Unraveling Ebola Virus
University of Virginia School of Medicine Scientists Help Unravel How Deadly Ebola Virus Works
Lukas Tamm, PhD, the Harrison Distinguished Professor of Molecular Physiology and Biological Physics and director of UVA’s Center for Membrane Biology
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va., July 5, 2011 – Molecular and cell biologists at the University of Virginia School of Medicine have discovered new information about how the Ebola virus works that could eventually lead to new drug treatments for the deadly virus.
No known cure exists for the Ebola virus, which causes hemorrhagic
fever and can be fatal in up to 90 percent of cases. People who are
infected can have extensive bleeding in and from the body but usually
die of shock, according to the National Institutes of Health. The
disease has only been detected among people living in parts of Africa,
but there are concerns Ebola could be used as a bioterrorism
agent.
UVA’s researchers focused on how the Ebola virus enters healthy cells.
“What we discovered is a very important piece of the Ebola virus life
cycle. We found a key that opens the cellular lock which, in turn, lets
the virus in,” explains Lukas Tamm, PhD, the Harrison Distinguished
Professor of Molecular Physiology and Biological Physics and director
of UVA’s Center for Membrane Biology.
The UVA team found out how a critical piece of the glycoprotein that
sits on the surface of the Ebola virus, called the fusion loop, is
responsible for the penetration of the virus into a healthy cell. The
fusion loop changes its structure to allow Ebola to enter the cell in a
process called membrane fusion, which Tamm likened to the clenching of
a fist. The front end of the fusion loop punches a hole into the
healthy cell membrane, connecting or fusing the two membranes.
“Ebola has to get into the cell in a controlled way, make thousands of
copies of itself, spread into other cells and then do its damage,” Tamm
says. “But now that we have images of these molecules, we could design
drugs that better target Ebola. That’s the hope here, although there
are still many hurdles to overcome before this basic science discovery
can be translated into treatments for patients.”
The research – performed in collaboration with the lab of Judith
White, PhD, a UVA Professor of Cell Biology – was done on a $2 million
nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy instrument bought by UVA
through a shared-instrumentation grant from the National Institutes of
Health.
Their findings were published online June 20 in the journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). The paper,
titled “Structure and function of the complete internal fusion loop
from Ebolavirus glycroprotein 2,” can be found at the journal’s
website.
Contact:
Peter Jump
(434) 924-1501
prj4p@virginia.edu

