Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Cows Can Cure HIV. Surprised? Well This Is What Researchers In The US Have Found

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Jul, 2017 12:48 PM
  • Cows Can Cure HIV. Surprised? Well This Is What Researchers In The US Have Found

A study published in journal Nature by researchers at Scripps Research Institute, the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI) and Texas A&M University has found that cows hold the clue to HIV cure.

 

The researchers were able to induce potent antibodies against HIV in cows. Cows never get infected by HIV. Their immune systems produce unique antibodies against infections.

 

As part of the research, the scientists injected four calves with HIV immunogens, reports the Time.com. The researchers discovered that the cows quickly developed bNAbs, or a neutralising antibody that defends a cell from an antigen or infectious body by neutralizing any effect it has biologically, to HIV in their blood.

 

 

An immunogen is any antigen capable of inducing humoral and/or cell-mediated immune response instead of immunological response.

 

The scientists were pleasantly shocked by the unique discovery. “I was shocked,” TIME quoted study author Devin Sok as saying. He said that the calves developed responses against HIV at an unanticipated speed. Not only this, the scientists were also able to isolate the antibodies from the calves and they identified “NC-Cow 1” as the most powerful antibody attacking the HIV.

 
 
With the study, the scientists were able to study how the immune systems of cows is capable of creating such antibodies.

 

Cows cannot be infected with HIV, of course. But these findings illuminate a new goal for HIV vaccine researchers: by increasing the number of human antibodies with long loops, we might have an easier chance of eliciting protective bnAbs by vaccination," the researchers noted.

 

While no one knows definitively why these powerful antibodies evolved in cattle, one theory holds that the key could be in long loops of bNAbs, called HCDR3, which are tied to the animals’ extensive gastrointestinal systems. The researchers note that a promising approach to HIV vaccine development may be to promote the human immune system’s development of long HCDR3 loops.

 

“HIV is a human virus,” said Devin Sok, a study leader and Antibody Discovery and Development Director at IAVI, “but researchers can certainly learn from immune responses across the animal kingdom.”

 
 
 
According to TIME, understanding of the immune system of cows that effectively develops antibodies against HIV is a “valuable information” for the scientists, who are hoping to develop an HIV vaccine. It will, however, depend on whether the scientists are able to develop a way through which human bodies can mimic the process through which cows create these antibodies.
 

Scientists have so far been unable to develop a vaccine against HIV. After this study, the researchers are hopeful of applying their finding on humans.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Obesity silently damages heart

Obesity silently damages heart
Obese people without an overt manifestation of heart disease experience silent cardiac damage that fuels risk of heart failure in the future, with new research...

Obesity silently damages heart

Trans fats bad for brain too

Trans fats bad for brain too
Every gram of dietary trans fatty acids consumed in a day was linked with 0.76 fewer words recalled, which means 11 fewer words recalled with...

Trans fats bad for brain too

Sleep-deprived schoolchildren run obesity risk

Sleep-deprived schoolchildren run obesity risk
Children of mothers who work full time may not be getting the amount of sleep they need each night, placing them at higher risk of being overweight or obese...

Sleep-deprived schoolchildren run obesity risk

Unravelling the process of going to sleep

Unravelling the process of going to sleep
Sleeping is a gradual process and researchers have now developed a method to estimate the dynamic changes in brain activity and behaviour during the transition from wakefulness to sleep....

Unravelling the process of going to sleep

Male hormone does not hamper women's libido

Male hormone does not hamper women's libido
  Failed relationships and emotional health threaten menopausal women's interest in sex more than levels of the male hormone testosterone and other...

Male hormone does not hamper women's libido

Now, ultrasound can penetrate bones, metals

Now, ultrasound can penetrate bones, metals
Materials like bones and metals, called aberrating layers, have physical characteristics that block or distort ultrasound's acoustic waves. ...

Now, ultrasound can penetrate bones, metals