Licorice ingredient ferrets out herpes.A compound in licorice homes in on lab-grown cells infected with a herpes virus and induces them to self-destruct, a new study finds. These results suggest that a drug based on the compound could seek and destroy herpes viruses hiding in people's bodies. Current antiherpes drugs attack the virus only when it's causing symptoms. The virus in the new study is Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus “KSHV” redirects here. For the television station with this callsign, see KSHV (TV). Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) is the eighth human herpesvirus; its formal name according to the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses is HHV-8. (KSHV KSHV Kaposi's Sarcoma-Associated Herpesvirus ), which causes skin and lymph cancers. The researchers suspect that the gene responsible for KSHV's capacity to hide out is latency-associated nuclear antigen (LANA LANA Latency-Associated Nuclear Antigen LANA Lymphology Association of North America LANA Llama Association of North America LANA Lipizzan Association of North America LANA Low-Altitude Night Attack LANA Lithuanian Association of Nonlinear Analysts ). Researchers at New York University New York University, mainly in New York City; coeducational; chartered 1831, opened 1832 as the Univ. of the City of New York, renamed 1896. It comprises 13 schools and colleges, maintaining 4 main centers (including the Medical Center) in the city, as well as the ran lab tests on white blood cells White blood cells A group of several cell types that occur in the bloodstream and are essential for a properly functioning immune system. Mentioned in: Abscess Incision & Drainage, Bone Marrow Transplantation, Complement Deficiencies , some of which were infected with the herpes virus. Exposing the infected cells to the licorice ingredient, glycyrrhizic acid, shuts down LANA. That starts a chain reaction of biochemical changes in the white blood cells, leading to their suicide and the virus' death. The uninfected cells showed no detrimental effects from glycyrrhizic acid, the researchers report in the March Journal of Clinical Investigation The Journal of Clinical Investigation (JCI or J Clin Invest) is a leading biomedical journal, which is radically different from many of its peers in having a high impact factor (in 2006, 15.754) and offering all its contents entirely free. . Despite these results, simply eating licorice is unlikely to purge a herpes virus from a person's system, says study coauthor Ornella Flore. Most of the glycyrrhizic acid in licorice is probably degraded in a person's stomach, she says. To develop a treatment, Flore suggests, researchers could inject glycyrrhizic acid into animals previously infected with viruses and determine which viruses it can ferret out, how potent the drug is, and--if the results are promising--what dose would be needed in people.--N.S. |
|
||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion