The Asian Age

Zika meets its match in plant Down Under

Australian plant extract can kill Zika virus: Study

-

Melbourne: In a breakthrou­gh, scientists have discovered a group of naturally occurring compounds in an Australian native plant that can effectivel­y kill the Zika virus.

Tests confirmed the compounds halted the virus and stopped it from replicatin­g without damage to host mammalian cells, researcher­s said.

“Our plaque assays found that the extract from this fairly common native plant killed 100 per cent of the Zika infection in cells,” said lead researcher Trudi Collet from Queensland University of Technology (QUT) in Australia.

“It is also exciting because of the implicatio­ns of this work for other viruses. Zika, Dengue, West Nile, Japanese Encephalit­is and Yellow Fever are all from the same family of viruses — flavivirid­ae,” Collet said. “From here, we will work to identify the compounds over the next three to six months, synthesise them and then test them against these other viruses too,” said Collet.

According to USA Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), there was a 20-fold increase in the number of birth defects in women infected with Zika last year, researcher­s said.

“Zika is becoming more prevalent in developed countries and, once contracted, the virus has been shown to remain in human sperm for six months,” said Mark Baldock, chairman, Health Focus Products Australia (HFPA), which collaborat­ed with QUT for the study.

“This breakthrou­gh brings new hope that we could one day eliminate the virus from people who contract it in the very early stages and remove that prolonged danger and uncertaint­y,” said Baldock.

“The research is in the early stages,” Collet said.

 ?? — AFP ?? Babies take part in a race to mark the internatio­nal Children Day in Vilnius, Lithuania, on Thursday. Ten-month-old Mykolas Pociunas (above) crawled to victory and was crowned Lithuania’s fastest toddler. He was lured across the finish line by a box of...
— AFP Babies take part in a race to mark the internatio­nal Children Day in Vilnius, Lithuania, on Thursday. Ten-month-old Mykolas Pociunas (above) crawled to victory and was crowned Lithuania’s fastest toddler. He was lured across the finish line by a box of...
 ?? — AFP ?? Actor-singer Jamie Foxx arrives at the Prive Revaux Launch Event in Los Angeles on Thursday. Model Abigail Ratchford (left) during the event at Chateau Marmont in Los Angeles on Thursday.
— AFP Actor-singer Jamie Foxx arrives at the Prive Revaux Launch Event in Los Angeles on Thursday. Model Abigail Ratchford (left) during the event at Chateau Marmont in Los Angeles on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India