Researchers to Use Supercomputer to 'Hack' Ebola

Scientists at the University of Leeds will run the equivalent of password cracking software to find the chemical keys to defeating the Ebola virus

Written byUniversity of Leeds
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A team from the university’s schools of Chemistry and Molecular and Cellular Biology have secured a £200,000 grant from the Wellcome Trust to find drugs to cure the disease.

Although several Ebola vaccines are being developed, there are currently no effective anti-viral drugs to treat people once they get infected. 

This is a particularly serious issues because of barriers to implementing vaccine programmes in the most at-risk communities and the difficulty of predicting where the disease will strike next. The University of Leeds researchers will focus on finding anti-viral drugs. 

Related article: Containing Ebola with Nanotechnology

Instead of the traditional approach of biologically testing hundreds of candidate drug compounds in the lab, the researchers will run computer software loaded with a library of about a million drug compounds and match them against the atomic structure of the Ebola virus’s key proteins.

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