Protease inhibitors (PIs) are a class of medications used to treat or prevent infection by viruses, including HIV and Hepatitis C. PIs prevent viral replication by inhibiting the activity of HIV-1 protease, an enzyme used by the viruses to cleave nascent proteins for final assembly of new virons.
The class of medications called protease inhibitors was developed by Dr. David Ho, an American doctor and specialist in Infectious Diseases and AIDS.
Indinavin is Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) protease inhibitor.
"Protease Paunch" is an effect that occurs with some people who are taking a protease inhibitor drug as part of an anti-retroviral therapy to treat HIV. Protease inhibitors are widely used as part of a drug regimen to treat HIV, and many people taking the medicines have noticed a bulge or distended abdomen. In it's most severe cases, it can appear as if the person is pregnant. This can happen to both men and women, but does not affect everyone who is taking a protease inhibitor. The "protease paunch" is a nickname given to the more general condition of lipodystrophy, which is a shifting of body fat in a person. In addition to the paunch, a deposit of fat on the top of the neck can occur, often called a 'buffalo hump', as well as fat can be lost from the facial area and arms and legs.
Serum protease inhibitor alpha-1-antitrypsin
Protease inhibitor
The third class of antiretroviral drugs developed against HIV were the protease inhibitors. These work far back in the life cycle of HIV, after host cell integration but before budding. These drugs affect the enzyme protease, which is used to cut up the HIV protein to be packaged into virions. When the cell produces HIV proteins, the raw material is in a long connected string. The enzyme protease acts as a "scissor" to cut up the string into the protein for each virion. Protease inhibitors prevent protease from doing this. They resemble pieces of the protein string that protease usually cuts. This disrupts the cutting process, which prevents the chain from being cut into small pieces, which prevents HIV from making copies of itself.
Protease inhibitors are considered one of the most potent medications for HIV developed so far.
Protease is an enzyme that inhibits incorrrect proteins such as HIV proteins such gag pol proteins so is ubut one ingredient used in 'Haart' treatment its a retroviral slowing agent! and works well!
protease inhibitors :)
Protease inhibitors.
protease
Blood type has never been mentioned as an inhibitor of HIV.
Alph-1-antitrypsin, produced in the liver, is a protease inhibitor. It inhibits Factor XIa, thrombin, kallikrein, plasmin, and tPA in the coagulation pathway. It is the major inhibitor of FXIa.