Engineering an HIV-resistant immune system for HIV cure

NIH RePORTER · NIH · K08 · $196,128 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

 DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): The candidate, Hind Fadel, M.D., Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor at the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine. She is a member of the Division of Infectious Diseases in the Department of Medicine, and of the Department of Molecular Medicine at the Mayo Clinic. Dr. Fadel is a physician-scientist committed to a career in basic and translational HIV-1 research and gene therapy. She has gathered an experienced team of mentors, collaborators and advisors and is proposing a comprehensive research, course work, and career development plan that will position her to be a successful independent investigator. The environment provided by the Mayo Clinic is ideally suited for the success of both the research and career development components of the award. She has also maintained and identified advisors and collaborators outside Mayo Clinic. The career development plan will allow her to hone her skills in genome editing with engineered site-specific nucleases, to gain insights into host factors role in HIV-1 biology, and to develop new skills to manipulate human genome for HIV-1 cure applications and gene therapy. The research plan focuses on developing HIV cure strategies that use targeting/editing of HIV-1 dependency and restriction factor genes with novel engineered nucleases in order to create HIV-1 resistance. The methods will be applied to primary CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and studied in humanized mice. While antiretroviral drugs have made treatment of HIV disease possible, they in many ways represent a "halfway technology." They leave existing patients vulnerable to major problems that include resistance, persistent immune dysfunction and immunosenescence, complex metabolic disturbances, and accelerated aging phenomena. The second problem is that while drug treatment can in theory prevent further transmission, the many problems associated with supplying the pill combinations life-long and with maintaining adherence have meant that the epidemic continues to expand. A definitive cure could solve both problems. Cure was until recently considered futuristic, but this has now changed. The recent cure of a patient with both HIV and leukemia -- the so-called "Berlin patient" -- by bone marrow transplantation from a donor lacking a main HIV cellular cofactor (the entry co-receptor CCR5) was energizing to the field. The specific approach (allogeneic BMT) is far too toxic for anyone without cancer. However, the value of targeting a gene that HIV needs (a host cofactor) has been made clear. Along with the very recent emergence of highly promising gene targeting technologies, and advances in our understanding of the disease process itself, the Berlin patient helped catalyze making cure a central priority in the field. Modification of a patient's own HSCs to regenerate an HIV- resistant immune system in subjects with HIV/AIDS, coupled with appropriately mild conditioning, could be an effective cure strategy. It is es...

Key facts

NIH application ID
9869836
Project number
5K08AI122838-05
Recipient
MAYO CLINIC ROCHESTER
Principal Investigator
Hind Jawdat Fadel
Activity code
K08
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$196,128
Award type
5
Project period
2016-01-01 → 2022-12-31