HIV Immunity Gene Found In Rhesus Monkeys 81
Stile 65 writes "According to the BBC, the National Institute for Medical Research has isolated a gene in rhesus monkeys that makes them immune to HIV. Amazingly, 'only a single change to the human [version of the] gene is needed to enable it to block HIV infection.' It's a very different approach to treating HIV infection from the potential vaccine developed in Brazil and described earlier on Slashdot."
Please don't let this be a hoax. (Score:1)
Re:Please don't let this be a hoax. (Score:1)
Re:Please don't let this be a hoax. (Score:2)
If it managed to stay in the monkeys, I doubt it'll be recessive...and if it actually blocks HIV instead of just not being susceptible to it, then codominance is perfectly fine, right?
Re:Please don't let this be a hoax. (Score:3, Funny)
Recipients of the vaccine may develop the following side effects:
* An intense desire for bananas.
* Repeated urges to hurl their own feces at fellow primates (even when its NOT an election year).
Give us all the same genes (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Give us all the same genes (Score:3, Insightful)
and this is the answer. and you need it.
would you use it or not?
though that's all MOOT: how about a little RTFA? ""In theory, it should be possible to take cells from an HIV-infected individual, make them resistant to HIV infection with the modified gene and reintroduce them into the patient. These cells could then block progression to Aids."
insightful my ass
Gene therapy at last? (Score:3, Interesting)
it's not 'Gene therapy' (Score:3, Interesting)
Sadly true for any useful treatment of disease so far.
Really the current news is about a scientific discovery, not about gene-therapy at all. But so many people seem to need to say the words 'gene therapy', just to make the thing look newsworthy.
It seems to be a discovery about comparative or evolutionary biology of the immune system. How these gene differences arose and how they were perpetuated are interesting questions in the
It may only be a "single change"... (Score:5, Insightful)
it is important to stress that any therapeutic benefits that may arise from this research are unlikely to be felt for many years.
"This type of gene therapy would involve removing white blood cells from patients, cloning them, and altering their genetic make-up before reintroducing them to the patient on an individual-by-individual basis.
"Although it is theoretically possible, this approach is unlikely to be practical or cost-effective with currently available technologies."
It sounds to me like this would be a rather arduous process to go through, and given the scale of the epedemic that means, effectively, no major impact. The only effective solution is likely to be a cheap, easily admistered, relatively safe vaccine.
What would have an impact would be for religious leaders worldwide to withdraw their objections to birth control and actually promote condom use. Likewise better funding for medical facilities in overstressed third-world location would prevent infection via needle re-use, as would an educated approach to drug addiction, rather than simply pushing the issue underground.
there, three easy steps to minimise the spread, while the clever guys work on an actual therapy.
Re:It may only be a "single change"... (Score:3, Informative)
For instance if an organisation puts out literature on birth control which even mentions the word 'abortion', they're automatically de-funded. this is a side-effect rather than a direct effect but it stems directly from religious conviction.
Admittedly this is n
Re:It may only be a "single change"... (Score:2)
no, but he's a good example of a stumbling block in this context.
Re:It may only be a "single change"... (Score:1)
Actually, promoting condom use doesn't work as well as promoting abstinence outside marriage. Uganda uses a pro-abstinence strategy in fighting AIDS, and it is the most successful anti-AIDS campaign in Africa, and perhaps anywhere. Countries that promote condoms have less success in fighting AIDS...
Promoting condoms does nothing to reduce sex outside of marria
Re:It may only be a "single change"... (Score:2)
The US is not Uganda. In the US, people can afford condoms. In Uganda, they can't.
Further, the cardinal's critics have to explain why three countries where condoms are readily available and their use vigorously promoted - Zimbabwe, Botswana, and South Africa - have the world's highest rates of HIV infection.
Prostitution and rape. S. Afr
Re:It may only be a "single change"... (Score:1)
Re:It may only be a "single change"... (Score:2)
Hello, Mr. Michael Jackson? Or is it Mr. Howard Hughes? The degree of isolation acceptable to prevent communicatable disease is always a important, sensitive, personal choice.
And the religious part of it adds fuel to the fire. How many times do you need to be told "you shouldn't have sex because it's a sin" to have the middle finger up before "because"?
Re:It may only be a "single change"... (Score:2)
I say this as a person who believes strongly in God but also in the need for truth, even i
Re:It may only be a "single change"... (Score:1)
Re:It may only be a "single change"... (Score:2)
Because many of them believe that condoms cause AIDS?
Fetus Gene therapy (Score:3, Interesting)
It seems like an awful amount of work to do on a full grown human...
Re:Fetus Gene therapy (Score:2)
The only possible problem I can see is when women give birth to those adorable little rhesus monkeys... could lead to negative press. ;)
Re:Fetus Gene therapy (Score:1)
Oh yeah!
Cure for AIDS consequences (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Cure for AIDS consequences (Score:3, Informative)
Sure, but the need for increased spending on prevention/treatment of these other STDs would be more than balanced by the reduced impact of countless other diseases that prey on immunocompromised individuals. I do research on TB, and one of the reasons that bug has been resurgent recently (mostly in the Third World) is that it takes particular advantage of people with AIDS. The current trea
Re:Cure for AIDS consequences (Score:2)
Jeez, sometimes these mods make me nuts--and I *am* a mod! (At least when I have points.)
Re:Cure for AIDS consequences (Score:2, Interesting)
but most areas needing condoms for aids also need them for overpopulation anyhow...
Re:Cure for AIDS consequences (Score:2)
seriously!
aids is so slow in killing people that eliminating it won't affect other sexually transmitted diseases that much(thos who are moving them around move them around regardless of aids, it's just an added negative'bonus').
health food? (Score:4, Funny)
More like monkey shit (Score:2)
who would have thought that all this time, people could have been eating rhesus phesus
I don't eat monkey shit [google.com], no matter how much I get thrown at me. I've been told it's nothing to phone home [snopes.com] about.
Re:More like monkey shit (Score:2)
oh poo...
Re:pretty cool (Score:2)
Search "porn" on kazza and blindly download the results. You find some sick shit.
Re:pretty cool (Score:2)
Re:pretty cool (Score:2)
hmmm (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:hmmm (Score:1)
Re:hmmm (Score:2)
How to get a cure for AIDS: (Score:5, Insightful)
I joke, but many a true hath been spoke in jest.
Re:How to get a cure for AIDS: (Score:2, Informative)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:How to get a cure for AIDS: (Score:1)
Secondly your ignorant "They fuck like rabbits..." statement shows a basic lack of understanding of mammalian biology and human social systems.
When placed under biological stress, mammalian rates of fecundity have a tendancy to rise (their fertility rates go up) - this is simply because the species has built in mecha
Re: (Score:1)
Re:How to get a cure for AIDS: (Score:2)
Re:How to get a cure for AIDS: (Score:1)
Re:How to get a cure for AIDS: (Score:2)
Food for thought--the U.S. pharmaceutical industry spent $10.8 billion on marketing [thenation.com] in 1998. I presume that figure has risen since.
$2 billion is one B-2 bomber.
$2 billion is less than two percent of an Iraq invasion. (And heading rapidly towards 1%.)
$2 billion sounds like a lot of money, but as far as government programs go it's pretty trifling. About four hundred thousand Americans [yale.edu] have AIDS
Re:How to get a cure for AIDS: (Score:2, Insightful)
I've often heard people complain about 'evil' drug companies not spending enough on AIDS research, or charging too much for their drugs. I'm sad to say that if I was a drug company, I wouldn't touch AIDS vaccines/cures with a ten foot pole. Why? Because as soon as I spent a few billion in research to develop and test a drug (and many failures along the way), everyone will demand that I give it away for free to anyone who wants it.
Yeah, maybe I'm a stin
Re:How to get a cure for AIDS: (Score:2)
horrible side effects (Score:2)
deer god! (Score:1)
The cure for HIV (Score:3, Funny)
Evolutionary theories and research problems (Score:2)
A couple of points: (Score:2)
While this may be true in a general sense when trying to apply these models to HIV, i might point out that Influenza and TB are both airborne, and both very large health threats. Also Ebola Reston was airborne. Latency is th
Re:A couple of points: (Score:2)
I shouldn't have been so general when saying 'Africa.'
Ebola stays latent?
Yes, I agree the longer the time in host to host transmission, the less lethal a virus can afford to be. TB might be lethal eventually, but doesn't use up host resources at a rapid rate. Also, TB has been around for some time, I believe. According to Burnette and White's theories, a few hundred to a few thousand years from now TB might be non lethal. I don't claim that B&W are 100% accurate, though. On the contrary,
Re:A couple of points: (Score:2)
No, not really, but almost all infections (well viral infections anyway) have some sort of incubation period, which is probably what i should have said. Ebola has a 10-14 day incubation period followed by muscle aches, fever, etc, etc, followed by all the classic jazz...
The thing with Ebola is that we still don't know a lot about transmission in human populations, so it's not really known if it's contageous at the early stages (because people aren't bleeding all over each other then,
Re:A couple of points: (Score:2)
I think immunocompromised patients add an interesting element to the evolution of infectious disease. If you have a host who is infected by multiple pathogens and likely to die in a few months, long term strategies which slowly use up a host's resources don't make sense. A few immunocompromised (or multiply infected) people in a population should increase the overall vi
ah, hot toddys (Score:2)
Why can't we get some critical reporters (Score:2)
Gah
Get a reporter with a fvcking science degree!
I expect more of the BBC.
UK / US (Score:2)
The folks who wrote this report didn't even know that AIDS was an acronym, and wrote it Aids.
The folks who wrote this report are British and their convention is to capitalize only the first letter of acronyms. They think your all-caps AIDS looks like shouting. Open your mind to the customs of others before ranting.
Re:UK / US (Score:2)
They always capitalize BBC.
They didn't capitalize AIDS.
And just for the record, I'm not living in the US.
So you're 0/2 in your baseless assumptions.
But thanks for playing.
Re:UK / US (Score:2)
My, what a smug smart-ass you are.
As you appear to be not only clueless but arrogantly so, I'd like to point out to you the difference between an acronym and an initialization. An acronym forms a word while an initialization does not. And I never said you lived in the US, so what was that about baseless assumptions, again?
You can shut up now or continue to highlight your ignorance. Your call.
Re:UK / US (Score:2)
As you appear to be not only clueless but arrogantly so, I'd like to point out to you the difference between an acronym and an initialization. An acronym forms a word while an initialization does not. And I never said you lived in the US, so what was that about baseless assumptions, again?
It says you don't even read your own posts. And I don't blame you. Your subject was UK/US.
You were the one who personally attacked me with this holier than thou attitude. The reporter w
Re:UK / US (Score:2)
Your subject was UK/US.
Yes, that was the subject line. Congratulations on your reading ability. The subject was the difference between UK English and US English. The subject was not an assumption about your current living arrangements.
You were the one who personally attacked me with this holier than thou attitude.
You were the one who launched a baseless attack on a reporter using a "baseless assumption"; namely, that the reporter used an incorrect capitalization of the word AIDS/Aids. The report
So now we need... (Score:2)
applied to a large population. Of course only if
it is safe and has no detrimental effects on the
patients and their offspring.
Nice would be a kind of non selfreproducing
retro-virus which could (only) infect fertilized
human egg cells and flick (only) that gene-switch.
All you would need then to apply the gene-therapy
will be a load of viri and a syringe.
The human which will then be born will have a
(artificial) inherent immunity to aids.
ps. This is only wishfu
Application of discovery (Score:1)
Oh, wait...
Baboons? (Score:2)
Humans? (Score:2)
It's even mentionned in this article [bbc.co.uk]