Discovery paves way for drugs to fight bird flu, other influenza epidemics
Washington, Aug 26 : Researchers at Rutgers University and The University of Texas at
Austin have found a new drug target in the fight against bird flu and other virulent
strains of influenza.
The researchers have determined the three-dimensional structure of a site on an
influenza A virus protein that binds to one of its human protein targets, thereby
suppressing a person's natural defences to the infection and paving the way for the virus
to replicate efficiently.
This so-called NS1 virus protein is shared by all influenza A viruses isolated from
humans - including avian influenza, or bird flu, and the 1918 pandemic influenza
virus.
A decade ago, Professor Robert M. Krug at The University of Texas at Austin discovered
that the NS1 protein binds a human protein known as CPSF30, which is important for
protecting human cells from flu infection.
Once bound to NS1, the human protein can no longer generate molecules needed to
suppress flu virus replication.
Now, researchers led by Rutgers Professor Gaetano T. Montelione and Krug identified the
novel NS1 binding pocket that grasps the human CPSF30 protein.
"Our work uncovers an Achilles heel of influenza A viruses that cause human epidemics
and high mortality pandemics. We have identified the structure of a key target site for
drugs that could be developed to effectively combat this disease," said Montelione,
professor of molecular biology and biochemistry.
X-ray crystallography identified the three-dimensional structure of the NS1 binding
pocket.
"The X-ray crystal structure gives us unique insights into how the NS1 and human
protein bind at the atomic level, and how that suppresses a crucial antiviral response,"
said Das, research professor at Rutgers.
Rei-Lin Kuo, Jesper Marklund, Karen Twu and Krug at The University of Texas at Austin
verified the key role of this binding pocket in flu replication by genetically engineering
a change to a single amino acid in the NS1 protein's binding pocket, which in turn
eliminated the protein's ability to grasp the human protein that is needed to generate
antiviral molecules.
These authors then produced a flu virus with an NS1 pocket mutation and showed that
this mutated virus does not block host defences, and as a consequence has a greatly
reduced ability to infect human cells.
"These experiments validate the NS1 pocket as a target for antiviral drug discovery.
Because this NS1 pocket is highly conserved in all influenza A viruses isolated from
humans, a drug targeted to the pocket would be effective against all human influenza A
strains, including the bird flu," said Krug, professor and chair of molecular genetics and
microbiology.
The study is published in the PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences)
Early Edition and will be published in an upcoming issue of the PNAS print edition.
--ANI