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Possible cure for HIV?


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#1 Tony2103

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Posted 31 May 2011 - 11:39 AM

http://articles.phil...ls-hiv-positive

In a feat that is renewing hopes for conquering AIDS, researchers have genetically engineered patients' vital immune cells to make them resistant to HIV infection.

To confer this invulnerability, scientists took the immune cells from HIV-positive patients' own blood, then snipped out a single gene - the first time such a precise alteration has been achieved on a meaningful scale.

When put back in the patient, the cells no longer make a receptor that HIV needs to enter the cell, effectively blocking the virus.

At an AIDS conference Wednesday in Boston, University of Pennsylvania gene-therapy expert Carl June presented data from nine HIV-positive patients who received the novel treatment in Philadelphia, New York, and California. The first patient received the one-shot infusion in July 2009.


Edited by Tony2103, 31 May 2011 - 11:40 AM.


#2 LWFM

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Posted 01 June 2011 - 02:58 AM

Very interesting ... but when you read page 2 :Forgetfull:

#3 Jason_Bourne

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Posted 01 June 2011 - 06:11 AM

This is certainly not a magic bullet or a cure than could possibly be applied to any population in the foreseeable future. But it is just one of many, many encouraging results of the research that has been going on.

Thanks, Tony, for bringing this to our attention. PLUS ONE!

#4 Nujo

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Posted 16 July 2011 - 06:03 PM

View PostTony2103, on 31 May 2011 - 11:39 AM, said:

http://articles.phil...ls-hiv-positive

In a feat that is renewing hopes for conquering AIDS, researchers have genetically engineered patients' vital immune cells to make them resistant to HIV infection.

To confer this invulnerability, scientists took the immune cells from HIV-positive patients' own blood, then snipped out a single gene - the first time such a precise alteration has been achieved on a meaningful scale.

When put back in the patient, the cells no longer make a receptor that HIV needs to enter the cell, effectively blocking the virus.

At an AIDS conference Wednesday in Boston, University of Pennsylvania gene-therapy expert Carl June presented data from nine HIV-positive patients who received the novel treatment in Philadelphia, New York, and California. The first patient received the one-shot infusion in July 2009.



I have just heard there are 3 ladyboys in Los i have been diagnosed hiv+ do anyone no who. Mongering is be coming dangerous now. That the ladyboys have to take your come for analysis

#5 bluesman55

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Posted 13 September 2011 - 05:03 AM

BBC

12 September 2011 Last updated at 07:38 ET

Glowing cats shed light on Aids

Cats that have been genetically modified to glow in the dark are being used to gain insights into Aids.

Attached File  1ac.jpg   15.63K   0 downloads
The cats expressed the fluorescent protein throughout their bodies


The scientists inserted one gene into the cats that helps them resist the feline form of Aids.

They also inserted a gene that produces a fluorescent protein called GFP, Nature Methods journal reports.

This protein - which is produced naturally in jellyfish - is commonly used in this area of research to monitor the activity of altered genes.

"We did it to mark cells easily just by looking under the microscope or shining a light on the animal," said Dr Eric Poeschla, from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, US.

The antiviral gene comes from a rhesus macaque, and produces a protein called a restriction factor that can resist Aids-causing viruses affecting other animals.

The team from the US and Japan then transferred this gene, along with the one for GFP, into feline eggs - known as oocytes.

The method worked so well that nearly all offspring from the modified eggs had the restriction factor genes. And these proteins were made throughout the cats' bodies.

The researchers found that there was reduced replication of the feline Aids virus - known as feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) - in these cats.

Just as the human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV, does in people, FIV works by wiping out infection-fighting T-cells.

FIV infects mostly feral cats, of which there are half a billion in the world, Dr Poeschla said. It is transmitted by biting, largely by males defending their territory, but companion cats are affected as well.

In both humans and cats, proteins called restriction factors that normally fight off viral infections are defenseless against HIV and FIV because the viruses have evolved potent counter-weapons.

But certain monkey versions of these restriction factors are capable of fighting the viruses.

So far, Dr Poeschla's team has only tested cells taken from the animals and found they were resistant to FIV. But eventually they plan to expose the cats to the virus and see if they are protected.

"If you could show that you confer protection to these animals, it would give us a lot of information about protecting humans," the Mayo Clinic researcher explained.


Attached File  1ab.jpg   6.8K   0 downloads
The method could be applied to studying forms of Aids in other animals


See also: http://news.bbc.co.u...ure/8070252.stm

Edited by bluesman55, 13 September 2011 - 05:05 AM.


#6 roscoe

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Posted 13 September 2011 - 05:24 PM

You have to remember that it takes a huge amount of money, time and effort to productize any cure... FDA clinical trials for a new drug are typically over $1 billion. Drug companies hate to invest in HIV vaccines, because even if they have the patent, countries like Thailand will declare the new vaccine a "public good" and ignore the patent (which is what they are doing with the antiretrovirals).

AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria are the world's three most deadly infections ... and none of the drug companies want to invest in vaccine work, because the profit is so elusive


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