reverse transcriptase inhibitor
Noun: A reverse transcriptase inhibitor is a type of antiviral medication. Its primary function is to block the activity of an enzyme called reverse transcriptase. This enzyme is crucial for the replication of retroviruses, such as Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). By inhibiting this enzyme, the drug prevents the virus from copying its RNA genetic material into DNA, a necessary step for the virus to integrate into and take over a host cell.
This term is used specifically in medical, pharmacological, and virological contexts to describe a class of drugs used primarily in antiretroviral therapy (ART) for HIV/AIDS treatment. - It is often abbreviated as RTI. - These drugs are not typically used for viruses that do not use reverse transcriptase.
In a medical context:
- The doctor prescribed a combination therapy that included a reverse transcriptase inhibitor.
- Resistance to some older reverse transcriptase inhibitors is a growing concern.
In a scientific explanation:
- Nevirapine is a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI).
- The study compared the efficacy of two different reverse transcriptase inhibitors.
Nucleoside/Nucleotide Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitor (NRTI): A subclass that mimics the building blocks of DNA, causing premature termination of the DNA chain when incorporated by the reverse transcriptase enzyme.
- Zidovudine (AZT) was the first approved nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor.
Non-Nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitor (NNRTI): A subclass that binds directly to the reverse transcriptase enzyme at a different site, deforming it and preventing it from functioning.
- Efavirenz is a commonly used non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor.
- Reverse Transcriptase (n): The enzyme that is the target of this inhibitor class.
- Antiretroviral (adj/n): Referring to drugs or therapy active against retroviruses like HIV. Reverse transcriptase inhibitors are a core component of antiretroviral therapy.
- Protease Inhibitor (n): Another major class of antiviral drugs for HIV that targets a different viral enzyme.
- Integrase Inhibitor (n): A class of HIV drugs that blocks the integrase enzyme.
- RT inhibitor (Abbreviation)
- Transcriptase inhibitor (Less common, context-dependent)
- Combination therapy: The standard HIV treatment approach, which almost always includes one or more reverse transcriptase inhibitors combined with other drug classes.
- Drug resistance: A major issue where the virus mutates and the reverse transcriptase inhibitor loses its effectiveness.
- an antiviral drug that inhibits the action of reverse transcriptase in retroviruses such as HIV