Scientists today report initial results
from humans on the safety and tolerability of a novel strategy to curb
HIV disease by removing key cells from HIV-infected individuals,
genetically modifying the cells to resist HIV infection and returning
them to those people. The basic and pre-clinical research on this
strategy, which eventually might help people control the virus without
drugs, was funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health. The Phase I
clinical trial was funded by Sangamo BioSciences and was led by NIAID
grantee Carl H. June, M.D., with co-investigators Bruce L. Levine,
Ph.D., and Pablo Tebas, M.D., all of the Perelman School of Medicine at
the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
The trial built on the observation that
people who naturally have a genetic modification in a protein called
CCR5 are resistant to HIV infection, and when infected with HIV,
progress to AIDS more slowly. CCR5 is a cell-surface molecule, or
receptor, that most HIV variants must use to enter their primary target:
the CD4+ T cell. In the trial, CD4+ T-cells were
collected from each of 12 HIV-infected volunteers whose virus was
controlled by anti-HIV therapy. These cells were then treated in the
laboratory with molecular tools called zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs). The
ZFNs were designed to snip the DNA within the gene that codes for the
CCR5 receptor. This process introduced a genetic mutation rendering CCR5
receptors non-functional. Subsequently, the cells were stimulated to
multiply, and each patient received an infusion of 10 billion of their
own CD4+ T-cells, with roughly a fifth of the CCR5 genes now mutated.
Four weeks later, in a planned
interruption of anti-HIV therapy, half the study participants stopped
taking their antiretroviral drugs for 8 to 12 weeks. Investigators found
that the experimental treatment was generally safe, and that the
genetically modified cells appeared to be protected from HIV infection.
In one volunteer who naturally had the desired mutation in half of his CCR5 genes,
HIV replication was controlled during the entire 12-week treatment
interruption. Future research will include evaluating this experimental
treatment in more volunteers, as well as maximizing the frequency of CCR5 disruption
by ZFNs and increasing the persistence of the genetically modified
cells in the body to achieve a therapeutic effect.
Said Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the NIAID, to the NYT:
“It’s a great strategy. It’s exciting,
interesting, elegant science. But a lot of ‘ifs’ need to be addressed
before you can say ‘Wow, this could really work.’”
The paper adds: "Dr. Fauci also questioned whether patients would
want this relatively complex treatment when many people can keep the
infection under control with just one to a few pills a day."
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