BYU Researchers Get a Unique Look at Virus

BYU Researchers Get a Unique Look at Virus


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Ed Yeates ReportingTake a 15-foot high magnet together with a little tiny virus, and you just might see something you've never seen before. How about clues that could kill that virus before it kills us?

BYU Researchers Get a Unique Look at Virus

The National High Magnetic Field Lab in Florida has a 16-ton, 15-foot high magnet that allows researchers to measure teeny tiny distances between molecules and atoms. Using this magnet, Brigham Young University and Florida State University researchers came up with a molecular model that reveals sort of the "black hole" of viruses.

This is an influenza virus molecule. In the center, a protein hole - a doorway if you will - that lets chemicals pass into and out of the virus.

Dr. David Busath/ BYU Biophysics: "If you're trying to design a drug to block a molecule, you have to know where the atoms are, not just what the general shape is."

This is a viral structure we haven't seen before. And yet, through these tiny little doors acid must come in and DNA must come out if the virus is to survive.

Understanding a virus like this on a molecular level has enormous potential applications, applications that would block these viruses.

Dr. David Busath/ BYU Biophysics: "The idea more is to block the door so that its normal function that is required for the virus to replicate is prevented."

AIDS, influenza-- including the Avian strain - and more. In theory, if your block off the channels in these viruses, perhaps..

Dr. David Busath: "The four struts that make up the sides of the hole would come together this way and the hole would collapse."

The Florida/Utah project is currently funded by the National Institutes of Health to the tune of over a million dollars per year.

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