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Scientists from the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), in collaboration with the University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research (Scotland), the University of Cambridge, the Institute of Cancer Research, University College London (all in England), and other partners, have demonstrated how hepatitis C virus (HCV) evades antibodies and have provided new evidence on the mechanism that HCV uses to enter cells. These results were published in the journal eLife.
The study used cell culture adaptation to decipher how HCV might improve its ability to enter and infect cells in the absence or presence of antibodies. Using a series of diverse virology and computational methods, as well as molecular dynamics simulations for conformational mobility, the researchers showed that hypervariable region 1 (HVR1) acts as a “safety catch” that regulates entry.
The complex mechanism used by HCV to enter cells has long been an area of focus for both fundamental virologists and groups interested in generating vaccines. The molecular mechanism of entry remains largely undefined and presents a challenge both in the understanding of fundamental molecular aspects of HCV and in the potential design of new therapeutics beyond the current direct-acting antivirals.
This study provides new evidence on the mechanism by which HCV, one of the main causes of liver cancer worldwide, evades immunity and enters cells.
p>Stejskal L, Kalemera MD, Lewis CB, Palor M, Walker L, Daviter T, et al.Scientists from the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) and partner institutions h...
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