Friday, September 13, 2013
Vaccine 'clears HIV-like virus' in monkeys
A vaccine for the monkey equivalent of HIV
appears to eradicate the virus, a study
suggests.
Research published in the journal Nature has
shown that vaccinated monkeys can clear Simian
Immunodeficiency Virus (SIV) infection from their
bodies.
It was effective in nine of the 16 monkeys that were
inoculated.
The US scientists say they now want to use a similar
approach to test a vaccine for HIV in humans.
Prof Louis Picker, from the Vaccine and Gene Therapy
Institute at Oregon Health and Science University,
said: "It's always tough to claim eradication - there
could always be a cell which we didn't analyse that
has the virus in it. But for the most part, with very
stringent criteria... there was no virus left in the body
of these monkeys."
Search and destroy
The research team looked at an aggressive form of
virus called SIVmac239, which is up to 100 times
more deadly than HIV.
Infected monkeys usually die within two years, but in
some inoculated primates the virus did not take hold.
The vaccine is based on another virus called
cytomegalovirus (CMV), which belongs to the herpes
family.
It used the infectious power of CMV to sweep
throughout the body. But instead of causing disease,
it has been modified to spur the immune system into
action to fight off the SIV molecules.
"It maintains an armed force, that patrols all the
tissues of the body, all the time, indefinitely,"
explained Prof Picker.
The researchers gave rhesus macaque monkeys the
vaccine, and then exposed them to SIV.
They found that at first the infection began to
establish and spread. But then the monkeys' bodies
started to respond, searching out and destroying all
signs of the virus.
Of the monkeys that successfully responded to the
vaccine, they were still clear of infection between
one-and-a-half and three years later.
Prof Picker said his team was still trying to work out
why the vaccination worked in only about half of the
monkeys.
"It could be the fact that SIV is so pathogenic that
this is the best you are ever going to get.
"There is a battle going on, and half the time the
vaccine wins and half the time it doesn't," he said.
Human trials
The researchers are now testing the vaccine to see if
it can be used after SIV exposure to treat and
potentially cure infected monkeys.
They also want to see if the technique could work in
humans.
Prof Picker said: "In order to make a human version
we have to make sure it is absolutely safe.
The researchers now want to move from monkeys to
test the vaccine in humans
"We have now engineered a CMV virus which
generates the same immune response but has been
attenuated [modified to lose its virulence] to the
point where we think it is unequivocally safe."
This would first have to pass through the regulatory
authorities, but if it does, he said he hoped to start
the first clinical trials in humans in the next two
years.
Commenting on the research, Dr Andrew Freedman,
from Cardiff University School of Medicine, said: "This
suggests that prophylactic vaccines - vaccines
designed to prevent infection - using CMV vectors
may be a promising approach for HIV.
"While they may not prevent the initial infection,
they might lead to subsequent clearance, rather than
the establishment of chronic infection."
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