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Tuesday, January 11, 2022

Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich - New method for genetic analysis of resting human immune cells [Medical Xpress, December 2021]

Title:
New method for genetic analysis of resting human immune cells 
 
By: 
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
 
Published:
Medical Xpress, 28 December 2021
 
From the article:
CD4+ T cells are important parts of the immune system and play a key role in defending the body against pathogens. As they possess a great variety of defense mechanisms against HIV in their resting state, they are infected only very rarely—but these few infected cells form a latent reservoir for HIV in the body that currently cannot be reached by antiviral drugs. Consequently, the virus can spread again from there after activation of the CD4+ T cells. Understanding how HIV interacts with resting CD4+ T cells is essential for finding new therapeutic approaches. Scientists led by Prof. Oliver T. Keppler from the Max von Pettenkofer Institute at LMU have now developed a method that for the first time allows these specific immune cells to be genetically manipulated under physiological conditions in an efficient and uncomplicated manner. As the authors report in the journal Nature Methods, this permits previously unobtainable insights into the biology of these cells.