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Researchers get closer to a more effective HIV treatment—and possibly a vaccine

 

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Last year the worldwide community of HIV researchers had a major disappointment—its leading potential vaccine, so promising in lab tests, had fallen flat in human trials. Today there is better news: in the new issue of Cell, researchers from Harvard Medical School and the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center announce that a technique called RNA interference can dramatically suppress HIV's spread not just in a petri dish but also in mice carrying human immune cells. The findings suggest a new mechanism for treating HIV with drugs—and perhaps also preventing it with a vaccine. NEWSWEEK's Mary Carmichael spoke with Harvard's Priti Kumar, one of the study's leaders. Excerpts:

NEWSWEEK: RNA interference is certainly promising—its discoverers won the Nobel Prize two years ago. Can you explain to me how it works, both in general and when it's used against HIV?
Priti Kumar: RNA interference is a mechanism where short molecules of ribonucleic acid called siRNA are introduced into cells. They can attach to very specific strands of mRNA, the chemical that DNA uses to [express genes], and prevent the mRNA from doing its job [by destroying it]. That stops gene expression from taking place. These short molecules of RNA were discovered as an innate defensive mechanism that plants were using against viruses. They are now known to function in mammalian cells, too.

Scientists had the idea of using them against HIV a few years ago, and they proved that the RNA molecules could stop the virus in a lab setting.
Yes, [the laboratory of Kumar's collaborator Premlata Shankar] was one of the first to discover that targeting HIV with RNA interference could lead to the virus' destruction—replication couldn't take place, and thus the spread of HIV from one cell to another could be totally stopped. The challenge then was how to introduce the siRNA into the T cells, the human cells that are targeted by HIV. Once the virus infects the body, there's a huge decline in these T cells, and we suspected that having the short molecules of RNA ready in the T cells could prevent that. The challenge was to get them into those specific T cells in the first place.

So how did you do it?
We attached the short RNA molecules to antibodies that are attracted to a protein found only on the outside of T cells. Binding an antibody to this particular protein doesn't seem to affect the T cell's normal activity at all. And we had to be very careful about that—we didn't want the T cells to get activated or suppressed. But it appears that engaging this molecule on the cells does not have any debilitative consequences; it just delivers the RNA into the inside of the cells.

Once the RNA is inside the cell, what does it do?
It stops three key genes … from working. One of these is a human gene, CCR5, a molecule of choice for preventing the virus' entry into cells. But we also had short molecules of RNA targeting two other HIV genes to destroy the viral RNA if it gains entry into cells. One of the major problems with current HIV drugs, the antiretrovirals, is that the virus can develop into mutated strains that become resistant to the drug. You could also have this happen if you used a single type of siRNA—that could lead to the development of mutated, resistant strains of the virus too. But if you can target multiple genes at the same time, the probability of resistant strains coming up is very low.

So you're targeting the other two genes as a backup. Let's zoom out from the cell for a minutewhat happened when you actually tried this out in mice?
Well, one of the other challenges in studying HIV infection is the lack of good animal models. HIV can infect only human T cells. Even with primate models, you are forced to use simian immunodeficiency virus instead, which is closely related to HIV, or artificial viruses that contain parts of both SIV and HIV. But we had a group of immunodeficient mice to study. They lack their own immune system, so you can introduce human T cells into these mice and they don't regard those cells as foreign or reject them.

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  • Posted By: WILL NYORKER @ 09/19/2008 2:04:52 PM

    Dear Sarah, If he hates me, he must hate you twice as much, cause I'm sure I'll see him before you!!!

  • Posted By: WILL NYORKER @ 09/19/2008 2:03:43 PM

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  • Posted By: RedRaider621 @ 08/28/2008 11:19:46 AM

    i dont care who you are, this is good for everyone, as it affects and destroys many people's lives

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