Researchers at Center for the AIDS Program of Research (CAPRISA)
discovered potent antibodies which can neutralize and kill multiple
strains of HIV. The study was published in the scientific journal,
Nature on 3 March 2014.
Researchers studied how a South African woman’s body referred to as
CAPRISA 256 (abbreviated to CAP256) responded to her HIV infection by
making potent antibodies. These potent antibodies are also called as
neutralizing antibodies because of their ability to kill multiple
strains of antibodies.
How the potent antibodies were developed
The
potent antibodies were made by the researchers by first identifying the
antibodies present in the blood of the CAP256 and then duplicating
these antibodies by cloning it in the lab. The cloned antibodies were
then used to elucidate the pathway followed by the immune system to make
these potent antibodies.
Findings of the Research
In their earlier
research in 2013, researchers at CAPRISA discovered that a shift in the
position of one sugar molecule on the surface of the HIV virus led to
the development of broadly neutralising antibodies against HIV.
However, in the research conducted on CAP256, the researchers were
also able to isolate a broadly neutralizing antibody and trace its
origins to understand exactly how it rose. This could lead to new HIV
vaccine strategies that are able to stimulate the rare precursors of
these protective antibodies.
The study conducted on CAP256 also showed that broadly neutralising
antibodies have some unusual features. These antibodies generally have
long arms which enabled them to reach through the sugar coat that
protects HIV. Moreover these antibodies had long arms right at the
outset requiring less time and fewer changes to become effective in
killing HIV.
All HIV infected people respond to HIV by making antibodies. In most
patients, these antibodies are not able to kill a wide range of HIV
which is described as a lack of neutralization breadth. However, in a
few infected people, they naturally make antibodies that neutralize many
different kinds of HIV, with their broadly neutralizing antibodies.
South African Department of Health (SADH) has more interest in this
development than anyone else in the world since South Africa has the
largest burden (30 percent) HIV infection globally.
About the CAPRISA consortium
The Research team
was led by Professor Lynn Morris of National Institute for Communicable
Diseases (NICD). The CAPRISA consortium included scientists from the
National Institute for Communicable Diseases in Johannesburg, the
University of KwaZulu-Natal and the University of Cape Town, Vaccine
Research Center of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases, US and Columbia University in New York.
Funding for the research
The
research was primarily funded by the US National Institutes of Health’s
Vaccine Research Center and the South African Department of Science and
Technology. The South African researchers also have fellowships from
the Wellcome Trust, the Fogarty International Center, the National
Research Foundation and the Poliomyelitis Research Foundation.
No comments:
Post a Comment