Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Health

How Does HIV Virus Evades Immune System

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Apr, 2016 12:22 PM
    Scientists have identified a human (host) protein that weakens the immune response to HIV and other viruses.
     
    "Our study provides critical insight on a paramount issue in HIV research: Why is the body unable to mount an efficient immune response to HIV to prevent transmission?" said one of the researchers Sumit Chanda, professor and director of Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute (SBP) in the US.
     
    The findings showed that a deficiency in NLRX1 -- an intracellular protein -- reduces the replication of the HIV virus.
     
    It also slows down the power of immune system and promotes immunity to infection.
     
    "Importantly, we were able to show that deficiencies in NLRX1 reduce HIV replication, suggesting that the development of small molecules to modulate the innate immune response may inhibit viral transmission and promote immunity to infection," Chanda added, in the paper published in the journal Cell Host and Microbe.
     
    Further, host immune checkpoints that control the immune response to cancer were also discovered.
     
    "This research expands our understanding of the role of host proteins in viral replication and the innate immune response to HIV infection, and can be extended to DNA viruses such as HSV and vaccinia," added another researcher Haitao Guo, postdoctoral research associate at University of North Carolina.
     
    Immune checkpoints are immunological "brakes" that prevent the over-activation of the immune system on healthy cells.
     
    Tumour cells often take advantage of these checkpoints to escape detection of the immune system.
     
    The results have important implications for improving HIV antiviral therapies, creating effective viral vaccines, and advance a new approach to treat cancer, the team concluded.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Calgary Hospital Researching Heart Rates And Predicting Oncoming Illness

    Calgary Hospital Researching Heart Rates And Predicting Oncoming Illness
    Dr. David Liepert, the hospital’s director of perioperative medicine, says a lack of variability in a heart rate is an indicator of medical stress.

    Calgary Hospital Researching Heart Rates And Predicting Oncoming Illness

    Shots For Other Viruses Offer Clues In Race For Zika Vaccine

    Scientists are racing to create a Zika vaccine, and while they're starting from scratch against a poorly understood disease, copying shots for similar viruses offers a head start.

    Shots For Other Viruses Offer Clues In Race For Zika Vaccine

    Best-before Date A Guide To Food Quality, Not Safety

    Best-before Date A Guide To Food Quality, Not Safety
    Should you worry about eating food if the best-before date on the label has come and gone? That depends on whether it's a can of tomatoes or a carton of milk.

    Best-before Date A Guide To Food Quality, Not Safety

    Beware! Binge Drinking Can Kill You In Sleep

    Beware! Binge Drinking Can Kill You In Sleep
    Binge drinking is defined as four drinks in two hours for women and five drinks in two hours for men.

    Beware! Binge Drinking Can Kill You In Sleep

    Cheap, Portable Biosensor Developed By Indian-American To Keep Tab On Alzheimer's Progress

    Cheap, Portable Biosensor Developed By Indian-American To Keep Tab On Alzheimer's Progress
    A team of researchers led by an Indian-American scientist has developed a portable biosensor that can display the progress of Alzheimer's disease in a patient.

    Cheap, Portable Biosensor Developed By Indian-American To Keep Tab On Alzheimer's Progress

    Yoga Can Make Life Better For People With Abnormal Heart Rhythm

    Yoga Can Make Life Better For People With Abnormal Heart Rhythm
    The researchers examined the effects of yoga on patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF) in which faulty electrical signals and rapid heart rate begin suddenly and then stop on their own.

    Yoga Can Make Life Better For People With Abnormal Heart Rhythm