American and Chinese scientists have identified how a multi-functional enzyme1 works to fight diseases including HIV infection and autoimmune disorders2.
来自美国和中国的科学家发现一种多功能酶,可以对抗包括艾滋病感染和自体免疫失调在内的疾病。
The study, published on Monday in the journal
Proceedings3 of the National Academy of Sciences, has
detailed4 how the enzyme called SAMHD1 managed to
inhibit5 proteins that
stimulate6 the immune response in human and mouse cells, thus opening up the possibility of finding ways to turn this activity on and off and making way for new
therapeutic7 approaches for hard-to-treat diseases.
The paper's senior author Wu Li, a professor in Ohio State University's Center for Retrovirus Research, and colleagues from China's Wuhan University, have
illuminated8 the way in which SAMHD1 act as a
neutralizer9 of potentially harmful responses during viral infection.
The researchers said that lacking this enzyme due to SAMHD1
gene10 mutations can
activate11 the human immune system and increase inflammation.
"SAMHD1 is responsible for balanced regulation of the immune response, but it also could limit HIV or other viral infections and alter the progression and treatment of certain cancers," Wu told Xinhua. "We need good immune responses, obviously, but we don't want overwhelming immune
activation12."
Wu said the enzyme could break down a
DNA13 building block in our cells - to act as "
molecular14 scissors."
"Too much of this building block due to SAMHD1 deficiency caused by
genetic15 mutations can lead to autoimmune diseases and help cancerous tumors grow. If we can find a way to cut off or reduce the supply, the disease might not be
viable16, like a car without gas."
"Because inflammatory pathways influence nearly all diseases in humans and animals, including HIV infection and cancers, identification of SAMHD1 as an inhibitor of
immunity17 may have far-reaching implications in biomedical research," he said.