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						Compound found to treat 
						three parasitic tropical diseases 
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		[August 09, 2016] 
		LONDON (Reuters) - Scientists have 
		found a single class of drugs that can kill the parasites responsible 
		for three tropical diseases that affect millions in Africa, Asia and 
		Latin America - Chagas disease, leishmaniasis and sleeping sickness. | 
        
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			 In a study published in the journal Nature, scientists at the 
			Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation found the 
			compound can cure all three diseases in mice, and does not harm 
			normal human cells in laboratory tests. 
 This provides a strong starting point for developing new drugs to 
			replace existing treatments that are expensive, sometimes not very 
			effective, and can also have side effects.
 
 Chagas, leishmaniasis and sleeping sickness kill more than 50,000 
			people a year, but receive relatively little funding for research 
			and drug development.
 
			
			 
			They have different symptoms but are all caused by parasites called 
			kinteoplastids with similar biology and genetics.
 Hoping to find a shared weak spot in that biology, the scientists 
			tested around 3 million chemicals on them. They identified a 
			compound, called GNF6702, that worked against the parasites, and 
			then refined it to make it more potent before testing in it mice.
 
 "We found that these parasites harbor a common weakness. We hope to 
			exploit this weakness to discover and develop a single class of 
			drugs for all three diseases," said Frantisek Supek, who led the 
			work.
 
			
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			The fact that GNF6702 seems to have no adverse effects in mice 
			suggests it might have fewer side-effects than existing drugs, the 
			researchers said, although this will need to be tested in human 
			studies.
 (Reporting by Kate Kelland, Editing by Kevin Liffey)
 
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