The AIDS-causing virus was completely wiped out in four out of 10 lab mice using promising approach
Researchers have refined a ‘kick and kill’ approach targeting dormant HIV particles by tricking them out of infected cells into the open to be attacked by the body’s natural killer cells, offering hope for a potential cure.
The study, whose findings were published in the Nature Communications journal, involved lab tests on 10 HIV-infected mice. A team of scientists from UCLA reported that the AIDS-causing virus was completely eliminated in some 40% of cases.
The new research was the continuation of an approach devised in 2017
that saw the team administer a synthetic agent called SUW133 to activate dormant HIV in infected mice. The chemical compound, developed at Stanford University, tricks the viral cells into revealing themselves.
After that study saw some 25% of the HIV-infected cells die within 24 hours, the scientists sought to improve efficiency this time around by injecting healthy natural killer cells into the mice. The combined approach worked better than using either the agent or the killer cells by themselves.
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“These findings show proof-of-concept for a therapeutic strategy to potentially eliminate HIV from the body, a task that had been nearly insurmountable for many years,” Jocelyn Kim, the study’s lead author, said, adding that they open a “new paradigm for a possible HIV cure in the future.”