Ebola virus breakthrough may help find potential cures

In the largest and deadliest outbreak of the disease yet recorded, ebola has killed more than 1,000 people in West Africa since March.
A group of scientists in the United States found that ebola carries a protein called VP24 that interferes with a molecule called interferon, which is vital to the immune response.
“One of the key reasons that ebola virus is so deadly is because it disrupts the body’s immune response to the infection,” said Chris Basler of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, who worked on the study.
“Figuring out how VP24 promotes this disruption will suggest new ways to defeat the virus.”
The team, lead by Gaya Amarasinghe from Washington University School of Medicine, found that VP24 works by stopping something called “transcription factor STAT1” — which carries interferon’s antiviral message — from entering the nucleus of a cell and initiating an immune response.
“This study shows just how nefarious the ebola virus can be,” said Ben Neuman, a virologist at Britain’s university of Reading who was not directly involved in this study.
“ebola virus carries a small tool that intercepts the cell’s distress signals, and when this happens, it disables some of the most useful machinery that our bodies have for fighting ebola. That leaves the body with only crude defences that are less effective at stopping the virus, and end up causing much of the damage that can eventually lead to death.”
Ebola is one of the most deadly diseases known in humans and has a case fatality rate of up to 90%. In the current epidemic in West Africa, the virus has infected more than 1,800 people. So far, 1,013 of these have died, the vast majority in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.
Amarasingh’s team, whose work was published in the journal Cell, said understanding how ebola disarms immune defences will be crucial in the development of new treatments.
- Liberia is facing an excruciating choice — deciding which handful of ebola patients will receive an experimental drug that could prove either life-saving or life-threatening.
ZMapp, the untested ebola drug, has arrived in the West African country. Assistant health minister Tolbert Nyenswah said three or four people would begin getting it straight away. The government had previously said two doctors would receive the treatment, but it was unclear who else.
These are the last known doses of ZMapp left in the world.
The US-based company that developed it has said it will take months to build up even a modest supply.