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By ANDREW BRIDGES : Associated Press Writer
Jun 29, 2003 : 7:23 pm ET
Researchers are reporting progress in the
quest to infect mice with HIV, which would allow more widespread use
of the common laboratory animal in studying the virus that causes
AIDS.
An incremental step reported by researchers
at the University of California, San Francisco, is the latest in a
decade-long effort. Details appeared Sunday in the journal Nature
Cell Biology.
Further breakthroughs are expected in coming
weeks, researchers hinted.
While mice are the laboratory animal of
choice for studying many diseases, researchers largely have had to
rely on chimpanzees and gibbons for work on HIV and AIDS.
Some mice, genetically modified so their own
immune systems have been replaced with elements of their human
equivalents, can be infected with HIV. However, the virus only
replicates in the "human" cells within the mouse.
Otherwise, the replication of HIV in mice is
blocked at multiple points.
Previous work had overcome the barrier that
blocked the entry of the virus into mouse cells.
The new work reported Sunday showed success
in modifying mouse cells in a way that allows HIV-1, the predominant
type of the virus, to replicate, although not at the same levels
seen in humans, co-author Yong-Hui Zheng said.
Additional roadblocks likely exist, he said.
Harris Goldstein, director of the Center for
AIDS Research at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, said the
study lays out the structural basis for one of the blocks that
prevent efficient HIV-1 replication in mice. Goldstein was not
connected with the study.
Nathaniel Landau, an associate professor at
the Salk Institute who also was unconnected with the study, stressed
the study "will not solve the problem. It is maybe a step along the
way."
Worldwide, 42 million people had HIV/AIDS as
of December, according to the United Nations. The UN estimates 3.1
million died of AIDS last year.
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