http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/157635#.T_pMD45WKTA
Winning Start-Up Fights AIDS, Biowarfare
A winning Israeli start-up uses nanotechnology to fight HIV/AIDS and other killer viruses. Nano-cells could protect from bio-warfare, too.
The elite 8200 association has chosen its winners in 2012’s Startup Competition. This year’s first place winner is Vecoy Nanomedicines, a firm that uses nanotechnology to fight deadly viruses.
The company has created a totally new way of fighting viruses. Its nano-scale virus traps mimic human cells in order to lure viruses. The viruses are then trapped and destroyed.
The nano-scale “traps” differ from existing treatment for viral illness by targeting viruses before the viruses can affect human cells. The traps are non-toxic to the human host, avoiding the adverse side effects typical of current treatment.
Moreover, viruses cannot develop a resistance to the traps, as by doing so they would become resistance to human cells as well.
“Essentially, we are creating antibiotics for viruses,” said founder and CEO Erez Livneh, a graduate of the Weizmann Institute of Science. “The Vecoy technology will fundamentally change the treatment of viral infections.”
Treatment of cells Vecoy Nanomedicines
Livneh first unveiled his idea two years ago at the Singularity University, an elite science program held in a NASA base in California. Response to the concept was overwhelmingly positive, and when he returned to Israel, he set about making it a reality.