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Bacterial toxin can kill 'hidden' HIV

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Press Trust of India Washington
Last Updated : Jan 10 2014 | 1:32 PM IST
A genetically modified bacterial toxin can kill HIV-infected cells that persist despite treatment, an approach that could potentially be part of cure for the deadly virus, scientists say.
The toxin, known as 3B3-PE38, targets HIV-infected cells and becomes internalised by them, shutting down protein synthesis and triggering cell death.
A team including University of North Carolina and National Institutes of Health (NIH) scientists has demonstrated in a mouse model that the HIV-specific poison can kill cells in which the virus is actively reproducing despite antiretroviral therapy.
According to the researchers, such a targeted poison could complement antiretroviral therapy, which dramatically reduces the replication of HIV in infected cells but does not eliminate them.
The 40 mice in the experiment were bio-engineered to have a human immune system. They were infected with HIV for several months and then given a combination of antiretroviral drugs for four weeks.
Half of the animals subsequently received a two-week dose of a genetically designed, HIV-specific poison, or immunotoxin, to complement the antiretrovirals, while the other half continued receiving antiretrovirals alone.

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The scientists found that, compared to antiretrovirals alone, the addition of the immunotoxin significantly reduced both the number of HIV-infected cells producing the virus in multiple organs and the level of HIV in the blood.
These findings, and results from previous studies, suggest that treating certain HIV-infected people with a combination of antiretrovirals and an immunotoxin might help achieve sustained disease remission, in which HIV can be controlled or eliminated without a lifetime of antiretroviral therapy, researchers said.
The immunotoxin was created in 1998 in the laboratories of Edward A Berger of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and Ira Pastan, of the National Cancer Institute.

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First Published: Jan 10 2014 | 1:32 PM IST

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