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中国科学家试图治愈HIV患者 [复制链接]

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发表于 2019-9-18 16:13 |显示全部楼层
此文章由 revstar 原创或转贴,不代表本站立场和观点,版权归 oursteps.com.au 和作者 revstar 所有!转贴必须注明作者、出处和本声明,并保持内容完整
本帖最后由 revstar 于 2019-9-18 17:46 编辑

想象一下,你27岁了,某天开始感到不舒服。你病得很严重,不得不去医院,经过多次的穿刺验血和等待化验结果,你获知自己是HIV阳性。两周后你会发现这还不是最糟糕的。你也得了血癌(白血病)。

在任何情况下这都是一个极大打击。特别是在中国,艾滋病毒/艾滋病患者被高度歧视。但对于2016年春末,一位中国青年来说,这个双重晦气的诊断中有一个小而重要的一线希望。他将有资格参加首次临床试验,用以评估使用基因编辑技术CRISPR在一项治疗中同时治愈癌症和艾滋病感染的安全性。

2017年7月, 来自北京的医生对病人进行的化疗和放疗大量抑制了他自己的骨髓 , 留出空间让医生通过静脉给他注射了数以百万计的干细胞。这些新的干细胞,由健康同胞捐赠,将取代病人自身受损的骨髓, 医生希望这种方法能治愈他的癌症。但与其他常规骨髓移植不同的是,这次研究人员用CRISPR技术事先对这些待移植的干细胞进行了编辑,敲掉了一种名为CCR5的基因,没有这种基因,艾滋病病毒就无法入侵人体免疫细胞。

现在,两年多过去了,病人的健康状况良好,他的癌症完全缓解,正如研究人员今天在《新英格兰医学杂志》上报告的那样。经过编辑的干细胞存活了下来,并仍然为他的身体提供所有必要的血液和免疫细胞,其中一小部分细胞继续携带保护性的CCR5突变。尽管如此,这还不足以治愈他的艾滋病毒——他仍然受到感染,并在服用抗逆转录病毒药物来控制病毒。尽管如此,专家表示,新的病例研究表明,使用CRISPR技术对人类似乎是安全的,并使该领域朝着创造无药艾滋病毒治疗又迈进了一步。

癌症研究先驱Carl June在随附的一篇评论中写道:“这种安全性似乎是可以接受的。我们注意到本次基因编辑似乎是精确的,并且工程干细胞没有在病人体内引起免疫反应。June也提出警告说该研究的单一病例提供的数据有限未具普遍性。

他发现,更令人震惊的是,科学发展的速度如此之快,从最初报道的用CRISPR技术来治疗小鼠艾滋病毒感染,到进行临床试验,仅用了两年时间。在宾夕法尼亚大学(University of Pennsylvania), June领导了一项名为CAR-T的开创性癌症治疗项目,该项目涉及将免疫细胞基因重组成一支以肿瘤为靶向的杀手克隆大军。但他花了五年时间才从动物的研究到临床试验。他写道,在这种情况下,中国相对更为宽松的生物医学研究规定可能加快了这项工作,也可能是基因工程为艾滋病治疗的竞赛提供了新的动力。“无论如何,通过基因组编辑,妖怪已经从瓶子里跑出来了。”

这是HIV阳性患者首次接受CRISP细胞编辑技术的治疗。但十多年来,科学家们一直在努力寻找使CCR5基因失效的方法。这一切都始于2007年,当时一名德国医生为一名41岁的已经停用抗逆转病毒药物的艾滋病和白血病双料患者插上一根细管连接到他胸部的静脉,通过这根细管获得骨髓捐献者的血液细胞,该捐献者身上携带一个叫做CCR5 32的罕见基因突变。这个捐助者恰恰丢失了一段DNA,而这段DNA却能最终让HIV病毒进入免疫细胞。这位41岁病人最终从癌症中幸存下来,成为世界上第一个(尽管不再是唯一一个)被认为完全治愈的人
(这段故事可以参见  https://med.sina.com/article_detail_103_1_61910.html


在那一刻之前,科学家们只能寄希望于通过PrEP等药物来控制这种潜伏的疾病,这些药物可以减少传播,或者通过抗逆转录病毒治疗来支撑患者的免疫系统。柏林的病人让他们相信HIV病毒完全灭失是可能的。

他的故事激励了世界各地的实验室和公司使用基因工程来做这件事。2009年,总部位于加州的Sangamo Therapeutics公司推出了首个基因编辑治疗HIV的人体试验,使用的是一种更古老的技术——锌指核酸酶。这些编辑人体T细胞的试验取得了有限的成功。


许多人认为,更好的方法是编辑T细胞(以及所有其他血液和免疫细胞)的细胞,使其深入人体骨骼。它们被称为造血干细胞,往往对编辑更有抵抗力,而且在注入人体时带来更多的风险和不适。但万一你成功了,你可以为病人提供终生的HIV免疫血液和免疫细胞。这就是CRISPR技术所能做的。

进行这项最新研究的中国研究团队此前曾将CRISPR编辑的CCR5突变人类细胞移植到小鼠体内,使它们能够抵抗艾滋病病毒感染。2017年春天,他们登记了一项小规模的人体试验,将在北京人民解放军307医院进行。北京大学干细胞研究中心主任、该研究的合著者之一邓红奎说,到目前为止,研究人员只招募并治疗了一名志愿患者。但邓预计,一旦他们提高了技术效率,试验将会扩大。

为了编辑供体的干细胞,邓的团队将其放入一台施加轻微电击的机器中。这使得CRISPR技术的基本元件——一种DNA切割酶和类似GPS导航那样告诉它从哪里切割——能够穿过细胞膜并开始工作。这种方法最大限度地减少了潜在的错误,也就是所谓的靶外效应,因为CRISPR只在细胞中存在很短的时间,这意味着它们不太可能失控,破坏它们本不应该破坏的DNA。但这同时也意味着并非所有的细胞都被编辑。

在理想的情况下,从捐赠者的骨髓中分离出的大约1.63亿个干细胞中,CCR5基因的两个拷贝都将被全部敲掉。这将复制柏林病人从捐赠者那里得到的干细胞的相同过程。而研究人员得到的干细胞要低得多。移植到人体后,只有5.2%到8.3%的患者的骨髓细胞会携带至少一份CCR5编辑物。(该研究的作者没有报告有多少细胞同时编辑了两个拷贝,而有多少细胞只编辑了一个拷贝。)

到目前为止,研究人员对这名患者进行了为期19个月的跟踪调查。但更能说明问题的是,患者血液中的T细胞是否也保留了编辑的片段。在HIV用来渗透免疫系统的特定类型的T细胞中,只有2%的细胞中存在CCR5缺失的版本。

“这留下了很大的改进空间。”南加州大学Keck医学院研究HIV和基因编辑的分子微生物学家Paula Cannon说 :“在这样的水平上,这些细胞预计不会对病毒产生多大影响。”

另一项由洛杉矶希望之城(City of Hope)进行的临床试验,正在研究使用锌指核酸酶编辑HIV阳性患者的造血干细胞,其清除骨髓的步骤不那么激进,你可以称之为“化学轻化”(chemo-lite)。“到目前为止,已有6名患者接受了治疗,同样,根据上个月在西雅图举行的HIV / AIDS会议上提供的数据,500天后,只有大约2%到4%的细胞携带了这种突变。



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BOC  在2019-9-18 16:59  +40分  并说
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发表于 2019-9-18 16:15 |显示全部楼层
此文章由 revstar 原创或转贴,不代表本站立场和观点,版权归 oursteps.com.au 和作者 revstar 所有!转贴必须注明作者、出处和本声明,并保持内容完整
https://www.wired.com/story/chin ... ns-hiv-with-crispr/



Imagine you’re 27 years old and you start feeling ill. Ill enough that you go to the hospital, and after much poking and prodding and waiting for lab results you learn you’re HIV positive. Two weeks later you find out that’s not even the worst of it. You’ve got leukemia too.

Under any circumstances it would be a lot to take in. Especially in China, where HIV/AIDS is highly stigmatized. But for one young man living there, who this happened to in the late spring of 2016, there was one small but significant silver lining to this double whammy of a diagnosis. He would be eligible to participate in the first-ever clinical trial to assess the safety of trying to cure both the cancer and the infection in a single procedure using the gene-editing tool called Crispr.

In July of 2017, doctors in Beijing blasted the patient with chemicals and radiation to wipe out his bone marrow, making space for millions of stem cells they then pumped into his body through an IV. These new stem cells, donated by a healthy fellow countryman, would replace the patient’s unhealthy ones, hopefully resolving his cancer. But unlike any other routine bone marrow transplant, this time researchers edited those stem cells with Crispr to cripple a gene called CCR5, without which HIV can’t infiltrate immune cells.

Now, more than two years later, the patient is in good health, his cancer in full remission, as researchers report today in the New England Journal of Medicine. The edited stem cells survived and are still keeping his body supplied with all the necessary blood and immune cells, and a small percentage of them continue to carry the protective CCR5 mutation. Not enough to have cured him of HIV, though—he remains infected and on antiretroviral drugs to keep the virus in check. Still, experts say the new case study shows this use of Crispr appears to be safe in humans and moves the field one step closer toward creating drug-free HIV treatments.

“The safety profile appears to be acceptable,” pioneering cancer researcher Carl June wrote in an accompanying editorial, noting that the editing appeared to be precise, and that the engineered stem cells didn’t provoke an immune response in the patient. June did offer a caveat that the study’s single patient offered only limited data to draw on.

What he found more striking was how quickly the science has moved from the first reports of using Crispr to treat HIV infection in mice to trying it in humans: only two years. At the University of Pennsylvania, June has led work in a groundbreaking cancer treatment called CAR-T, which involves genetically reprogramming immune cells into a clone army of tumor-targeting assassins. But it took him five years to go from studies in animals to trials involving humans. In this case, China’s more permissive biomedical research regulations might have expedited the work, or it could be that genetic engineering is lending new momentum to the race for an HIV/AIDS cure, he wrote. “In any case, the genie is out of the bottle with genome editing.”
This is the first time an HIV-positive patient has been treated with Crispr-edited cells. But scientists have been trying to find ways to genetically disable CCR5 for more than a decade now. It all started in 2007, when a German doctor took a 41-year-old man with HIV/AIDS and leukemia off of his antiretroviral drugs and hooked a thin tube up to a vein in his chest. Through it, the so-called Berlin Patient received blood cells from a bone marrow donor who had a naturally occurring mutation called CCR5 Δ32. He was missing a chunk of DNA that ultimately allows an HIV virus to enter immune cells. The patient survived his cancer and became the first (though no longer the only) person considered to be fully cured of
Until that moment, scientists had only hoped to control the insidious disease, through drugs like PrEP that cut down on transmission or antiretroviral treatments that prop up patients’ immune systems. The Berlin Patient made them believe total virus annihilation was, in fact, possible.

His story galvanized labs and companies across the world to do it using genetic engineering. In 2009, California-based Sangamo Therapeutics launched the first human trials of gene-editing to treat HIV, using an older technology called zinc-finger nucleases. Those trials, which edit a person’s T cells, have produced some limited successes.

A better approach, many contend, is to instead edit the cells that make T cells (and all the other blood and immune cells) deep inside a person’s bones. Known as hematopoietic stem cells, they tend to be more resistant to editing, and require more risk and discomfort to deliver. But if you succeed, you can provide a patient with a lifetime supply of HIV-immune blood and immune cells. That’s what Crispr seems to offer.

The Chinese research team that conducted the latest study had previously transplanted Crispr-edited CCR5 mutant human cells into mice, making them resistant to HIV infection. In the spring of 2017 they registered a small human trial, to be conducted at the 307 Hospital of the People’s Liberation Army in Beijing. So far, the researchers have only enrolled and treated the single patient, according to Hongkui Deng, director of Peking University’s Stem Cell Research Center and one of the study’s coauthors. But Deng expects the trial to expand once they improve the efficiency of their technique.

To edit the donor stem cells, Deng’s team put them into a machine that applies a mild electrical shock. This allows the Crispr components—a DNA-chopping enzyme and GPS guides that tell it where to cut—to slip through the cell membrane and get to work. This approach minimizes potential mistakes, known as off-target effects, because Crispr is only in the cells for a short period of time, meaning they aren’t as likely to go rogue and break DNA they’re not supposed to. But it also means not all the cells get edited.

In an ideal world, both copies of the CCR5 gene would get snipped in all of the 163 million or so stem cells they isolated from the donor’s bone marrow. That would replicate what the Berlin Patient received from his donor. What the researchers got instead was much lower. After transplantation, only between 5.2 and 8.3 percent of the patient’s bone marrow cells carried at least one copy of the CCR5 edit. (The study authors didn’t report how many cells had both copies versus one copy edited.)
That number stayed more or less stable over the 19 months that researchers have so far tracked the patient. But the more telling question is whether T cells in the patient’s blood also retain the edit. In the specific kind of T cells that HIV uses to infiltrate the immune system, the broken version of CCR5 was present in only about 2 percent of them.

“That leaves a lot of room for improvement,” says Paula Cannon, a molecular microbiologist who studies HIV and gene-editing at the University of Southern California’s Keck School of Medicine. “At those levels, the cells would not be expected to have much of an effect against the virus.”

Another clinical trial, run by the City of Hope in Los Angeles, is investigating using zinc-finger nucleases to edit the hematopoietic stem cells of HIV-positive people, with a less aggressive bone-marrow-clearing-out step, what you might call “chemo-lite.” So far six patients have been treated, and again, after 500 days only about 2 to 4 percent of cells carried the mutation, according to data presented at an HIV/AIDS conference last month in Seattle.





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发表于 2019-9-18 16:21 |显示全部楼层
此文章由 revstar 原创或转贴,不代表本站立场和观点,版权归 oursteps.com.au 和作者 revstar 所有!转贴必须注明作者、出处和本声明,并保持内容完整
本帖最后由 revstar 于 2019-9-18 16:23 编辑

在找CRISPR技术的股票,正好9月的新闻就顺手翻了   

发表于 2019-9-18 16:31 |显示全部楼层
此文章由 我的电脑 原创或转贴,不代表本站立场和观点,版权归 oursteps.com.au 和作者 我的电脑 所有!转贴必须注明作者、出处和本声明,并保持内容完整
很好,多翻译点科技新闻

2014年度奖章获得者 2015年度奖章获得者

发表于 2019-9-18 17:30 |显示全部楼层
此文章由 蚝 原创或转贴,不代表本站立场和观点,版权归 oursteps.com.au 和作者 蚝 所有!转贴必须注明作者、出处和本声明,并保持内容完整
可以可以,这么长的新闻,我都看不下去

楼主辛苦

发表于 2019-9-18 20:28 |显示全部楼层
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有难度
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退役斑竹

发表于 2019-9-18 20:33 |显示全部楼层
此文章由 飞儿 原创或转贴,不代表本站立场和观点,版权归 oursteps.com.au 和作者 飞儿 所有!转贴必须注明作者、出处和本声明,并保持内容完整
这是好事,功德无量。

发表于 2019-9-18 20:35 |显示全部楼层
此文章由 qianqian2007 原创或转贴,不代表本站立场和观点,版权归 oursteps.com.au 和作者 qianqian2007 所有!转贴必须注明作者、出处和本声明,并保持内容完整
新闻版难得的一篇非常通顺的文章

发表于 2019-9-19 08:36 |显示全部楼层
此文章由 回眸一笑 原创或转贴,不代表本站立场和观点,版权归 oursteps.com.au 和作者 回眸一笑 所有!转贴必须注明作者、出处和本声明,并保持内容完整
中国没有国外的研究前的ethics 申请,所以容易开展这些新项目。上次应用在双胞胎身上引起的全球风暴,也许是引起了这个技术该不该应用在HIV的预防上。
Believing everybody is dangerous;
Believing nobody is very dangerous

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