CRISPR editing removes HIV from immune cells

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FaxModem1
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CRISPR editing removes HIV from immune cells

Post by FaxModem1 »

Futurism
IN BRIEF

Scientists managed to eliminate HIV-1 DNA from T cell genomes in human lab cultures. It will take time for advanced use in humans, but it is a remarkable accomplishment.
THIS IS THE POWER OF CRISPR

Using the much-touted CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing method, scientists have demonstrated how they can edit HIV out of human immune cell DNA, and in doing so, can prevent the reinfection of unedited cells too.

If you haven’t heard of the CRISPR/Cas9 gene-editing technique before, get ready to hear a whole lot more about it in 2016, because it’s set to revolutionise how we investigate and treat the root causes of genetic disease. It allows scientists to narrow in on a specific gene, and cut-and-paste parts of the DNA to change its function.

CRISPR/Cas9 is what researchers in the UK have recently gotten approval to use on human embryos so they can figure out how to improve IVF success rates and reduce miscarriages, and it’s what Chinese scientists were caught using in 2015to tweak human embryos on the down-low.

Earlier this year, scientists started using CRISPR/Cas9 to successfully treat a genetic disease – Duchenne muscular dystrophy – in living mammals for the first time, and now it’s showing real potential as a possible treatment for HIV in the future.

The technique works by guiding ‘scissor-like’ proteins to targeted sections of DNA within a cell, and then prompting them to alter or ‘edit’ them in some way.CRISPR refers to a specific repeating sequence of DNA extracted from a prokaryote – a single-celled organism such as bacteria – which pairs up with an RNA-guided enzyme called Cas9.

So basically, if you want to edit the DNA of a virus within a human cell, you need a bacterium to go in, encounter the virus, and produce a strand of RNA that’s identical to the sequence of the virtual DNA.

This ‘guide RNA’ will then latch onto the Cas9 enzyme, and together they’ll search for the matching virus. Once they locate it, the Cas9 gets to cutting and destroying it.

Using this technique, researchers from Temple University managed to eliminate HIV-1 DNA from T cell genomes in human lab cultures, and when these cells were later exposed to the virus, they were protected from reinfection.

A NEW BREAKTHROUGH IN THE FIGHT AGAINST HIV

NIH
NIH
“The findings are important on multiple levels,” says lead researcher Kamel Khalili. “They demonstrate the effectiveness of our gene editing system in eliminating HIV from the DNA of CD4 T-cells and, by introducing mutations into the viral genome, permanently inactivating its replication.”

“Further,” he adds, “they show that the system can protect cells from reinfection and that the technology is safe for the cells, with no toxic effects.”

While gene-editing techniques have been trialled before when it comes to HIV, this is the first time that scientists have figure out how to prevent further infections, which is crucial to the success of a treatment that offers better protection than our current antiretroviral drugs. Once you stop taking these drugs, the HIV starts overloading the T-cells again.

“Antiretroviral drugs are very good at controlling HIV infection,” says Khalili. “But patients on antiretroviral therapy who stop taking the drugs suffer a rapid rebound in HIV replication.”

There’s still a lot more work to be done in getting this technique ready for something more advanced than human cells in a petri dish – particularly when it comes to perfect accuracy for the ‘cutting’ process – but it’s an exciting first step.

The results have been published in Scientific Reports.
It'll probably be years before this becomes anything, but it's good to see progress on this front.
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Ziggy Stardust
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Re: CRISPR editing removes HIV from immune cells

Post by Ziggy Stardust »

It's worth noting that this technique is essentially just a more advanced/refined version of existing medications that are commonly used in the treatment of HIV and cancer, and many other disorders. Most of our medicines essentially do the same thing as CRISPR (that is, they target specific aspects of the viral genome to block replication; for example, some are designed to mimic a certain type of nucleotide base that will attach during gene replication and block further bases from being added). CRISPR is a more targeted and elegant method of performing the same type of attack.

Which is to say that this is an impressive and important accomplishment, but it remains to be seen whether this will correspond to dramatically increased efficacy. It's possible that the pitfalls of other, similar medications will still be true for CRISPR (but with fewer side effects ... which would still be fantastic, but it's not a cure or anything).
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Re: CRISPR editing removes HIV from immune cells

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No Ziggy, this technique is radically different from existing HIV antiviral medications. Antivirals inhibit HIV replication, fusion, and genome integration, essentially preventing infection of virus-naive new cells by circulating virus. As already-infected cells die are are lysed by HIV, production of new virus declines and levels of circulating virus fall to zero. The current barrier to cure is the small number of quiescent cells (such as CD-4 memory T-cells) that serve as a non-replicating reservoir of HIV. When these cells periodically reactivate, they release new virus and perpetuate the infection. These latent, infected cells may remain quiescent for decades before reactivating, thus necessitating essentially lifelong antiviral treatment. Current antivirals cannot attack HIV while it is integrated into the DNA of these quiescent cells, but the referenced article describes a novel application of CRISPR-Cas9 can actually delete HIV DNA from cell nuclei, essentially un-infecting the cells and permanently curing the patient.

If translated into an actual therapy, this would be a real game-changed in that we could cure HIV/AIDS patients with a finite-duration of treatment, after which they would no longer need to take antiviral medications. The barrier to implementation is that, while CRISPR-Cas9 works in a petri dish, there is currently no proven delivery mechanism to reach latently infected immune cells in a living human body.
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Esquire
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Re: CRISPR editing removes HIV from immune cells

Post by Esquire »

Plus, from a public health standpoint, this would - if it works in humans, etc, etc - reduce HIV/AIDS treatment costs to a much more manageable level, improving not just outcomes for lower-income/less-insured patients, but also the overall efficiency of the health care system.
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Re: CRISPR editing removes HIV from immune cells

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Very fascinating. One with a lot of potential.
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