Soy Sauce Molecule May Unlock Drug Therapy for HIV Patients

Compounds can be 70 times more potent than Tenofovir, a first-line HIV regimen

Written byUniversity of Missouri
| 2 min read
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For HIV patients being treated with anti-AIDS medications, resistance to drug therapy regimens is commonplace. Often, patients develop resistance to first-line drug therapies, such as Tenofovir, and are forced to adopt more potent medications. Virologists at the University of Missouri now are testing the next generation of medications that stop HIV from spreading, and are using a molecule related to flavor enhancers found in soy sauce, to develop compounds that are more potent than Tenofovir.

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