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BRAKING NEWS ;AIDS Study Explains How the First Effective HIV Vaccine Worked (449 hits)


AIDS researchers have only been able to guess at what these critical weapons against HIV could be, which is partly why their efforts to create a vaccine have thus far been marked by a long line of failed attempts. But when the RV144 trial in Thailand showed promise in 2009, scientists finally had something to work with. The vaccine was only modestly effective — protecting just 31% of heteros*xual adults from infection — especially compared with inoculations against other common infectious agents like measles or mumps, which are 95% to 98% effective. But it was a start.

(MORE: AIDS Vaccine: The Promise of HIV Antibodies)

Studying blood samples from the original Thai trial, Dr. Barton Haynes, director of the Duke Human Vaccine Institute of Duke University, and his colleagues report this week in the New England Journal of Medicine that they have begun to understand how the vaccine worked. Two HIV-binding antibodies may play an important role in determining whether the virus can gain a foothold in healthy cells and start an infection, the researchers say.

The scientists began with blood samples from 246 trial participants who were vaccinated; 41 people later became infected with HIV and 205 did not. After a two-year search for the right antibodies or other factors that could be responsible for protection against HIV, they zeroed in on 17 assays that were “sensitive, specific and could pick up something this vaccine did to allow us to compare before and after,” says Haynes.

The researchers then focused on six of the strongest variables, and then compared those who got infected with those who did not. The groups differed in levels of two antibodies. One, called V1V2, is made by the immune system to bind to HIV’s outer coating; part of the immune cell family called IgG, this antibody may be critical in preventing the virus from attaching to and then gaining entry into a healthy cell. Those with higher levels of V1V2 antibodies were less likely to become infected with HIV than those with lower levels.

The other antibody, however, had the opposite effect. Part of the IgA family of immune cells, these antibodies, which bound to a different part of HIV, seemed to increase the risk of infection: higher levels of IgA binding to HIV were linked with higher rates of infection, which suggested that rather than protecting against the virus, the vaccine was actually helping HIV to do its pathogenic duty. “Our first thought was, Oh, my gosh, this vaccine is inducing antibodies that enhance infection,” says Haynes.

(VIDEO: Q&A With Bono on the Global Fight Against HIV/AIDS)

But that didn’t make sense, since the vaccine was 31% effective in warding off infection. When the researchers compared IgA levels among those who were vaccinated and became infected with those who didn’t get the vaccine, they found the two groups had similar infection rates. That provided some relief, since it suggested that the IgA antibodies were not enhancing infection. Rather, the antibodies appeared to be countering the effect of the V1V2 antibodies that were fending off HIV and undoing their protection.

That’s an important finding, since it hints at how complex any successful HIV vaccine must be in order to protect people from infection. Unlike viral infections such as influenza, measles and mumps, AIDS is caused by a much wilier virus that survives and replicates by inserts itself into its host’s genome and becoming a part of the cell. To be protected against such an intrusion, says Haynes, it may take an exquisite balance of both turning up defensive immune cells that target and destroy viruses, as well as turning down the body’s natural suppression systems that keep the immune system from overreacting — much like regulating a vehicles speed by using both the accelerator and the brakes.

That understanding could also clarify why previous vaccine candidates have failed. Some might have been successful in eliciting the proper antibodies or immune responses, but failed to provide an overall protective effect because they were washed out by the counteracting antibodies. “We have a direction now, with tools and clues to check out in previously completed trials, why they might have worked or might not have worked,” says Haynes.

(MORE: HIV Drugs May Prevent Infection in Healthy Individuals)

“This analysis has produced some intriguing hints about what types of human immune responses a preventive HIV vaccine may need to induce,” said Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, which helped fund the study, along with the U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, in an statement. “With further exploration, this new knowledge may bring us a step closer to developing a broadly protective HIV vaccine.”

And because of the way HIV works, that vaccine needs to be able to protect people immediately and powerfully. “For this vaccine, we have got have all our antibodies and killer cells and armamentarium upfront,” says Haynes. “The person has to be completely protected from infection at the time they are challenged by HIV.”

And now, with the first clues about how to develop that protection, a more effective anti-HIV vaccine might actually be possible in coming years.



Read more: http://healthland.time.com/2012/04/05/stud...
Posted By: DAVID JOHNSON
Thursday, April 5th 2012 at 6:41PM
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Kenya Eyes Top Scientific Spot with AIDS Vaccine
2012-04-05 20:03:32 Xinhua Web Editor: Li
Kenya's quest to lead the scientific community as a major innovation hub will be confirmed with the ongoing efforts to produce the world's first ever HIV/AIDS vaccine, a senior official has said following the conclusion of a three-day forum here.

The Kenya Aids Vaccine Initiative (KAVI), which has been ongoing for several years, has been certified as the world's most viable plan toward a vaccine, but is one among 42 similar research and innovation projects in the pipeline.

"If there is ever going to be a first vaccine for HIV/AIDS, it will come from Kenya," said Professor Crispus Kiamba, permanent secretary of Kenyan Science and Technology Ministry and a former vice chancellor of Nairobi University.

The Africa Regional Forum on Science, Technology and Innovation, the first of its kind, gathered over 50 ministers of education, science and technology from Africa and the world to discuss from Monday to Wednesday innovation within the African continent.

There are ongoing clinical trials by KAVI to determine whether two candidate vaccines could become the ultimate protection against HIV/AIDS, Kiamba said.

The trials are being administered on non-infected human beings on a random basis to determine its efficiency.

Scientists are watching out for a strong and sustained and specific immune response against the targeted pathogen, according to the KAVI website.
Thursday, April 5th 2012 at 6:46PM
DAVID JOHNSON
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