Design of HIV Vaccines May Have Been Faulty
Immune systems attacked antibodies, study claims
by Robert Preidt | Apr 28 '05
New information about how HIV evades the body's immune system
may lead to more effective approaches to creating a vaccine, says a
The study results suggest that HIV vaccines may have been
ineffective in the past because they induced production of antibodies that are
attacked by the recipient's immune system.
The Duke researchers found that certain antibodies that
recognize and attach to the HIV protein gp41 resemble antibodies made in
autoimmune diseases. In most people, the immune system attacks and destroys
these kinds of antibodies.
Attempts to create HIV vaccines may have failed, in part, because
specific proteins on the protective outer layer of HIV trigger only
short-lasting, self-reactive antibodies rather than long-term, HIV-specific
antibodies, the study said.
The findings also suggest that, during the initial infection
stage, HIV may avoid destruction by the body's immune system because these
outer-coat proteins on HIV activate self-reactive antibodies.
those antibodies that kill most HIV strains
-- are made," study lead author Dr. Barton Haynes, director of the Human
Vaccine Institute at Duke, said in a prepared statement.
"This provides a plausible explanation for why broadly
protective antibodies have not been made in response to currently tested HIV
vaccines," Haynes said.
The study appears online April 28 in Science Express.
More information
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