Showing posts with label Science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Science. Show all posts

Monday, 27 July 2015

How a young child fought off the AIDS virus

How a young child fought off the AIDS virus

 

In 1996, a baby infected with HIV at birth was started on anti-AIDS drugs. But at age 6, against the advice of doctors, her family stopped treatment. Twelve years later, the young French woman is still healthy, with no detectable virus in her blood. Her unusual case, reported today at an international AIDS conference in Vancouver, Canada, may hold clues that might help other HIV-infected people control their infections without antiretroviral (ARV) drugs and offer insights to AIDS vaccine developers.

The case adds a new wrinkle to earlier reports of people who manage to control their HIV infections on their own: the so-called elite controllers, who never receive treatment yet suppress the virus to low levels, and posttreatment controllers like the “Mississippi baby,” who stopped taking ARVs at 18 months of age and remained virus free for more than 2 years. In 2013, many researchers thought that child might have been “cured,” but HIV came back strong after 27 months off treatment.

This time, it’s clear that the French woman is not cured: Investigators have found strong signals of HIV DNA in her immune cells and can readily induce them to produce virus, says Asier Sáez-Cirión, a viral immunologist at the Pasteur Institute in Paris who reported on her case. But she is the first documented HIV-infected child to go off treatment and remain in remission for this length of time. “We don’t know why this happened,” Sáez-Cirión says.

Some clues may come from a group of people infected by HIV as adults, known as the VISCONTI cohort, who went off ARVs and did not have the virus return for many years. As Sáez-Cirión and colleagues described in the March 2013 issue of PLOS Pathogens, the adults were diagnosed shortly after they became infected, began ARVs immediately, and stayed on them for an average of 3 years. At the time of that publication, the average person had been off ARVs for 7 years. Sáez-Cirión and co-workers have added the new case to the VISCONTI group, which now has 20 members.

The people in the VISCONTI cohort look strikingly different from elite controllers, the 1% of HIV-infected people who never have high virus levels, even in the first weeks of infection, despite never receiving treatment. Although no single factor explains the unusual ability of elite controllers to rein in HIV, many are genetically predisposed to have high levels of the CD8 lymphocytes that identify and eliminate cells infected with HIV. 
Posttreatment controllers, like the people in VISCONTI, have high virus levels shortly after infection and their immune systems rapidly deteriorate. Paradoxically, many have a genetic background that predisposes them to a weak adaptive immune response to the virus.

Sáez-Cirión thinks they may be receiving help instead from the more primitive and less powerful “innate” immune system that serves as a frontline defense against invaders. The researchers suspect that the innate immune system may be strong enough to contain HIV if people have very small reservoirs of viral DNA. Members of the VISCONTI cohort began treatment so quickly after infection that those reservoirs never got a chance to fill.

Another, somewhat counterintuitive, possibility is that the weak immune response in posttreatment controllers helps limit the size of the reservoir before the drugs are even started. HIV preferentially targets and infects the CD4 white blood cells that help fight infections. A weak CD4 response to the virus means fewer targets for it to infect.

Sáez-Cirión also suggests a third possibility: that some posttreatment controllers happen to be infected with a weaker form of the virus—a mutant resulting from HIV’s error-prone replication.

Anthony Fauci, who heads the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, says he’s intrigued by the new French case and how it fits together with the Mississippi child. “There’s something about the immune system of a very young person,” Fauci says. “The Mississippi child was a tickler for us, and I wouldn’t throw it out the window—27 months is a long time. Maybe, somehow, the way that child kept the virus under control is the same as the new case. I have an entirely open mind.”


Wednesday, 3 June 2015

15 Natural Phenomena You Didn't Know About

1. Dirty thunderstorms, aka volcanic lightning, occur when lightning is produced in a volcanic plume.

Dirty thunderstorms, aka volcanic lightning, occur when lightning is produced in a volcanic plume.
Martin Rietze / Via mrietze.com

They look like the entrance to Hell!

They look like the entrance to Hell!
Carlos Gutierrez / UPI Photo / Landov

2. Oh wait, here’s The Door to Hell, a gas fire in Turkmenistan accidentally ignited by scientists in 1971 and still burning. Oops.

Oh wait, here's The Door to Hell, a gas fire in Turkmenistan accidentally ignited by scientists in 1971 and still burning. Oops.
Flickr: flydime / Creative Commons

3. Flammable ice bubbles: frozen bubbles of methane, trapped beneath Alberta’s Lake Abraham.

Flammable ice bubbles: frozen bubbles of methane, trapped beneath Alberta's Lake Abraham.
Emmanuel Coupe / Getty Images

4. The Catumbo Lightning, which occurs during 140 to 160 nights a year, 10 hours per night and up to 280 times per hour.

The Catumbo Lightning, which occurs during 140 to 160 nights a year, 10 hours per night and up to 280 times per hour.
commons.wikimedia.org / Creative Commons

5. Christmas Island’s Red Crabs: Each year an estimated 43 million land crabs migrate to lay their eggs in the ocean.

Christmas Island's Red Crabs: Each year an estimated 43 million land crabs migrate to lay their eggs in the ocean.
Imago / Barcroft Media

Authorities close most of the island’s roads during the migration, which normally takes at least a week.

6. Monarch butterflies: The eastern North American population is notable for its southward late summer/autumn migration from the USA and Canada to Mexico, covering thousands of kilometers.

Monarch butterflies: The eastern North American population is notable for its southward late summer/autumn migration from the USA and Canada to Mexico, covering thousands of kilometers.
Flickr: lunasinestrellas / Creative Commons

No individual butterfly lives through the whole migration. Female monarchs lay eggs and their offspring continue the migrations.

No individual butterfly lives through the whole migration. Female monarchs lay eggs and their offspring continue the migrations.

7. Surreal spiderwebs: Fleeing torrential floodwaters near Wagga Wagga, Australia, thousands of spiders cover fields with cobwebs.

Reuters / Daniel Munoz
Reuters / Daniel Munoz

8. Namibia’s mysterious Fairy Circles: Studies suggest that a sand termite is responsible for their creation.

Namibia's mysterious Fairy Circles: Studies suggest that a sand termite is responsible for their creation.
Norbert Juergens / University of Hamburg

9. Underwater crop circles in the ocean off Japan: created by a male pufferfish in order to woo females.

Underwater crop circles in the ocean off Japan: created by a male pufferfish in order to woo females.
Yoji Ookata / NHK / Via ookatayouji.amaminchu.com

10. Spherical boulders in New Zealand: exhumed from the mudstone enclosing them by coastal erosion.

Spherical boulders in New Zealand: exhumed from the mudstone enclosing them by coastal erosion.
Flickr: chris_gin / Creative Commons

11. The Great Blue Hole: a large submarine sinkhole off the coast of Belize, over 300m across and 124m deep.

The Great Blue Hole: a large submarine sinkhole off the coast of Belize, over 300m across and 124m deep.

12. The Black Sun: Huge flocks of up to 50,000 starlings form in areas of the UK just before sundown during mid-winter. They are known as murmurations.

The Black Sun: Huge flocks of up to 50,000 starlings form in areas of the UK just before sundown during mid-winter. They are known as murmurations.
Flickr: 27770620@N02 / Donald Macauley / Creative Commons

13. The Sardine Run: occurs from May through July when billions of sardines move north along the east coast of South Africa. Their sheer numbers create a feeding frenzy along the coastline.

Flickr: mycoffeemug / Creative Commons
Flickr: mycoffeemug / Creative Commons

14. The Giant’s Causeway, Northern Ireland: an area of about 40,000 interlocking basalt columns, the result of an ancient volcanic eruption.

Flickr: iguanajo / Creative Commons
Flickr: ncurado / Creative Commons

15. Sailing stones in Death Valley, USA: a geological phenomenon where rocks move and inscribe long tracks along a smooth valley floor without human or animal intervention.

Flickr: mandj98 / Creative Commons
Flickr: thomashawk / Creative Commons