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SCORPION-xisa [38]
3 years ago
13

The primary healthcare provider prescribes antiviral medication to a human immune deficiency virus–positive client to inhibit th

e viral enzyme that helps insert viral dna into human dna. which drug is being administered?
Biology
1 answer:
Travka [436]3 years ago
4 0
The viral enzyme involved in the insertion of viral DNA to the human DNA is the enzyme <em>integrase. </em>The antiretroviral drug actions to inhibit integrase therefore inhibiting the integration of viral DNA to the human DNA and therefore preventing the viral effects of HIV as well as in vivo viral replication. These drugs usually end in the suffix -gravir, i.e. Raltegravir.
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rotein Function

We have seen that each type of protein consists of a precise sequence of amino acids that allows it to fold up into a particular three-dimensional shape, or conformation. But proteins are not rigid lumps of material. They can have precisely engineered moving parts whose mechanical actions are coupled to chemical events. It is this coupling of chemistry and movement that gives proteins the extraordinary capabilities that underlie the dynamic processes in living cells.

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All Proteins Bind to Other Molecules

The biological properties of a protein molecule depend on its physical interaction with other molecules. Thus, antibodies attach to viruses or bacteria to mark them for destruction, the enzyme hexokinase binds glucose and ATP so as to catalyze a reaction between them, actin molecules bind to each other to assemble into actin filaments, and so on. Indeed, all proteins stick, or bind, to other molecules. In some cases, this binding is very tight; in others, it is weak and short-lived. But the binding always shows great specificity, in the sense that each protein molecule can usually bind just one or a few molecules out of the many thousands of different types it encounters. The substance that is bound by the protein—no matter whether it is an ion, a small molecule, or a macromolecule— is referred to as a ligand for that protein (from the Latin word ligare, meaning “to bind”).

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