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Study might lead to new AIDS treatment
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and colleagues at Sangamo BioSciences Inc. of Richmond, Calif., said their goal is to use modified T cells from an HIV-infected person for that person's own treatment. They showed that, by using the zinc fingers, they could reduce the viral load of immune-deficient mice transplanted with engineered T cells.
The researchers, led by Dr. Elena Perez, an assistant professor of pediatrics, and Dr. Carl June, a professor of pathology and laboratory medicine at Penn, are planning a clinical trial in humans in which T cells from HIV patients would have their CCR5 gene -- necessary for the AIDS virus to enter immune system cells -- deliberately knocked out.
The modified T cells could then be infused back into the patients to re-establish their immune system and decrease their viral load.
The research is reported online in the journal Nature Biotechnology.
Copyright 2008 by United Press International
This news arrived on: 07/03/2008
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