Friday, May 22, 2009

HIV Experimental Vaccine Developed In U.S.

U.S. researchers have developed an experimental vaccine against the virus that causes AIDS using a novel technique that leapfrogs the body's natural immune system. The new vaccine, successfully tested in monkeys, is still years away from human use. But it offers new hope of preventing the spread of a disease that has already killed 20 million people and infected 33 million more around the world.

Dr. Philip Johnson and a team of researchers at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine decided to pursue their novel approach because, Johnson says, all previous efforts to get the body's natural immune system to fight off an HIV infection have failed.

"I think that the time has passed and people have seen that the traditional methodologies, the traditional approaches, have not worked. And there's no evidence that they will work in the short term," Dr. Johnson said.

Instead, Johnson and his colleagues pursued a strategy they've been working on for 10 years that focuses on special antibody-like proteins that can neutralize the HIV virus. Bypassing the immune system, the investigators created the proteins from a variant of HIV called SIV, which infects monkeys. They engineered the DNA of these proteins into a harmless cold virus and injected this modified carrier into the muscles of laboratory monkeys that were not infected with SIV.

Once injected into the muscles, the transferred genes began producing and pumping out anti-SIV proteins -- called immunoadhesins -- that circulated throughout the monkeys' bloodstream, binding to SIV and preventing the virus from infecting healthy cells.

In order to produce a vaccine for humans, Johnson says researchers would make immunoadhesins from people who have been infected with HIV for decades, in some cases before they developed AIDS.

"And what we can do is go into those individuals, take cells from them and then actually tease out the genes that are responsible (for keeping AIDS at bay). And then we can use those genes to develop new molecules in the lab that we can turn around and give back to people who have never been exposed to HIV. And in the case of the monkey study that we just published on, we were able to protect the monkeys using that approach," Dr. Johnson said.

To read full article click chosun.com

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