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Researchers Discover Gene That Blocks HIV

stemceller writes to tell us that a team of researchers at the University of Alberta claims to have discovered a gene capable of blocking HIV thereby preventing the onset of full blown AIDS. "Stephen Barr, a molecular virologist in the Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, says his team has identified a gene called TRIM22 that can block HIV infection in a cell culture by preventing the assembly of the virus. 'When we put this gene in cells, it prevents the assembly of the HIV virus," said Barr, a postdoctoral fellow. "This means the virus cannot get out of the cells to infect other cells, thereby blocking the spread of the virus.'"

15 of 333 comments (clear)

  1. Holy crap! by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Does anyone know if gene therapy has progressed far enough to actually apply this to cell DNA? Is this actually a real cure for AIDS?

    1. Re:Holy crap! by ScentCone · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Does anyone know if gene therapy has progressed far enough to actually apply this to cell DNA? Is this actually a real cure for AIDS

      Sure. They just use a mostly-dead other virus to permanently change your genetic code. Nothing could possibly go wrong.

      --
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    2. Re:Holy crap! by Cadallin · · Score: 4, Insightful
      No, It is not even potentially a cure for AIDS. It does look like it might offer a route for immunization, or at least increased resistance. This would still be an incredible breakthrough, but it is important to keep perspective on what the realities are.

      Always Remember: AIDS is Deadly. It is not a "chronic condition." It is a death sentence, maybe it'll take 5, even 10 years to kill some small group of victims, for many it is as few as 6-24 months. Way, way to many young people somehow manage to remain ignorant of this.

    3. Re:Holy crap! by Ctrl-Z · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh, I see. So making a vaccine which can help protect the 99.4% of humanity that is not infected is not nearly as exciting as a cure for the 0.6% of humanity living with HIV?

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    4. Re:Holy crap! by garett_spencley · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No one is understating the importance of a vaccine, and should one be developed it will be a day to celebrate. However, a cure would be more exciting.

      Why ?

      Because a cure will "save" the 0.6% of the population AND leave the remaining 99.4% of the population with the peace of mind of knowing that in the unfortunate event that they do contract HIV they are not completely fsck'd.

      Of course the best scenario would be both a vaccine and a cure.

    5. Re:Holy crap! by harry666t · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Believe me or not, but there /are/ things that are worse than death...

    6. Re:Holy crap! by gad_zuki! · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Hi, you must be new here. Heck just saying "Bill Gates is the devil" is at least +1 insightful.

      btw, Bill Gates is the devil.

  2. Re:But how will it be used? by TheMeuge · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Can we please stop the trolling?

    Science is expensive. Large-scale high-throughput biomedical science is even more expensive. Clinical trials are EVEN MORE expensive. Where do you expect that the money for all of that comes from.

    It seems that on Slashdot, the prevalent opinion is that we should all get whatever we want, whenever we want, for free (or nearly free). That's not how the real world works. Many scientists are working on important biological pathways... but it is largely with the financing of the pharmaceutical companies, that they are able to translate their discoveries into drugs.

    Could we improve the system? Of course.
    Should we ban consumer-targeting pharmaceutical advertisement? Absolutely.
    Should we heavily regulate drug companies? Certainly.

    But one thing we should be careful about doing, is assuming that all biomedical science will be miraculously well-financed if drug companies disappear.

  3. Until the Virus Mutates by Veramocor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And it always mutates.

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    Veramocor
  4. How to filter low impact science by digitalderbs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm always suspicious whenever I see ostensibly "high-impact" summaries that link to press releases of work that is either unpublished or published in low impact journals. In this case, I haven't looked up the impact factor of the journal PLoS pathogens (article), but I do biophysics research on HIV and I've never heard of this journal. As a useful general rule, science articles shouldn't appear on here (and waste everyone's time) unless they've been submitted through a peer-reviewed journal (not the case here), and I think they should hit high-impact journals like Science, Nature, Cell, PNAS, ...

    1. Re:How to filter low impact science by ruinevil · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It should be peer-reviewed at least... Nicer journals can request better experts in the peer review process, who understand the methods, hypotheses, and may point to some other papers that go against or help the findings. Plospathogens is an new open-access peer-review journal. It might be good in the future, but not right now.

    2. Re:How to filter low impact science by PCM2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As a useful general rule, science articles shouldn't appear on here (and waste everyone's time)

      You seem to have a misguided interpretation of the role and purpose of Slashdot...

      --
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  5. Re:Is healthcare a right? by Pendersempai · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In that case, perhaps filet mignon was a bad example because it is not expensive enough. At some point, people die. Usually, that death can be delayed with medical care. But the further you delay it, the more money it costs, and the cost progression is exponential or perhaps hyperbolic to infinity. So no matter what, eventually you have to pull the plug because you can't afford the next stage of treatment. It's sad, and hopefully someday when our consciousness has been transplanted into circuitry that will not be the case, but until then, we're going to have to continue to put prices on human's lives.

  6. Re:Is healthcare a right? by KiahZero · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You've got an unstated assumption that you're not addressing: that scarce resources should be awarded to those with more resources. It's tempting to treat this as a given, since it's a premise of an unregulated market, but it's not a necessity.

    If healthcare resources are so scarce that we are unable to effectively treat all members of society, then society must decide how to distribute those resources. As I stated above, it's not justice to award those scarce resources to only one class of people. In the original position, one would likely decide to allocate them either based on an attribute other than wealth, or more likely, allocate them in a random distribution (i.e., if there are two people with terminal cancer, and society can only afford to cure one of them, there's a coin flip).

    I also wonder whether you've considered how much of that scarcity is based on scarcity of physical goods, labor, etc., and how much is artificial scarcity that could be changed by changing societal structure. For instance, if a pharmaceutical company can be compensated so that there is incentive to research new life-saving drugs, while amortizing the cost of said drugs over the whole population, rather than just on a small number of sufferers, it may no longer be the case that the sufferers are forced to compete for access to their medication.

    --
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  7. More seriously... by DrYak · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The good part is that HIV attacks the white blood cells, i.e.: cells that aren't fixed in an organ, but that freely mobile in the blood stream and are produced by the bone marrow (which can also be injected freely in the blood stream and will home on its own to the bones).

    So one possibility would be to :
    - get some progenitor cells from the marrow
    - do the recombination under laboratory controlled conditions using whatever methodology seems to be the best (not forced to use viruses that can still replicate other methods could be acceptable)
    - select those progenitor cells where the recombination happened in the most optimal way (the new gene did got indeed inserted, and got inserted at a correct place where it won't cause cancer or otherwise disturb the function of gene that were present before the recombination)
    - inject those modified cells into the patient bloodstream and let them go back to the bone marrow
    - those celles produce a new generation of HIV-resistant lymphocytes.

    As we are not forced to use virus inside a patient but can do the transformation under controlled conditions, and as we have a lot more knowledge about human genome, we might manage to diminish the risk of the transposons continuing to jump around and damage important genes (compared for example to what was found with Monsanto's GM corn).

    Risks of rejection may be lowered compared to what happens with Cystic-fibrosis gene therapy, because :
    - no virus inside the patient body and less foreign material : less likely to trigger a immune response.
    - cells are only modified using the new gene, no other virus-cycle replicating proteins : less likely to be recognized as 'foreign'
    - patient with an active AIDS are immuno-compromised anyway so the risk of immunological reject are lowered anyway.

    Also, unlike other gene therapies, the effect of that one are very likely to be permanent because we have access to the progenitor cells that produce the lymphocytes. Whereas with CF gene therapy, the virus is inhaled and affects cells on the surface of the respiratory tract : mostly differentiated cells that won't divide anymore, once they are dead a new exposition to the virus is necessary to produce a new crop of modified cells, hence the risk of rejection increase with each exposition. In CF, the progenitor cells aren't easily available.

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