Washington:
In a path-breaking finding, researchers have discovered how the immune
system makes a powerful antibody that blocks HIV infection of cells by
targeting the V1V2 site on the virus.
It is believed that if a
vaccine could elicit potent antibodies to a specific conserved site in
the V1V2 region, then the vaccine could protect people from HIV
infection. The V1V2 is a region on the virus envelope which increases
the susceptability to neutralistion by antibodies.
"The new
findings point the way toward a potentially more effective vaccine that
would generate V1V2-directed HIV neutralising antibodies," said
scientists from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases, part of the US National Institutes of Health.
Scientists
from Columbia University, the Centre for AIDS Programme of Research in
South Africa, and the National Institute for Communicable Diseases,
Johannesburg, were part of the research.
The team began its work
by identifying an HIV-infected volunteer, who naturally developed
V1V2-directed HIV neutralising antibodies after several months of
infection.
Using techniques similar to those employed in an
earlier study of HIV-antibody co-evolution, the researchers analysed
blood samples donated by the volunteer between 15 weeks and four years
after getting infected.
This enabled the scientists to determine the genetic make-up of the original form of the antibody.
They
also identified and defined the structures of a number of the
intermediate forms taken as the antibody mutated toward its fullest
breadth and potency.
The study revealed that after relatively few
mutations, even the early intermediates of V1V2-directed HIV
neutralising antibodies can neutralise a significant proportion of known
HIV strains.
According to the scientists, this improves the
chances that a V1V2-directed HIV vaccine developed based on the new
findings would be effective.
They have now started working on a
set of vaccine components designed to elicit V1V2 neutralising
antibodies and guide their maturation, said NIH in a press release.
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