Press Release
05.09.2024
On a mission to cure HIV: Christian Gaebler receives ERC Starting Grant
Prof. Christian Gaebler © Charité | Sebastian Tromm
Prof. Christian Gaebler, an HIV researcher at Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, has a goal: to develop treatments that cure HIV infection in patients or prompt the immune system to keep the virus in check in the long term, even without medications. To that end, Gaebler plans to conduct a detailed study of patients who are already living without medication. His research project has now persuaded the European Research Council (ERC), which has awarded him about 1.5 million euros in funding under an ERC Starting Grant.
Electron microscope image of an immune cell infected with HIV that releases many viral particles into its surroundings © CDC | C. Goldsmith
Advances in HIV treatment allow people with the virus to lead largely normal lives these days. However, they have to continue taking antiretroviral drugs, a special type of medications that suppress viral replication. “Antiretroviral therapy can’t cure HIV infection because the virus hides inside immune cells,” explains Christian Gaebler, head of a lab at the Department of Infectious Diseases and Critical Care Medicine at Charité and the Berlin Institute of Health at Charité (BIH). “These hiding spots are called viral reservoirs. They explain why the virus resumes multiplying within a few weeks after the medications are discontinued.”
There are only a handful of people whose bodies have completely cleared the virus, all of them due to stem cell transplantation. A team of researchers from Charité, Gaebler included, presented one such true case of cured HIV to the medical world just recently, in July. But owing to high risks, stem cell transplantation is not an option for most of those living with HIV, so the virus is still viewed as incurable. Gaebler aims to change that through the HIV CURE MISSION project. The need is great: The Robert Koch Institute puts the number of people living with HIV in Germany at 96,700 as of the end of 2023, while the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) estimates about 40 million as the worldwide figure.
Learning from patients who have been cured or are in remission
Gaebler’s research follows a two-pronged approach. First, he plans to conduct in-depth studies of the cases in which HIV has been cured. Are there immunological traits on the part of either the stem cell donor or the recipient that could have contributed? Or parameters that explain why stem cell transplantation did not lead to a cure in other cases? Second, he plans to study a second group of people living with HIV who are managing without antiretroviral therapy, patients known as “post-treatment controllers.”
“There are people with HIV whose immune system keeps the virus in check even though they’ve discontinued antiretroviral treatment,” Gaebler explains. “In those patients, the immune system suppresses viral activity although the virus is still hiding in some cells in the body. Because the virus is still detectable, we don’t refer to these patients as having been cured. Instead, we say they are in ongoing remission.”
How does the immune system manage to control the virus?
Several of these post-treatment controllers who have been in remission for over four years were followed after receiving a new HIV antibody treatment. Gaebler was involved in the phase I trial, whose results were published in 2022. He received the German AIDS Prize for that work last year. “We want to learn from these people,” Gaebler says. He and his team plan to document exactly how their immune system responds to the virus and which genes in their immune cells and in the virus are active. Because the viral reservoirs pose the biggest obstacle to curing HIV, the researchers will be studying their properties in detail. This is especially important because antibody treatment has been shown to reduce the number of places where the virus can hide.
Since antibody treatment is still in its infancy, there are not yet many people who are in remission as a result. However, Gaebler expects their number to increase as larger clinical trials get under way. “Once we understand the mechanisms that contribute to remission or a cure, we plan to use those findings to develop new approaches to treating HIV that can be used on a broad basis,” Gaebler says. “We do still have a ways to go, but our goal remains to either cure people with HIV or otherwise allow them to live a healthy life without medications.”
ERC Starting Grants
The European Research Council (ERC) currently supports early-career researchers as part of the Horizon Europe framework research program. Grants are awarded to outstanding talent with two to seven years of experience since earning a doctorate who are pursuing an unusual research approach on a topic of their choice. Proposals aimed at building a research group can receive about 1.5 million euros in funding for a five-year term.
Contact:
i. A. Dr. Pia Nitz
Referentin Wissenschaftskommunikation / Pressearbeit
Geschäftsbereich Unternehmenskommunikation
Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin
Campus Charité Mitte | Charitéplatz 1 | 10117 Berlin
Besuchsadresse: Friedrich-Althoff-Haus | Ebene 04 | Raum 04.004
T +49 30 450 570 400
presse@charite.de
https://www.charite.de
Source: https://www.charite.de/
"Reproduced with permission - "Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin"
Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin
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