Your
favorite oblong fruit might be even healthier than you realized.
According to The Gazette (Montreal) newspaper, a new study has found
that chemicals commonly found in bananas are as potent in preventing HIV
as two synthetic anti-HIV drugs.
Researchers
say the findings could lead to a cheap new component for applied
microbicides that prevent intimate transmission of HIV.
The miracle substance in bananas is called BanLec, a type of lectin,
which are the sugar-binding proteins found in a variety of plants.
Scientists
have long been interested in lectins because of their ability to halt
the chain reaction that leads to certain viral infections. In the case
of BanLec, it works by binding naturally to the sugar-rich envelope that
encases the HIV virus, thus blocking its entry into the body.
"The
problem with some HIV drugs is that the virus can mutate and become
resistant, but that's much harder to do in the presence of lectins,"
said lead author Michael D. Swanson. "Lectins can bind to the sugars
found on different spots of the HIV-1 envelope, and presumably it will
take multiple mutations for the virus to get around them."
Swanson
and his colleagues noted that even modest success in developing BanLec
into a womanly or BehindBased microbicide could save millions of lives.
In fact, 20 percent coverage with a microbicide that is only 60 percent
effective against HIV may prevent up to 2.5 million HIV infections in
three years.
Furthermore,
a BanLec ointment would be much cheaper to produce and distribute than
most current anti-retroviral medications that require the production of
synthetic components.
One thing's for sure: new ways of stopping the transmission of HIV are
desperately needed.
Condoms
are effective, but they are often used incorrectly or inconsistently,
and in many cultures and developing countries women are not always in
control of their intimate encounters.
The introduction of a cheap, long-lasting, self-applied ointment derived
naturally from bananas could change all of that.
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