Home pagePress monitoringDo plants have the potential to vaccinate against HIV?

Do plants have the potential to vaccinate against HIV?

Date: 6.4.2006 

Scientists have developed a new kind of molecule which they believe could ultimately lead to the development of a vaccine against HIV using genetically modified tobacco. Writing in Plant Biotechnology Journal, Dr Patricia Obregon and colleagues from St George's, University of London along with researchers at the University of Warwick say they have overcome a major barrier that has so far frustrated attempts to turn plants into economically viable "bioreactors" for vaccines. By creating fusion molecules, the researchers have found a way to make plants produce more of the molecules (antigens) needed for vaccines. "Source":[ http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2006-03/bpl-dph031306.php].

Nanotubes transport gene therapy drug into T-cells known to block HIV from entering cells in vitro - A promising approach to gene therapy involves short DNA fragments (interfering RNA) that bind to specific genes and block their "translation" into the corresponding, disease-related protein (22.2.2007)

Scientists Unveil Piece Of HIV Protein That May Be Key To AIDS Vaccine Development - In a finding that could have profound implications for AIDS vaccine design, researchers led by a team at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), have generated an atomic-level picture of a key portion of an HIV surface protein as it looks when bound to an infection-fighting antibody (20.2.2007)

 

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