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The humble banana may help prevent HIV spread | University of Michigan scientists have identified
a chemical in bananas as a potent inhibitor of HIV infection. Accordion to University
of Michigan Medical School scientists, the potent new inhibitor of HIV, derived
from bananas, may open the door to new treatments to prevent sexual transmission
of HIV. Scientists have an emerging interest in lectins, naturally occurring chemicals
in plants, because of their ability to halt the chain of reaction that leads to
a variety of infections. In laboratory tests, BanLec, the lectin found in bananas,
was as potent as two current anti-HIV drugs. Based on the findings published March
19 in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, BanLec may become a less expensive
new component of applied vaginal microbicides, researchers say. New ways of stopping
the spread of the HIV are vitally needed. The rate of new infections of HIV is
outpacing the rate of new individuals getting anti-retroviral drugs by 2.5 to1,
and at present it appears an effective vaccine is years away. "HIV is still rampant
in the U.S. and the explosion in poorer countries continues to be a bad problem
because of tremendous human suffering and the cost of treating it," says study
senior author David Marvovitz, M.D., professor of internal medicine at the U-M
Medical School . Although condom use is quite effective, condoms are most successful
in preventing infection if used consistently and correctly, which is often not
the case. "That's particularly true in developing countries where women have little
control over sexual encounters so development of a long-lasting, self-applied
microbicide is very attractive," Markovitz says. Some of the most promising compounds
for inhibiting vaginal and rectal HIV transmission are agents that block HIV prior
to integration into its target cell. The new research describes the complex actions
of lectins and their ability to outsmart HIV. Lectins are sugar-binding proteins.
They can identify foreign invaders, like a virus, and attach themselves to the
pathogen. The U-M team discovered BanLec, the lectin in bananas, can inhibit HIV
infection by binding to the sugar-rich HIV-1 envelope protein, gp120, and blocking
its entry to the body. "The problem with some HIV drugs is that the virus can
mutate and become resistant, but that's much harder to do in the presence of lectins,"
says lead author Michael D. Swanson, a doctoral student in the graduate program
in immunology at the University of Michigan Medical School. "Lectins can bind
to the sugars found on different spots of the HIV-1 envelope, and presumably it
will take multiple mutations for the virus to get around them," he says.
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