The development, optimisation and comparison of various virological assays and their uses in antiviral assessment of compounds wih potential anti-HIV activity.

The development and optimization of anti-viral screening methods are essential to develop newer more effective, treatments against HIV. The XTT method is a widely described method for antiviral screening. Both continuous HIVinfected cells and experimentally infected T-cells have been used in the XTT...

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Main Author: Singh, Varish.
Other Authors: Parboosing, Raveen.
Language:en_ZA
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10413/504
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-ukzn-oai-http---researchspace.ukzn.ac.za-10413-5042014-02-08T03:49:27ZThe development, optimisation and comparison of various virological assays and their uses in antiviral assessment of compounds wih potential anti-HIV activity.Singh, Varish.Medical virology.HIV infections--Molecular aspects.HIV (Viruses)--Identification.HIV (Viruses)--Molecular aspects.Theses--Virology.The development and optimization of anti-viral screening methods are essential to develop newer more effective, treatments against HIV. The XTT method is a widely described method for antiviral screening. Both continuous HIVinfected cells and experimentally infected T-cells have been used in the XTT assay. We compared these methods to screen several plant-derived extracts for cytotoxicity. Several considerations were taken into account when performing these tests (effect of media, solvents and plant enymes). Experiments were performed to investigate these effects. In addition, p24 and viral load quantification were compared as antiviral screening methods. The study showed that several modifications were necessary when performing the XTT assay on plant extracts, due to the effect of media, solvents and plant enymes. The XTT assays and p24 assays performed using experimentally infected cells are far more specific than those using chronically infected cells. The use of viral loads as an antiviral screening method consistently demonstrated the expected efficacy of AZT.Thesis(MMed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2009.Parboosing, Raveen.2010-08-23T09:51:57Z2010-08-23T09:51:57Z20092009Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10413/504en_ZA
collection NDLTD
language en_ZA
sources NDLTD
topic Medical virology.
HIV infections--Molecular aspects.
HIV (Viruses)--Identification.
HIV (Viruses)--Molecular aspects.
Theses--Virology.
spellingShingle Medical virology.
HIV infections--Molecular aspects.
HIV (Viruses)--Identification.
HIV (Viruses)--Molecular aspects.
Theses--Virology.
Singh, Varish.
The development, optimisation and comparison of various virological assays and their uses in antiviral assessment of compounds wih potential anti-HIV activity.
description The development and optimization of anti-viral screening methods are essential to develop newer more effective, treatments against HIV. The XTT method is a widely described method for antiviral screening. Both continuous HIVinfected cells and experimentally infected T-cells have been used in the XTT assay. We compared these methods to screen several plant-derived extracts for cytotoxicity. Several considerations were taken into account when performing these tests (effect of media, solvents and plant enymes). Experiments were performed to investigate these effects. In addition, p24 and viral load quantification were compared as antiviral screening methods. The study showed that several modifications were necessary when performing the XTT assay on plant extracts, due to the effect of media, solvents and plant enymes. The XTT assays and p24 assays performed using experimentally infected cells are far more specific than those using chronically infected cells. The use of viral loads as an antiviral screening method consistently demonstrated the expected efficacy of AZT. === Thesis(MMed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2009.
author2 Parboosing, Raveen.
author_facet Parboosing, Raveen.
Singh, Varish.
author Singh, Varish.
author_sort Singh, Varish.
title The development, optimisation and comparison of various virological assays and their uses in antiviral assessment of compounds wih potential anti-HIV activity.
title_short The development, optimisation and comparison of various virological assays and their uses in antiviral assessment of compounds wih potential anti-HIV activity.
title_full The development, optimisation and comparison of various virological assays and their uses in antiviral assessment of compounds wih potential anti-HIV activity.
title_fullStr The development, optimisation and comparison of various virological assays and their uses in antiviral assessment of compounds wih potential anti-HIV activity.
title_full_unstemmed The development, optimisation and comparison of various virological assays and their uses in antiviral assessment of compounds wih potential anti-HIV activity.
title_sort development, optimisation and comparison of various virological assays and their uses in antiviral assessment of compounds wih potential anti-hiv activity.
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10413/504
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