Chapter
7 - Takes a virus to catch a virus
THE GENETIC REVOLUTION by Dr
Patrick Dixon-1993/5
Once
in a Lifetime Medicines Medicines
to Cure your Grandchildren
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We
now come to one of the most extraordinary advances ever made by
genetic engineers: germ warfare directed against germs.The idea
of using one organism to fight another is not new.The naturally
occurring rabbit tuberculosis is a disease called myxomatosis.This
was introduced deliberately into Australia by releasing a small
number of infected animals and was an attempt to reduce the damage
to crops.
The
one disease that dominates so much research time in the 1990's
is AIDS, which stands for Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome.It
is caused by a virus that some have speculated at times was made
in a germ laboratory and released as a result of an accident.We
now know that the virus called HIV has been around much longer
than the facilities to make it in the laboratory.People went on
to suggest that the virus had been forced to alter in the laboratory
from an animal strain by using samples to affect a wide variety
of animals under strange conditions.
When
such infections are forced on creatures usually immune to a virus
the result can often be a change in the virus structure. This
mutation can make it more infectious and able to affect different
species.It is conceivably possible but very unlikely) that such
experiments could have accelerated the development of HIV from
animal viruses of a very similar nature.
What
is certain however is that we now have the tools to take viruses
apart and put them back together again.No longer do we need to
rely on the random effects of the animal host.These changes can
now be programmed in the test-tube with far greater confidence.
Many
of the attempts at finding an AIDS cure or a vaccine depend on
genetic engineering.The drive to find a cure is vast because the
problem is so massive.Almost every country of the world is now
reporting cases.While the European situation has turned out to
be slightly less severe than feared, the two-thirds world has
been severely hit.
In
many African towns and cities up to one in three of all the sexually
active adults are infected.Across the world as a whole the infection
is mainly a heterosexual one with gay men and drug users predominating
only in the affluent West.An exception is Thailand where numbers
infected have soared from 1000 to 300,000 in just over three years,
mainly through blood exchanged by drug users sharing dirty needles.
Already
the lives of 10 million people hang on finding a cure. The virus
can live in the body for up to 20 years before causing disease
so for some there is still time, but all the time the infection
spreads.
The
World Health Organisation estimated in 1990 that by the turn of
the century there would already be some 10 million children orphaned
as a result of AIDS with a further 10 million children infected
from birth.With such an explosive epidemic of other sexually transmitted
diseases HIV is hard to contain.
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Traditional
values preserved in societies over centuries have often been shattered
by modern communications and an a rapidly spreading materialistic
Western culture which has put a priority on instant personal satisfaction
rather than long term commitments.
So
far, genetic engineers have concentrated mainly on developing
a vaccine.Most of these vaccines are based on using genetic engineering
to programme bacteria or other cells to produce non-infectious
fragments of HIV outer coating which can be injected into humans.The
body reacts by producing antibodies against these fragments.When
HIV particles enter the body later o as a result of sexual intercourse,
they are rapidly destroyed and no infection results.That at least
is the theory.In practice HIV seems highly immune to attack by
human antibody.After all, almost everyone infected produces antibody
without being able to get rid of the virus.One reason at least
is that these outer fragments are highly variable with up to 30
different shapes emerging in slightly different HIV strains in
each person infected.An antibody for one shape is useless against
another.
Scientists
now think they have found a few parts of the virus structure which
change much less often and these are the parts being manufactured
(1470).A company called MicroGenesys makes parts called gp160
in insect cells, while Immuno makes gp160 in cells of mammals.Oncogen
makes gp160 as part of vaccinia virus while Chiron/Ciba Geigy
makes gp120 in yeast cells.Genentech and British Biotechnology
are also making fragments containing p24, yet another viral building
block (1480).All these vaccines are highly experimental but are
much safer than injecting whole HIV particles however damaged
we think we have made them before injecting.
Some
genetic engineers have also experimented to find an AIDS cure.These
treatments are all very experimental and can be hazardous.For
example inserting genetic code from HIV into a live vaccinia virus
(cowpox) resulted in severe vaccinia disease in two people with
AIDS when they were injected with the newly engineered virus.It
had been hoped that the new virus would stimulate the immune system
vigorously to produce a reaction to HIV.Instead it appears undamaged
vaccinia virus produced severe vaccinia disease in patients with
AIDS whose immune systems were too weak to fight it (1490).
Another
fascinating approach to fighting AIDS is to reprogramme the genetic
code of human white cells so that they have a special in-built
protection from HIV infection. Antibodies produced by cells only
work against whatever appears in the blood or the fluid surrounding
cells. Antibodies cannot enter cells through cell walls so what
happens inside a cell once the virus enters is beyond antibody
interference. However, we could try to generate specific antibody
production inside each cell at risk of infection.This approach
is known as "pathogen-derived resistance".Such genes
could be made and tested quite easily on white cells in the laboratory,
before attempting to use them as "gene therapy" in people
already HIV infected (1500).
The
way this method could work is as follows: first we have to identify
how the virus operates inside the cell and decide which part of
the machine to jam. This is relatively easy: for some years we
have known about a particular enzyme called reverse transcriptase
which is only used by HIV and not by the human cell. This enzyme
translates genetic code from the virus (RNA) backwards to make
a permanent copy in the DNA of the cell chromosomes. As we have
seen the usual pattern is always the reverse, with DNA programming
messenger RNA which then gives the instructions direct to the
ribosome factories. The main anti-AIDS drug used (Zidovudine)
is a drug which is used to try and block the activity of this
enzyme.
Here
the approach would be to expose human white cells in the testtube
to some reverse transcriptase, or some other piece of machinery.
Antibodies will then be produced against it. Messenger RNA which
is programming the production of this particular antibody would
then be extracted and used to make DNA with the same coding. This
DNA would then be inserted into bone marrow cells removed from
people carrying HIV.
These
reprogrammed bone marrow cells should then start to produce antibodies
against reverse transcriptase. They should now have some protection
against the virus because viruses entering the cell will find
antibodies inside the cell are destroying the enzyme needed to
reprogramme the nucleus (1505). At the moment such an approach
is theoretical only.
In
1987 I wrote a book called The Truth about AIDS which contained
all the most up to date information on the epidemic gleaned from
hundreds of recently published scientific papers. I speculated
then that scientists might by the turn of the century be able
to make an anti-virus: a new virus to reverse the effects of the
previous one.How realistic is this?
Recent
experiments on animals have already shown reprogramming is possible.In
1987 animal cells were grown in a test tube and successfully reprogrammed
using special techniques (1510) so that when implanted into mice
they produced human growth hormone.The implanted cells tended
to be destroyed by the mice and none were still active after three
months.However the experiment was a real breakthrough (1520).It
is also a relatively predictable technique because reprogrammed
cells can be observed carefully to see how they behave before
implantation.So what about using viruses to reverse damage done
to cells of mammals?Retroviruses have been used to reprogramme
liver cells successfully (1530) and bone marrow cells in monkeys
(1540).
Building
viruses is surprisingly straightforward, given their complexity
once assembled.Most viruses are built from basic structures like
identical pieces of lego, moulded so they can only be assembled
one way.These pieces attract each other and fit together so well
that if millions of them are placed in a liquid, they tend to
join up spontaneously, in exactly the right shape, built around
a core of genetic code.We can even build virus outer shells with
an empty core.As you might have guessed by reading this far, we
can also programme cells to make them.Such experiments have been
carried out using human cells to make empty shells of a virus
which causes bone marrow failure in children (1550).
Sickle
cell disease is yet another disease affecting red blood cell haemoglobin.Genetically
caused, it is extremely common in countries where malaria is present
because these unusually shaped red cells provide some resistance
to malaria, so people with sickle cell genes tend to survive longer
and have more children.Unfortunately when oxygen levels in the
body fall for any reason, these abnormal red cells alter shape
(into a sickle shape seen under the microscope) and clump together
blocking blood vessels and causing serious problems.Researchers
are trying to infect bone marrow cells with viruses to programme
back the faulty genes (1560).So far animal experiments are not
far enough advanced to try it out on humans.The approach would
to be (1560):
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1. construct viruses containing both the human
beta-globulin gene and a suitable market gene (see p
);
2. remove bone marrow cells from a patient with
sickle cell disease;
3. infect the cells in the laboratory and select
out the reprogrammed ones using the marker;
4. destroy all remaining bone marrow cells in
the patient by radiotherapy;
5. transplant back the patients own reprogrammed
cells.
The
virus contains a small section of genetic writing - usually just
enough instructions to tell the infected cell to stop all normal
factory production and instead to produce millions more viruses.The
virus does this by several methods.The virus causing AIDS does
it by reversing the normal chain of command in the cell.
Usually
the genetic code in the nucleus gives messages which are carried
out of the cell to tell the cell factories what to do. In this
case, a form of genetic code injected into the cell is used as
a messenger in reverse.This reverse messenger gets into the nucleus
and makes a permanent change to the messages recorded there.The
book of life has been permanently altered and every cell formed
as a result of growth and division will be similarly affected.Using
a computer analogy, the virus is a computer disc and the nucleus
is the memory of the computer.The computer disk is corrupt and
fills the computer with incorrect programs.
Using
the computer analogy it seems obvious that the answer to treating
such cells is to program them back to normal using a second virus
as you would a new manufacturers computer disc.
We
have been playing around with pieces of viruses for years.One
way of vaccinating people is to take normal virus particles and
damage them so they are incapable of causing infection.
If
they are injected, the white cells will see them as foreign and
destroy them.The Immune System will be prepared for the real thing
in the future with no risk of disease.Such vaccines do not work
with HIV for several reasons.The first is that damaged viruses
do no bother the Immune System very much and the body tends to
ignore them.Because of this the value of the learning experience
for the body is much less.The second reason is that the virus
is very variable.While the 'flu virus undergoes a change in shape
every few months or years somewhere in the world, HIV is so variable
that even in the same person you will find up to 30 different
shaped variations, each of which may require a slightly different
shaped anti-body to fight it. Experience has shown that HIV is
effectively immune from all known human anti-bodies.
You
can try to get a better response to a vaccine by creating a new
virus which is capable of causing infection but not disease. Sometimes
you find these occurring naturally.
The
cowpox virus produces very mild illness compared to smallpox,
but because their outside coatings are so similar infection with
cowpox in the past produces protection against smallpox in the
future.Attempts have been made to do this with HIV.
Billions of dollars every year are being poured into this process - trying
to find a way of producing anti-bodies in people that will protect
against HIV.However even if an effective vaccine is found it will
be some years before tests will show it to be fully safe.Even
when a good vaccine comes (ignore sensational reports) it will
do nothing to save the lives of the millions who are already infected.
We also need to find a vaccine that will work against a second
major type of HIV called HIV-2. This is gradually spreading from
countries in West Africa where it was first identified in the
mid 1980s. Almost certainly the development of this too will
be a direct result of genetic engineering (1565).
To
do this we need to make a new virus with an identical outside
coating so it sticks onto and affects the identical cells in the
body, but with the correct genetic message inside.Huge progress
has been made: in 1987 scientists took bone marrow cells and successfully
infected them with a virus containing genetic code for resistance
to an antibiotic called neomycin.they did it by mixing bone marrow
cells in a liquid containing a high concentration of viruses
and virus producing cells.They managed to reprogramme up to 16%
of the bone marrow cells by this method (1570).The virus type
used was very similar in action to the virus causing AIDS and
is of a family called retroviruses because they programme back
(retro) into the nucleus of the cell instructions which normally
come from the nucleus.In a normally operating cell, the genetic
code of the cell rules over what happens.Here the virus genetic
code takes charge and copies itself into the nucleus genetic code
(see fig ).
In
February 1991 it was announced that such an extraordinary achievement
had now been made.
The
disease was not AIDS but a very similar deficiency of the Immune
System present at birth as an inherited illness rather than one
happening as a result of virus infection.The disease is called
ADA for short.Remember that even though children are born who
will develop AIDS, they do so as a result of being HIV infected
through their mothers' blood in the womb, not because of a genetic
mutation.
Bone
marrow cells (T type white cells) were taken from a four year
old girl with the illness and infected with viruses containing
a normal copy of the ADA gene.The reprogrammed cells were then
grown in the laboratory and then transfused back into the person
again.Cells transfused back were correctly producing the missing
ADA for up to 40 days after reintroduction.The experiment was
carried out in September 1990 by the US National Institute of
Health (1580).
Such
a therapy could be available quite soon on an experimental basis
to those with HIV.However one further technical problem will need
to be overcome.
Viruses
are very sophisticated structures.There is a second message in
almost all viruses which is designed to stop another virus from
being able to enter the same cell.Viruses like to have sole occupation
it seems. It could get very confusing if two types of virus were
budding out of the same cells at once.The risk would be chaos
on the production lines.
The
chemical made by human cells as a response to viral infection
is called Interferon.Unless we can find a way of neutralising
its effects we could find it almost impossible to get a second
virus into a cell already infected.You can program bacteria to
produce huge amounts of Interferon as a medicine of course.This
has been tried for cancers and for AIDS with results which have
been very disappointing as a whole.
Once
we begin to build viruses accurately and with confidence we will
find almost overnight a revolution has taken place in medicine.Not
only will we have the ultimate cure for HIV infection, but also
for 'flu and a host of other viral infections including sore throats
and pneumonias.We may well find in the future that diseases like
Multiple Sclerosis also have a viral origin and can be similarly
cured.
Much
attention is being focused on the common cold, produced by around
120 different types of virus called rhinoviruses (1590).These
viruses are highly variable so you can catch the same strain of
cold virus several times in a lifetime - by the time it hits you
a second or third time, its outer coating is so altered as to
be unrecognisable by the body's immune system.
All
cold viruses have one thing in common: they all have a surface
feature which can latch on to cells lining the inside of the nose.these
nose cells are unique in the body which is why cold viruses do
not give you spots on your skin or - say - cause diarrhoea.Over
80% of the viruses attach to exactly the same component of the
walls of cells in the nose.The whole component (surface receptor
molecule) has been genetically engineered (1590).Perhaps one day
we will have a nasal spray of surface receptor molecules which
- if used twice a day - will mean cold viruses entering the nose
latch onto false receptors and are immobilised.
A
similar approach is already being tried in humans with HIV: here
the receptors on T4 white cells are called CD4 and are the ones
the virus causing AIDS is shaped to lock onto.Genetically engineered
CD4 has been produced in vast quantities in the laboratory and
injected as an experimental treatment.Results so far have been
poor, partly because the body destroys these particles very fast
and they have to be injected regularly to keep the blood concentration
high.Such a treatment would need to be taken for life.
The
massive drive forward because of AIDS will undoubtedly bring many
of the things we have looked at here to a practical reality within
ten to fifteen years.
Once
in a lifetime medicines
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Many
of these medicines would only need to be given once in a lifetime.For
example, if these synthetic viruses were used to alter genetic
code other than because of previous infections, then the results
should be permanent.We have many curious possibilities.In 1987
I first raised the possible of permanent hair colourant.We are
a hundred steps nearer.If you want blond hair instead of brown
then you buy a bottle of hair follicle virus.The viruses in the
mixture have an outside coating that fits only to cells which
make hair.They contain the instructions for fair hair instead
of dark.If by some accident a few other different cells in the
body are also infected the results will be unnoticeable.After
all, stomach cells do not use that part of the book of life anyway,
so however much it is altered the stomach cells will continue
as normal.
Unless
the virus medicine also infects the cells producing eggs or sperm
then the changes will die with the person and will not be passed
on to the next generation.
The
implications of all this are mind-stretching.Perhaps an adult
could buy a change of skin colour.We should be able to turn on
or off all kinds of instructions that certain cells use every
day.We should certainly be able to cure a great many cancers.A
tumour sample would be analyzed and the code checked for the fault.This
is then corrected with a virus injection. For mainly cancers we
will find that there are a number of faults which are very common
so one medicine will cure a great number of people rather than
different viruses needing to be designed for each person.
Medicines
to cure your grandchildren (Return
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The
outlook should improve dramatically for those who discover that
they have an inherited disease.In addition to major obvious diseases
such as haemophilia we should also be able to deal with bad genes
that occur in most of the population.Have you ever wondered why
doctors in hospital routinely ask what your parents died from
and at what age.Family history is possibly one of the greatest
clues to what problems you or I may face in the future.
Some
genetic code is more likely to produce strokes, while other genetic
code is more likely to produce breast cancer.Some code makes eczema
or asthma likely while other code produces a tendency to certain
mental problems.None of these things are certain unless you have
a disease like haemophilia with a fixed inheritance pattern.Many
of these other genetically based problems are influenced enormously
by the environment: foods, behaviour, stress, and other diseases
picked up along the way.
There
is therefore a huge market for genetic cleaning techniques: viruses
to infect eggs or sperm to make sure that you own children are
less likely than your parents were to drop down dead of heart
attacks before they were 60 years old.Doubtless such techniques
will be refined extensively in animals before trying on humans.However,
so long as society is so willing to abort what is inconvenient
or unwanted, such experiments will continue more rapidly.For someone
with severe inheritance problems it may be the only chance the
person is willing to take to have a child.Removing a cell from
within the womb could allow genetic analysis to make sure the
viral reprogramming had happened correctly.The other alternative
would be instead to make a full analysis of the eggs or sperm
to check the code is now permanently satisfactory before allowing
conception to occur.