Generic placeholder image

Current Pharmaceutical Design

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1381-6128
ISSN (Online): 1873-4286

Three Properties of the Hepatitis C Virus RNA Genome Related to Antiviral Strategies Based on RNA-Therapeutics: Variability, Structural Conformation and tRNA Mimicry

Author(s): Jordi Gomez, Anna Nadal, Rosario Sabariegos, Nerea Beguiristain, Maria Martell and Maria Piron

Volume 10, Issue 30, 2004

Page: [3741 - 3756] Pages: 16

DOI: 10.2174/1381612043382675

Price: $65

Abstract

The concept of using RNA molecules as therapeutic agents is receiving increasing attention by basic science and pharmaceutical research. Over the past five years, a number of clinical trials have been initiated to evaluate the efficacy and safety of several RNA agents for the treatment of a range of conditions from cancer to infectious disease. From a molecular biology perspective, two main factors are implicated in RNA therapeutics against pathogenic RNAs: i / The activity, stability and delivery of the inactivating agent (ribozyme, RNase P, “decoy” RNA, aptamer, small interfering-RNA) and its co-localisation with the target; and ii / The properties of the RNA substrate, which, in the case of an RNA virus, most likely limit the effectiveness of the inactivating agent. The main reasons are the limited size of the viral genome and the restrictions imposed by the RNA structure and variations at the target. In the first section of this article we review three properties of the HCV RNA genome, from primary sequence to tertiary structure, which imply restrictions and opportunities for RNA-based treatment. In the second section, we briefly describe several of the RNA-based therapeutic strategies against HCV now under development.

Keywords: hepatitis c virus, viral quasispecies, ribozymes, rnase p, sirna, trna-like, rna targeting


Rights & Permissions Print Cite
© 2024 Bentham Science Publishers | Privacy Policy