NEW HIV LIFE CYCLE DATA
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
Photo: EM of HIV Replication
LOS ALAMOS, NM (3/15/96)-
New research on the life cycle of HIV
suggests the virus replicates at an even faster rate than
previously believed. Nonetheless, new insights into HIV
replication should help guide the development of new AIDS
treatment strategies, report scientists at Los Alamos National
Laboratory.
Researchers at Los Alamos' Theoretical Biology and Biophysics
Group reported new estimates of how quickly the HIV-1 population
multiplies in the body, how long HIV particles last and how long
it takes for a viral particle to reproduce.
"We developed a new mathematical model which, combined with
frequent sampling, allows us to make an accurate model of the
kinetics of the viral particles," said Dr. Alan Perelson, of Los
Alamos.
The studies show that far more infectious particles of HIV-1 are
produced per day than previously estimated. A report in January
1995 by the same research team first documented a reliable
minimal replication rate for HIV.
"Using better modeling techniques and better data sets from
patients at different stages of the disease, we found about 10
billion virus particles are produced per day. That is a 15-fold
increase from estimates we made a year ago," said Perelson.
The new study also reported the first estimate of how long
HIV-infected cells live in the body. The majority live a day and
a half.
The results also suggest the minimum duration of the HIV-1 life
cycle in the body is 1.2 days on average. The life cycle is
measured from the time a mature virus particle is released until
it infects another cell and causes the release of a new
generation of viral particles.
The study looked at the destruction of the cellular factories
where viral particles are produced and at the mechanisms in the
body by which particles are eliminated. A new drug that renders
the virus incapable of infecting new cells was administered to
five patients. The drug, ritonavir, was approved for general use
only last week by the Food and Drug Administration. Ritonavir
blocks an enzyme the virus needs to be infectious.
This drug treatment study covered a short time scale of just a
week, and long-term trials are needed, Perelson notes. But the
development of effective drug therapies requires a solid
understanding of HIV's life cycle.
"Our hope to manage the disease over the long term depends on
these numbers - we need to know how many viral particles are
produced, where they are produced and how long the cells that
produce them live," Perelson said.
The research appeared in the
March 15, 1996 issue of Science.
Related information on the Internet
New Antiretrovirals
JAMA HIV Info.
HIV Replication Primer
Pathogenesis
YAHOO AIDS DIRECTORY
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