Publications by authors named "Lok Man John Law"

Cellular antiviral programs encode molecules capable of targeting multiple steps in the virus lifecycle. Zinc-finger antiviral protein (ZAP) is a central and general regulator of antiviral activity that targets pathogen mRNA stability and translation. ZAP is diffusely cytoplasmic, but upon infection ZAP is targeted to particular cytoplasmic structures, termed stress granules (SGs).

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New drugs to treat hepatitis C are expected to be approved over the next few years which promise to cure nearly all patients. However, due to issues of expected drug resistance, suboptimal activity against diverse hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotypes and especially because of their extremely high cost, it is unlikely that these HCV drugs will substantially reduce the world's HCV carrier population of around 170 million in the near future or the estimated global incidence of millions of new HCV infections. For these reasons, there is an urgent need to develop a prophylactic HCV vaccine and also to determine if therapeutic vaccines can aid in the treatment of chronically infected patients.

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Background & Aims: Very low density lipoproteins (VLDLs) are triacylglycerol (TG)-rich lipoproteins produced by the human liver. VLDLs derive the majority of their TG cargo from the lipolysis of TG stored in hepatocellular lipid droplets (LDs). Important roles for LDs and the VLDL secretory pathway in the cell culture production of infectious hepatitis C virus (HCV) have been established.

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