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New artificial proteins could improve cancer treatment

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cancersLondon : Danish researchers have developed a new class of artificial proteins that could lead to better treatment of cancers and diabetes.

“When you work with artificial proteins, you have better control over the proteins’ properties,” said one of the researchers, Knud Jensen, Professor at the University of Copenhagen.

“This is valuable when you are developing new, protein-based drugs and enzymes. In general, proteins have a very short lifetime in a body, a key parameter which can be improved for artificial proteins,” Jensen explained.

Nature has created a host of proteins, which come in many forms, and which have many functions in our body.

They are the body’s principal, and hardest working building blocks. For example, some of them provide our muscles with strength while others make sure that our cells receive messages.

In spite of this natural diversity, in the past 20 years or so there has been great scientific interest in creating artificial proteins, in part stimulated by drug development opportunities.

Artificial proteins are made from the smallest of nature’s building blocks.

In this case, the team of researchers succeeded in combining so-called oligonucleotides (short DNA molecules) with peptides (small proteins). The peptides coiled around one another effectively, creating an artificial protein.

“We forced three building blocks together and managed to make them form a protein mimic,” Professor Jesper Wengel from University of Southern Denmark said.

“We have shown that it is possible to enforce peptides together by this approach. It paves the way for testing countless new combinations, which could create new artificial proteins with functions, which nature itself has not created, but which we need,” Wengel noted in the study published in the journal Nature Communications.

The researchers hope that, in the future, artificial proteins can be used to treat some of the major diseases like cancer or diabetes.

Corona

Covid toll in Karnataka is a worrying sign for state government

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Even though Karnataka recorded the lowest number of Covid deaths in April since the virus struck first in 2020, the state is recording a rise in the positivity rate (1.50 per cent). Five people died from the Covid infections in April as per the statistics released by the state health department. In March, the positivity rate stood around 0.53 per cent. In the first week of April it came down to 0.38 per cent, second week registered 0.56 per cent, third week it rose to 0.79 per cent and by end of April the Covid positivity rate touched 1.19 per cent.

on an average 500 persons used to succumb everyday in the peak of Covid infection, as per the data. Health experts said that the mutated Coronavirus is losing its fierce characteristics as vaccination, better treatment facilities and awareness among the people have contributed to the lesser number of Covid deaths.

During the 4th and 6th of April two deaths were reported in Bengaluru, one in Gadag district on April 8, two deaths were reported from Belagavi and Vijayapura on April 30. The first Covid case was reported in the state in March 2020 and three Covid deaths were recorded in the month. In the following month 21 people became victims to the deadly virus, and May 2020 recorded 22 deaths. The death toll recorded everyday after May crossed three digits. However, the third wave, which started in January 2

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