Researchers have found that an effective way of treating the coronavirus behind the 2003 SARS epidemic also works on the virus at the heart of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

The substance concerned is nitric oxide, a compound with antiviral properties that is naturally produced by the body itself.

“To our knowledge, nitric oxide is the only substance shown so far to have a direct effect on SARS-CoV-2 [the virus behind the current pandemic],” says Åke Lundkvist, a professor at Uppsala University, who led the study, published in Redox Biology.

While the vaccines are there to help prevent people getting sick in the first place, there is still no effective cure for people who do contract COVID-19.

The main emphasis in the treatments tested has been on relieving symptoms. This can shorten hospital stays and reduce mortality. To date, however, it has not been possible to prove that any of these treatments has affected the actual virus behind the infection.

Nitric oxide is a compound produced in the body. Its functions include acting like a hormone in controlling various organs. It regulates, for example, tension in the blood vessels and blood flow between and within organs. In acute lung failure, nitric oxide can be administered as inhaled gas, in low concentrations, to boost the blood-oxygen saturation level.

During the SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) coronavirus epidemic of 2003, this therapy was tried out with success. One key reason for the successful results was that inflammation in the patients’ lungs decreased. This property of nitric oxide—the protection it affords against infections, by being both antibacterial and antiviral—is the very one that now interests the researchers.

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Their study builds further on a discovery about the coronavirus that caused the first SARS epidemic. In 2003, nitric oxide released from S-Nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine (SNAP) proved to have a distinct antiviral effect.

The researchers from Uppsala University and Karolinska Institute have now investigated how the novel coronavirus involved in the current pandemic, SARS CoV-2, reacts to the compound. And SNAP was shown to a clear antiviral effect on this virus, too—and an effect that grew stronger as the dose was raised.

“The dosage and timing of starting treatment probably play an important part in the outcome, and now need to be explored as soon as possible,” Åke Lundkvist says.

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The research group is now planning to proceed by investigating the antiviral effects of nitric oxide emitted in gas form. To do so, they will construct a model in the laboratory in order to safely simulate a conceivable form of therapy for patients.

Source: Uppsala University

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