快猫短视频

Genetic treatment closes door on HIV

HIV may be thwarted by genetically altering blood cells to remove the "door handle" by which the virus invades the cells

Editorial: We should play the long game with genomics

A PIONEERING treatment to thwart HIV by genetically altering blood cells so the virus cannot invade them has shown in the first nine people to receive it.

The treatment involves taking the white blood cells most prone to infection by HIV, called CD4+ cells, from someone with HIV. These are then altered in the lab to sabotage a gene called CCR5, before being returned to the patient. Because CCR5 makes the molecular 鈥渄oor-handle鈥 by which HIV enters cells, treated cells become impossible for the virus to infect. 鈥淭his is the first example of genetic editing to introduce a disease-resistant gene in patients,鈥 says lead investigator at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.

Preliminary results presented this week at a virus in Boston reveal that a year after the treatment, the altered cells had increased in number. In some patients, the cells had colonised areas of the gut and rectum mucosal linings where HIV multiplies, and where native CD4+ cells are usually depleted.

Topics: HIV and AIDS