CIMB Abstract

Curr. Issues Mol. Biol. (2000) 2 (2): 61-69

The Use of Ribozyme Gene Therapy for the Inhibition of HIV Replication and its Pathogenic Sequelae

Justin E. Rigden, Julie A. Ely, Janet L. Macpherson, Wayne L. Gerlach, Lun-Quan Sun, and Geoff P. Symonds

Johnson and Johnson Research Labs, GPO Box 3331, Sydney NSW 2001, Australia

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is a lentivirus, a separate genus of the Retroviridae which are RNA viruses that integrate as DNA copies into the genomes of host cells and replicate intracellularly through various RNA intermediates. Several of these RNA molecules can be targeted by ribozymes and a number of investigators, including our group, have demonstrated the ability of ribozymes to suppress HIV replication in cultured cells. It is argued that the use of this ribozyme gene therapy approach for the treatment of HIV infection may act as an adjunct to chemotherapeutic drugs and may affect not just viral suppression, but also immune restoration. This approach can be tested in Clinical Trials, several of which are currently under way.

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