NIAID
to Fund Novel B-Cell Approach to HIV Vaccine Development
Disappointing
results from recent studies have led some experts to question
the current approach to developing vaccines against HIV.
Last month,
the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) announced an
initiative to pursue a different type of vaccine strategy using immune system
B cells.
Below is the NIAID media release announcing the new program:
NIAID
to Advance B-Cell Approach to HIV Vaccines To
advance underdeveloped approaches to designing a preventive HIV vaccine, the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes
of Health, is launching a new program to foster the study of B cells, immune cells
that can produce antibodies with the capacity to neutralize HIV. The $15.6 million,
five-year program will strengthen and expand the scientific foundation of HIV
vaccine research through a network of 10 research teams nationwide that will share
resources, methods and data to accelerate progress.
In the immune system,
B cells recognize key parts of microbes, called antigens. Then, in cooperation
with T cells - parts of the immune system that kill cells infected by pathogens
- a reaction is triggered that leads B cells to produce antibodies, which can
lock onto antigens and sweep them out of the body. HIV is devilishly good at fooling
B cells and shielding itself from antibodies or changing its antigenic parts,
so antibodies can rarely rid the body of the virus.
The new NIAID research
program aims to uncover mechanisms that will enable scientists to outwit HIV and
stimulate the B-cell production of long-lasting antibodies that can neutralize
many strains of the virus; such antibodies are known as "broadly neutralizing."
"This
program reflects our commitment to probe the fundamental science underlying HIV
vaccine development," says NIAID Director Anthony S. Fauci, M.D. "The
study of B cells and broadly neutralizing antibodies to HIV will answer pressing,
basic scientific questions and bring greater balance to our portfolio of HIV vaccine
discovery research."
In recent years, investigator-initiated grants
supported by NIAID have focused more heavily on T-cell based approaches to preventive
HIV vaccines than on B-cell based ones. Many experts believe a successful HIV
vaccine will probably need to activate both T cells and B cells; consequently,
NIAID's creation of the new B-cell research program is an important stimulus for
HIV vaccine discovery.
Some evidence suggests that the program's goal
of eliciting broadly neutralizing antibodies to HIV, although extremely difficult,
may be feasible. Scientists have discovered that some HIV-infected individuals
naturally but rarely produce broadly neutralizing antibodies to HIV. Giving such
antibodies experimentally to monkeys protected the animals from HIV infection
after exposure to the virus. Scientists now face the challenge of how to stimulate
the human immune system to predictably produce broadly neutralizing antibodies
to HIV through vaccination.
Combining experience with innovation, NIAID
is awarding the B-cell program grants to four investigators who already have established
a body of research on B cells and antibodies in the context of HIV, and to six
investigators with less experience in this area who have exceptionally creative
ideas. Each grantee's combined expertise in basic immunology and HIV pathogenesis
reflects the program's roots in a collaboration between NIAID's Division of AIDS
and its Division of Allergy, Immunology and Transplantation. The joint awards
by the two NIAID divisions culminate a 20-month planning and implementation process
that began in September 2006. Scientific discussions a year and a half later,
during the NIAID HIV Vaccine Summit in March 2008, underscored the importance
of broadly neutralizing antibodies as a promising approach that merits further
investigation.
The grants are being awarded to the scientists as follows:
Dennis
R. Burton, Ph.D. The Scripps Research Institute
James E. Crowe,
Jr., M.D. Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Donald N.
Forthal, M.D. University of California, Irvine
Maureen M. Goodenow,
Ph.D. University of Florida College of Medicine
Min Lu, Ph.D. Weill
Cornell Medical College
Abraham Pinter, Ph.D. University of Medicine
and Dentistry of New Jersey
Gerald V. Quinnan Jr., M.D. Uniformed
Services University of the Health Sciences
Ignacio Sanz, M.D. University
of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry
Harry W. Schroeder, Jr.,
M.D., Ph.D. The University of Alabama at Birmingham
Raul M. Torres,
Ph.D. University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center
|
6/10/08
Source Monogram
Biosciences. Monogram Biosciences Announces Immediate Availability of Enhanced
Sensitivity Trofile HIV Tropism Assay. Press release. June 5, 2008.
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Information
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Preventive HIV Vaccine Fact Sheet
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