New ‘protein prompt’ may lead to possible universal Covid treatment


PTI, Oct 19, 2022, 10:39 AM IST

Washington DC: Scientists have found a way to produce a protein in mice that can block multiple variants of the SARS-CoV-2 virus from entering cells and causing respiratory disease, an advance that may lead to a ‘universal’ treatment for COVID-19.

Using messenger RNA (mRNA) packaged in lipid nanoparticles, the scientists showed in a mouse model that host cells can produce a ‘decoy’ enzyme that binds to coronavirus spike proteins, meaning the virus should not be able to latch onto cells in the host’s airway and start the infection.

”Rather than messenger RNA as a vaccine, this shows that mRNA can be used as a universal therapy against different coronaviruses,” said lead researcher Gaurav Sahay from Oregon State University (OSU) in the US.

”Despite mass vaccination, there is an urgent need to develop effective treatment options to end this pandemic. Several therapies have shown some effectiveness, but the virus’ high mutation rate complicates the development of drugs that treat all variants of concern,” Sahay said.

Proteins are large, complex molecules that serve as the workhorses of cells, enabling all of the biological functions within a cell.

DNA holds the blueprints from which proteins get made after the code is first transcribed into mRNA.

An enzyme is a type of protein that acts as a catalyst for biochemical reactions. HACE2 – short for human angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 – is an enzyme of the airway cells.

It is also expressed in the heart, kidney and intestine, and plays a role in numerous physiological functions.

”Simply giving a COVID-19 patient hACE2 would have limited effectiveness in treating the disease because the soluble form of the enzyme, the kind that can circulate throughout the body, has a short half-life – less than two hours, meaning it would not stay in a person’s system very long,” Sahay said.

However, lipid nanoparticles (LNP) containing mRNA that orders production of the enzyme can help overcome that problem.

In the study, published in ACS Nano and Advanced Science, the researchers engineered synthetic mRNA to encode a soluble form of the enzyme, packaged the mRNA into lipid nanoparticles and delivered it to cells in the liver with an IV.

Within two hours, the enzyme was in the mice’s bloodstream, and it stayed there for days. The scientists also delivered the loaded LNP via inhalation, prompting epithelial cells in the lungs to secrete soluble hACE2.

”The soluble enzyme effectively inhibited live SARS-CoV-2 from infecting host cells,” said OSU postdoctoral researcher Jeonghwan Kim.

”The synthesis of mRNA is fast, affordable and scalable, and LNP-delivered mRNA can be repeated as necessary to sustain protein production until the infection subsides. Once treatment stops, the no-longer-needed soluble hACE2 clears the system in a matter of days,” Kim said.

Next steps involve showing that the protein prevents infection in mice, said Sahay, who added that the mRNA treatment is possibly ”a couple of years” away from being available to human patients.

Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.

Top News

Ravi Varma’s ‘hitherto unseen’ portrait of his granddaughter on display in Bengaluru on April 29-30

Focus on KL Rahul to prove himself ahead Indian team selection when LSG take on MI

Stay blessed: Pakistani star Mahira Khan to Arijit Singh after attending singer’s concert in Dubai

LS polls 2024: Setback for Congress in Indore — Party nominee Akshay Bam withdraws candidature

Inter-state drug racket: 6 more held, fourth narcotics lab unearthed in Rajasthan’s Sirohi

Uppunda: One killed, five injured in road mishap

When is Modi govt going to pay Karnataka’s MGNREGS workers their wages, asks Congress

Related Articles More

Traffic noise can increase risk of cardiovascular disease: Study

Nearsightedness is at epidemic levels – and the problem begins in childhood

Study finds genetic basis for link between depression, heart disease

World Malaria Day: WHO calls for equitable health access

What role does genetics play in breast cancer? How can genetic testing help with early breast cancer diagnosis?

MUST WATCH

Skin Rash, Causes, Signs and Symptoms

11 bullets found in python’s body!

K. Jayaprakash Hegde Sharing His Memories

Grafting Jack Anil

Heat Illness


Latest Additions

Woman files complaint after miscreant shares her obscene pictures on social media

Padubidri: Man thrashes bus driver in road rage incident

Bengaluru: 2 arrested in POCSO case

Goa airport receives bomb threat email, security beefed up

SC extends stay on proceedings in hate speech case against TN BJP chief K Annamalai

Thanks for visiting Udayavani

You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.