ehem...) bio skills by correcting minor details in posts of others.
Re:some goofs (Score:2)
AIDS is not limited to humans. Cats, for example, can get it too, but not from the HIV but the FIV (Feline Immunodeficiency Virus).
Re:some goofs (Score:1)
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Actually I think the Sandia editor used this term to make it easier for people that don't understand it's ethiology (did I spell it correctly?) Boh, hope this molecule doesn't kill the target cells too. I mean come on, there are people out there that beleive in creationism...
Ciao
Why it's hard to beat (Re:some goofs) (Score:1)
From what I see, this solution would make it so the virus might not be able to kill you, but it would not make it so that you weren't infectious to others.
AntiVirus at the ready? (Score:2)
I know nothing about these HPAs other than what I've read in the the linked articles, but thoughts of HPA based morning vitamins to help prevent things as mundain as flu to as vicious as ebola sure sounds like something to strive for.
I can see the slogans now. "A Pill a day, Keeps the Viri at bay!"
*shudder*
Re:AntiVirus at the ready? (Score:3, Interesting)
IANAMD, but my mother is an infectious disease doctor (working, in fact, in a trial testing a prototype HIV vaccine). I have yet to ask her about this (seeing as I am at work), but one of the common concerns she has when she hears about antibiotics being used frequently is that strains of resistant bacteria may result faster due to overprescription of drugs.
There seems to be very little on the web about HPAs, but from what I've gathered, there seems to be conflicting, hazy theories about how they work on viruses. Now, HPAs very well may be resistance-proof: if a virus cannot replicate due to the physical constraints on retroviral replication, then they have little chance. However, evolution is a weird thing (to put it lightly). The most far-fetched mutation of a virus might just end up working, resulting in its proliferation.
Then there are the safety issues. Even though does not decompose in neutral solutions (and therefore compatable with the pH of blood), there are still the standard concerns about toxicity, carcinogenicity (is that a word?), and the like. One site [emory.edu] I found seems to have a description of a HPA that worked....until it started causing cancer in the patients.
Of course, this all might work, too. I hate to sound like a nay-sayer, though, but it's got a ways to go.
Re:AntiVirus at the ready? (Score:2)
Re:AntiVirus at the ready? (Score:1)
These are two of the tools that your immune system works with to clean yourself of a virus, with another helper being cytotoxic cells which go around and eat infected cells to clean up and stop the spread of the virus. To me it seemed that the HPA's as they discussed them in the article were of a more general purpose nature, and would bond to many different kinds of viruses.
This is both a good and a bad thing; with the bad thing being that because they are so chemically active they could cause any range of problems when they enter the diverse chemical pool of the bloodstream. Who knows what could happen?
Re:AntiVirus at the ready? (Score:1)
And this is why we have animal testing. Sucks for the animal, pisses off PETA, and saves Many Lives.
This is better than cold fusion! (Score:3, Interesting)
There are jillions of chemicals that will disable/destroy/etc. HIV in a test tube. Like plain old chlorine bleach. You know any AIDS sufferers being successfully treated with bleach?
I didn't think so.
Re:This is better than cold fusion! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:my best defence against virus (Score:1)
Thats primarily because Windows only has a shallow immune system to begin with, almost pre-destined to be infected by any virus able to infect anything. However the average slashdotter uses Linux/Unix, or some varient. It has a buit-in immune system, and some safeguards to keep infecteous diseases at least isolated to a certain region until further countermeasures can be taken.
In comparison, it's like comparing a full blown AIDS-infected patient already in a bubble, to a athletic person who eats regularly and has a very healthy immune system.
Serendipity in science (Score:2)
Re:Serendipity in science (Score:1)
Re:Serendipity in science (Score:1)
Re:Serendipity in science (Score:3, Interesting)
Uranus is in some way tied to asteroids though. The discovery of Uranus "proved" the Titius-Bode law, a mathematical formula that gave the distance of the planets from the sun. Based on the location of Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, and Jupiter, Bode's law predicted the location of Uranus. When Uranus was discovered in nearly the exact location it was supposed to be, astronomers started taking the law seriously. The interesting thing about Bode's law is that it also predicted a planet in the gap between Mars and Jupiter. Kepler also suspected that there was a planet between Mars and Jupiter. Astronomers planned a cooperative search for the missing planet in the gap. Before they could get started, Piazzi found Ceres. Pallas, Juno (1804), and Vesta (1807) were discovered shortly thereafter. After Pallas, they realized they weren't looking at planets, but instead minor planets.
So that's the story of asteroids and Uranus.
A brilliant example of the value of pure research (Score:4, Insightful)
"Identifying the problem concluded her task, but scientific curiosity led her to attempt to create the compound as an independent entity. "I was curious to see if I could synthesis it pure, rather than leave it merely as a discovered impurity," says Nyman."
Intellectual curiosity was the key here, more than dumb luck.
Re:A brilliant example of the value of pure resear (Score:1)
Re:A brilliant example of the value of pure resear (Score:1)
Sounds promising (Score:2, Insightful)
But we never get a free ride. The stuff will clog the arteries or something. Otherwise it will be sufficiently inert that it is used liberally, everywhere, and then it will turn out that viruses played a subtle role in all living systems. Of course that discovery would occur once the virus balance has been terminally offset.
reaching for straws (Score:3, Informative)
However, since HIV is a retrovirus, it can stay dormant as DNA inside cells and re-appear spontaneously after years or decades even if it is killed off completely. Therefore, it is impossible for drugs to cure HIV; they can only control it and only if taken indefinitely. Only a "curative" vaccine could control HIV infection without drugs, but even in the best possible scenario, people would still remain asymptomatic carriers and they would probably still require regular boosters.
The long and short of it is: don't get infected with HIV. It's a nasty virus, it is intrinsically incurable (although it may be controllable eventually), and it is easy to avoid.
Oooops (Score:3, Funny)
*In the background you hear 20,000 disgusted AIDS researchers throwing their clipboards to the ground in disgust*
Dumb luck. Gotta love it.