French scientists said today they had found a way to pinpoint elusive white blood cells which provide a hideout for the AIDS virus in people taking anti-HIV drugs.
Being able to spot, and one day neutralise, these "reservoir" cells has long been a holy grail in the quest to wipe out AIDS and the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that causes it.
The discovery "paves the way to a better fundamental understanding of viral reservoirs," said France's CNRS research institute, which took part in the study published in Nature.
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There is no cure for HIV, and infected people have to take virus-suppressing drugs for life.
This is because a small number of immune system cells, in a category of cell called CD4 T lymphocytes, provide a haven for the virus, enabling it to re-emerge and spread if treatment is stopped -- even after decades.
In tests using the blood of HIV patients, the researchers managed to spot a protein, dubbed CD32a, on the surface of virus-infected reservoir cells.
It was absent from healthy cells.
Such a "marker" has proved very difficult to find, explained AIDS researcher Douglas Richman from the University of California San Diego, who did not take part in the study.
A person infected with HIV has about 200 billion CD4 T cells, of which only one in a million act as virus reservoirs.
Two per cent of the body's CD4 T cells (some four billion) are found in the approximately five litres of blood in an adult human, said Richman.
This means that a 100-millilitre blood sample would contain about 80 million CD4 T cells, of which around 80 would be virus reservoirs.
Whether CD32a plays an active part in enabling the virus to hole up in CD4 cells is a big question.
If so, it could throw open a tempting target for drugs to block the stealthy process.
While describing the study as "potentially seminal", Richman cautioned that CD32a was a marker found in only about half of CD4 T reservoir cells.
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