google.com, pub-4988895920620082, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0

Sunday, October 15, 2017

New Strategized Method Could Help Fight HIV

White blood cells known as T cells play an important role in the immune system's of every human, it response to HIV infection, especially if a patient stops taking anti retroviral medications that normally keep the disease under control.



However, HIV has several strategies it can use to evade T-cell attack. Therefore, some researchers have proposed restructuring a patient's own T cells to more effectively fight HIV.

Several attempts to re engineer T cells to fight HIV have been made in the past, including one approach that made it to clinical testing. However, none have yet been successful enough for widespread use.

Now, a new attempt by Rachel Leibman, a PhD candidate in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, and colleagues shows promise.

The new technique builds on the earlier approach that made it to clinical trials, which relied on a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) a synthetic protein that when added to T cells allows them to fight a specific foe more effectively.

In treatment, T cells extracted from a patient's blood would be reengineered in the lab to express HIV-specific CARs, and then infused back into the patient to fight the virus.

(Other CAR-based techniques successfully enhance T cell attack of some cancer cells.)
Using recent advances in CAR technology, Leibman and her colleagues enhanced the CAR protein that had previously made it to clinical testing.

The protein consists of several different segments, which the scientists systematically tweaked one by one to optimize their performance.

They found that T cells expressing the new CAR were over 50 times more effective than those with the original CAR in preventing viral spread between human cells in the lab.

The researchers also tested the new CAR in mice infected with HIV. They found that mouse T cells reengineered to express the new CAR could protect other T cells in the mice from being attacked and depleted by HIV. In mice that had been receiving antiretroviral treatment, the reengineered T cells delayed rebound of the virus after treatment was stopped.

These findings could pave the way to clinical testing of T-cell reengineering using the new, enhanced CAR. If successful, such an approach could potentially keep HIV under control in the absence of antiretroviral treatment.

"Our data shows for the first time that engineered T cells can significantly control viral rebound in the absence of ART in vivo," the authors explain. "Our next step is to take this concept forward into the clinic."

SOURCE: SCIENCE DAILY

Related Posts:

  • Why Kids Face Chronic Pain Chronic pain in children and teenagers is a dramatically growing problem, with hospital admissions for youngsters with the condition rising ninefold between 2004 and 2010, a new study suggests. The most common type of… Read More
  • Combination Therapy Helps In Rheumatoid Arthritis Giving patients with rheumatoid arthritis two drugs gives better results than giving either of them individually. Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a painful condition of the joints which can lead to considerable disability.… Read More
  • Night Shift Workers Face Increased Breast Cancer Risk Working night shifts for 30 years or more could increase breast cancer risk, a Canadian review suggests. The World Health Organization's International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) considers shift work as a prob… Read More
  • Sugar May Cause Damage to Your Heart People who are concerned about their risk of developing conditions such as Type 2 diabetes or heart disease should get regular blood tests to make sure they are healthy. They should also maintain a healthy diet, since… Read More
  • 'When Does Cancer Turn Into a Claim?' Decades ago Britain was one of the biggest asbestos importers in the world. The so-called “magic mineral” is fire-proof and was used extensively in all types of industry.   Sadly, it is also human-proof with ou… Read More

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *