Design and testing of Hepatitis Delta Ribozymes for suppression of Chikungunya virus infection in cell cultures
Mark E. Fraser, Cheryl Kucharski, Zoe Loh, Erin Hanahoe, Malcolm J. Fraser

TL;DR
This study explores using Hepatitis Delta ribozymes to suppress Chikungunya virus infection in cell cultures, suggesting potential antiviral applications.
Contribution
The novelty lies in testing Hepatitis Delta ribozymes as a possible antiviral therapy for Chikungunya virus.
Findings
Hepatitis Delta ribozymes showed potential in suppressing Chikungunya virus in cell cultures.
The ribozymes may have broader antiviral applications beyond Chikungunya.
No effective therapeutics currently exist for Chikungunya, highlighting the need for new interventions.
Abstract
Chikungunya virus is an emerging pathogen with widespread distribution in regions of Africa, India, and Asia that threatens to spread into temperate climates following the introduction of its major vector, Aedes albopictus. Recent cases have been documented in Europe, the Caribbean, and the Americas. Chikungunya virus causes a disease frequently misdiagnosed as Dengue fever, with potentially life-threatening symptoms that can result in long term debilitating arthritis. There have been ongoing investigations of possible therapeutic interventions for both acute and chronic symptoms, but to date none have proven effective in reducing the severity or lasting effects of this disease. Recently, a promising vaccine candidate has received accelerated approval, indicating the importance of remedies to this emerging worldwide health threat. Nonetheless, therapeutic interventions for Chikungunya…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHepatitis C virus research · Influenza Virus Research Studies · SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research
