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Scientists Find A 'Weak Spot' In HIV That May Pave The Way To A Vaccine (futurism.com) 111

iONiUM quotes a report from Futurism: Research conducted by a team from the National Institutes of Health reported a new vulnerable site on HIV for vaccines to target. It is based on an antibody from the blood of an HIV-infected patient that binds with the virus and also prevents it from infecting a cell. A recent press release reports that a team of scientists led by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has discovered a new "weak spot" in HIV that vaccines can target. The area, called the fusion peptide, is a simple structure of eight amino acids that helps the virus fuse with a cell. According to the study, the team used a particularly powerful antibody, called VRC34.01, taken from the blood of an unnamed HIV-positive patient that caught the weak spot in the virus. It's not only capable of binding with the virus through the fusion peptide but also preventing it from infecting an entire cell.
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Scientists Find A 'Weak Spot' In HIV That May Pave The Way To A Vaccine

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  • by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Wednesday May 18, 2016 @06:54PM (#52138371) Journal

    Sweeeeet! Now Slashdot nerds can have no sex but without a condom!

  • by MobyDisk ( 75490 ) on Wednesday May 18, 2016 @06:59PM (#52138389) Homepage

    Can someone explain to me: If the person has an antibody that prevents HIV from binding to a cell, how are they HIV positive?

    • by Khyber ( 864651 ) <techkitsune@gmail.com> on Wednesday May 18, 2016 @07:04PM (#52138415) Homepage Journal

      HIV positive refers to the presence of the virus in the blood, not that it has infected any cells.

      • My information may be outdated, but isn't the test for HIV actually testing for the existence of antibodies rather than the virus?

    • by Firethorn ( 177587 ) on Wednesday May 18, 2016 @07:16PM (#52138475) Homepage Journal

      HIV is a retrovirus, it inserts it's code into the cell where it stays long term until triggered to replicate somehow. Ergo, a person could have all active viral particles removed and still be infected unless you blow away all the infected cells somehow as well. This is a large part of the reason why HIV can't be cured.

      That being said, if they can figure out how to train the body to produce these antibodies, it's possible that one could keep the infection rate of the viral particles low enough(the antibody isn't going to block 100% of viral particles from depositing their payload) that a person is effectively immune to the disease, because it just won't be successful enough at infecting cells. That would probably also have the benefit that even if they're exposed, there will be a prompt enough immune response to keep them from being a realistic infection vector, so no Typhoid Mary for them.

      That being said, there's a high probability that a vaccinated person would test as HIV positive today, because most HIV tests look for the antibodies, not the virus. Give them a vaccine that stimulates antivirus production...

      • by Andvari ( 685645 ) on Wednesday May 18, 2016 @10:47PM (#52139147)

        That being said, there's a high probability that a vaccinated person would test as HIV positive today, because most HIV tests look for the antibodies, not the virus. Give them a vaccine that stimulates antivirus production...

        This is not true, vaccinated people would not test HIV positive. first line HIV screens look for certain kinds of antibodies, the particular antibody the article is referring is not one of those antibodies.

        The initial HIV screen is a combined antibody/antigen assay, if that is positive a follow up screen, called a Western Blot, is done. The western blot looks for additional antibodies, such as: p24, gag, pol etc... If enough of these bands are positive then the person is considered HIV positive. There are cases where a western blot can return as indeterminate, in some cases (like a grp IV) the person is most likely positive but may not be. Interestingly, with the introduction of post exposure prophylaxis many people are now returning indeterminate western blots and never fully sero-convert despite being HIV positive. In these cases pro-viral DNA is used as a diagnosis.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      The antibody isn't 100% effective- although perhaps effective enough for people to lead a normal life. Their T-cell count was nearly normal, meaning they are doing a great job of fighting, but there was lots of HIV RNA around, meaning they were still quite infected. I believe this patient would show little to no signs of the disease while still being highly contagious.
      Who knows if it's effective enough to be a vaccine, but perhaps the bigger breakthough is that this antibody has found a chink in the armor t

    • by cfalcon ( 779563 )

      The body makes antibodies to HIV as it would any virus. An untreated HIV person has a long period without symptoms because the body is generally able to hold the virus in check- but in most humans, this is eventually a losing battle. A person never exposed to HIV will obviously not have an HIV antibody.

      If you received an experimental HIV vaccine- as was developed decades ago- then you would test positive for HIV, because you would have the antibodies. You would not in actuality be HIV positive, and you w

      • This new vaccine is hoped to help by training the body to target a different part of the virus, as best I can tell. I wouldn't get hopes up too high on this- vaccines have proven very frustrating for dealing with HIV.

        They haven't even hit the vaccine part. They've only found a new antibody that *might* be more effective at fighting the virus than is normally generated. The subject where it was found has a relatively low virus load(from what I can tell) for a patient not on antivirals, but high for one that is(should be under 200 in that case). However, his T-cell count is still acceptably high.

        Their hope is to create a vaccine that encourages development of that antibody.

    • LTNP (Score:5, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 18, 2016 @09:08PM (#52138867)

      After initial infection, the virus will enter a long-dormant period, during which it will continue to mutate and wear down the immune system. In most people, this period will end after a decade or so, when the immune system "tires" and allows viral load to increase. The destruction of CD4 helper cells (most by induced apoptosis, a small percentage by infection) opens the body to oprotunistic infection, which (barring treatment) is usually the end of the story.

      A small group of the infected, called "Long Term Non-Progressors," are able to create highly-effective antibodies in their B-cells. When they do this, the viral load never increases, and they remain in the latency period indefinitely.

      The antibodies produced by such people have been studied with X-ray crystalography. Their B-cells can actually be used in the "monoclonal antibody" process to create antibody solutions for other people that can be injected and used in treatment.

      In any case, these highly-effective antibodies are only produced after years of interaction of the virus with the immune system. They are not presented upon initial infection, and LTNP individuals don't differ from the normal immune reaction during the first six months.

    • They wouldn't have made the antibody until they were already infected. Once infection has set, it is difficult to clear the infection fully because HIV gets into long-lived cells in your immune system and hides. They could potentially clear themselves in 10 years or so.
    • Imagine a person. This person likes to swim. But when he's swimming, he often likes to shit in the pool.

      So one day, he jumps in a pool. He shits the pool. The pool now has APSS: Acquired Pool Shitter Syndrome.

      One day, the guy jumps into another pool. This pool just happens to have a certain pool cleaning chemical that, somehow, prevents him from shitting in the pool. But he's still in the pool, and might migrate to other pools in the sports complex. This pool has PSG: Pool Shitter Guy.

      So, this pool i

  • by sexconker ( 1179573 ) on Wednesday May 18, 2016 @07:08PM (#52138431)

    They found an HIV-patient exhibiting an effective (to what degree is unclear from TFS) immune response to the HIV virus.

    Let's give credit to the patient or the patient's immune system.

    • There are many long-term non-progressors. Not sure this guy's antibodies are all that unique.
  • by jasnw ( 1913892 ) on Wednesday May 18, 2016 @07:10PM (#52138453)
    ... is the patient whose body produced this antibody going to get a cut, or is it just the researchers and their organizations who will gain?
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Why would he? All he did was exist.

      Does God get a cut for having invented physics?

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Duh! He gets paid with souls.

      • Yup. It's called "tithe". And it's been running for way longer than the duration of any patent ever since, 'bout fucking time the shit got into public domain!

    • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

      He is probably receiving state of the art treatment now. If he ends up completely cured, that's a nice compensation.

    • by techdolphin ( 1263510 ) on Thursday May 19, 2016 @01:06AM (#52139549)
      This is government funded research so hopefully everybody gets a cut. Government spending--this is important--government spending creates investments that help individuals, states, and the nation. Spending on education, basic research, and scientific infrastructure enabled this discovery, which could prove very beneficial to individuals and society.
    • Once this patient is integrated into the Matrix, any HIV viral agent will have it's weak spot bound and rendered harmless.
  • The story's been out for an hour, and nary a comment about how it makes no sense to cure when they can keep profiting from ongoing treatment. I don't know whether to be relieved or disappointed. (oooh.... did I just really use the word 'nary' in a sentence???)
  • Brec1 can actually cure people of HIV, by going into infected cells and removing the integrated provirus. I'm a software engineer, so I have no idea how this works, but it sounds more promising than this naturally-occurring antibody. Apparently BREC is evolved with a genetic algorithm; that part I understand.
  • sent HIV as punishment for homosexuality. Why do these doctors hate Jesus?

  • I would think that if cells can not become infected that over time the virus might cease to exist within the body.

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