| Promising
Microbicide can be Produced by Plants
Scientists have
developed an anti-HIV microbicide that can be mass-produced
in plants in quantities large enough to make it affordable
for people in developing countries, they say.
The microbicide, which has been found
to prevent HIV transmission in cells, is a combination of
two promising microbicide compounds monoclonal antibody
b12 and the protein cyanovirin-N.
Together the compounds are "more
potent at neutralising HIV than its single components",
Amy Sexton, lead author of the study and a researcher at the
University of Melbourne, Australia, told SciDev.Net.
The researchers also showed that the microbicide
can be mass-produced by transferring the gene constructed
for the microbicide into tobacco plant cells.
"This way the plant expresses the
gene and produces the microbicide in the same way it produces
its own proteins," says Sexton.
Scaling-up production simply requires
growing acres of the plants from genetically modified seeds,
she adds.
Microbicide gels and creams are a great
hope for female-initiated protection from HIV/AIDS but so
far trials have had mixed results (see Drugs may be the next
frontier for HIV prevention and Anti-HIV gel fails to prevent
infection).
In February this year, research suggested
that the anti-HIV gel PRO 2000 might protect against infection
(see Microbicide hope at last, say researchers) but the results
were not completely certain. The results of a larger PRO 2000
study are due in December 2009.
"The success of microbicides depends
not only on the identification of a broad-acting effective
product, but also on the issue of cheap and easy production
at a huge scale for global availability. We have demonstrated
the potential for overcoming both of these hurdles,"
says Sexton.
But Morad Ahmed Morad, a professor of
medicine at Tanta University, Egypt, is more cautious, saying
that potential health issues such as allergic reaction to
a plant-produced microbicidal cream and environmental concerns
about the spread of the inserted gene to other plants need
to be considered.
He adds that developing countries may
not be able to produce such a microbicide themselves because
its production will be controlled by patents.
The research was published online in The
FASEB Journal last month (26 May).
Source: SciDev.Net
Date: 11 June, 2009

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