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Promising HIV vaccine
VACCINES DESIGNED to trigger an immune response to a small HIV
protein called Tat could be a promising way to fend off the
virus, intriguing new data suggest. According to a report in
Nature, "killer" T cells targeted to the Tat protein can
effectively contain simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), the
monkey version of HIV, during the natural course of early
infection.
University of Wisconsin researchers found that these Tat-
specific killer T cells eliminated the original strain of SIV
four weeks after they exposed rhesus macaque monkeys to the
virus.
The monkeys still had some SIV, but this SIV differed genetically
from the original strain.
These small genetic changes, pinpointed by the research team and
traced predominantly to the Tat protein, provided enough disguise
to enable the virus to escape immune attack.
"These animal studies open the window on immune events in early
HIV infection and provide a rationale for exploring a new
approach to designing HIV vaccines," says Anthony S. Fauci,
director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases (NIAID). "The results suggest that using vaccines that
stimulate immune responses against virus proteins produced within
a few hours after infection, such as Tat, may help control HIV."
"This is the first time someone has investigated the entire
cellular immune response during the acute phase of infection,"
adds Peggy Johnston, NIAID's assistant director for AIDS
vaccines.
The cellular immune response primarily consists of killer T
cells, which attack infected cells rather than target free virus.
"If ongoing work by these investigators shows that vaccinating
monkeys with SIV Tat induces a massive killer T-cell response
that can prevent infection or substantially reduce the amount of
virus in monkeys, research on HIV vaccines that incorporate
similar targets will be stimulated."
Current products in human vaccine trials primarily induce immune
responses to envelope or other structural proteins of HIV rather
than to functional proteins like Tat, which is required for the
virus to replicate.
Virus levels peak within weeks after both HIV and SIV infection,
but decline soon after when strong killer T-cell responses
develop.
These responses, however, can hold the virus at bay only so long,
eventually losing out to the virus. The power struggle shifts in
favor of the virus, the Wisconsin researchers found, because
killer T cells pressure the virus to evolve or be destroyed.
The challenge remains to design vaccines that induce killer T-
cell responses so that the immune system retains the power.
Patricia D'Souza, a project officer for this study, says cellular
immune responses to HIV and SIV have been difficult to
investigate, and only recent research developments made this work
possible.
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