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Novel Inhibitor of HIV Replication

Technology Benefits
Structurally unrelated to current anti-viral therapiesHas potent broad spectrum antiviral activity (e.g. treatment of HIV and various enteroviruses)May act through a potentially novel mechanism of action
Technology Application
Treatment for HIV-1 infectionTreatment for a variety of enterovirus infectionsMaybe used to treat drug-resistant variants of HIV-1 infection
Detailed Technology Description
UCLA researchers led by Profs. Paul Krogstad and Jun Zuo have identified a novel small molecule inhibitor of HIV-1 replication, as well as a broad spectrum anti-viral for the treatment of a variety of enteroviruses. Additionally this molecule is structurally unrelated to current antiviral therapeutics, and potentially utilizes a novel mechanism of action, and may be useful for variants of HIV that are resistant to current therapies.
Others

State Of Development

Researchers have tested this inhibitor in models of HIV-1 and enterovirus infection.


Background

Virus-borne diseases represent a significant proportion of infectious diseases worldwide. These diseases, including HIV the virus that causes AIDS which affect millions of people, and are often life-threatening, and have enormous economic impacts; the global market for HIV is estimated at ~$11 billion. Thus, drugs targeting a broad spectrum of viral types would have enormous market potential. However, almost all of the commercially available therapies are specific for particular viruses. The few broad-spectrum drugs are effective only against a limited number of viral types. They can also cause debilitating side effects, limiting the dosages to suboptimal levels. A broad spectrum antiviral therapy is essentially absent in the current marketplace, and few broad-spectrum antivirals are past the preclinical stage. Therapeutic approaches to treat a wide range of pathogenic viruses are therefore highly desirable.


Related Materials



Additional Technologies by these Inventors


Tech ID/UC Case

29043/2016-99I-0


Related Cases

2016-99I-0

*Abstract
UCLA researchers in the David Geffen School of Medicine have discovered a new small molecule inhibitor for HIV-1 replication.
*Principal Investigator

Name: Paul Krogstad

Department:


Name: Jun Zuo

Department:

Country/Region
USA

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