CRISPR Screens Map Human T‑Cell Genes That Promote or Block HIV Infection

How does HIV, armed with only nine genes, manage to hijack the immune system so effectively? For decades, researchers have known that the virus depends on human proteins to enter, replicate, and persist—yet the full roster of those host factors has remained elusive. One major reason: most HIV studies have relied on immortalized cell lines rather than the primary CD4+ T cells the virus actually infects in the body. As a result, scientists have lacked a comprehensive picture of how real human T cells respond when HIV attacks.

A new study from Gladstone Institutes and the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), changes that. In the study, titled “Systematic Discovery of Pro- and Anti-HIV Host Factors in Primary Human CD4+ T Cells” and published in Cell, researchers report the first genome‑wide map of human genes that either promote or restrict HIV infection in primary human CD4+ T cells, offering a long‑sought blueprint of the host–virus interface.

“HIV has been a global crisis for over 40 years,” said Alex Marson, MD, PhD, director of the Gladstone‑UCSF Institute of Genomic Immunology and senior author of the study. “By studying human T cells, which are the primary target of the virus, we’ve finally mapped the genes—many of which were previously unknown—that influence whether or not they can be infected by HIV.”

Gladstone Institutes
Scientists in the Marson Lab at Gladstone Institutes have opened a new door to understanding HIV by creating the first genetic roadmap of how the virus interacts with real human cells. [Gladstone Institutes]

Achieving this required overcoming a fundamental technical barrier. “One challenge of using real human T cells for research is they’re very difficult to infect with HIV; out of a whole dish of cells, typically only one or two percent would get infected,” said first author Ujjwal Rathore, PhD. After years of optimization, the team pushed infection rates to roughly 70%, enabling genome‑scale CRISPR perturbations in primary cells for the first time.

With that platform in hand, the researchers performed orthogonal genome‑wide CRISPR activation (CRISPRa) and CRISPR knockout (CRISPRn) screens in CD4+ T cells, systematically testing nearly every human gene. Disrupting genes revealed those HIV depends on, while overactivating genes exposed natural antiviral defenses that HIV normally suppresses. “Over‑activating the genes gave us a wealth of information,” said co–first author Eli Dugan, a PhD candidate in Marson’s lab. “We discovered natural antiviral proteins that were previously invisible because the virus could effectively silence them.”

Across both screens, the team identified hundreds of host factors that shape HIV infection. Among the most striking were two previously unrecognized antiviral proteins: PI16 and PPID (Cyp40). “PI16 interacts with host factors involved in HIV fusion and inhibits viral entry, whereas PPID, a paralog of the proviral cyclophilin CypA, binds capsid and reduces nuclear import of the HIV core,” wrote the authors. Targeted mutagenesis, along with structural modeling and evolutionary analyses, pinpointed residues essential for PPID’s restriction activity, and engineered variants were up to tenfold more potent, according to Dugan.

To test whether these defenses could counter real‑world viral strains, the team collaborated with HIV pioneer Jay Levy, MD, who provided isolates from the early AIDS epidemic. Elevated levels of PI16 or PPID restricted even these aggressive HIV strains.

“This was the first genome‑wide effort to show how human genes affect HIV infection in cells taken directly from human blood samples,” said Nevan Krogan, PhD, director of the HIV Accessory and Regulatory Complexes (HARC) Center. “Our findings could eventually lead to new treatments that help the body’s immune system resist the virus.”

Beyond identifying antiviral factors, the study offers the potential for a powerful new platform for probing HIV latency—the persistent reservoir that evades antiretroviral therapy. “Now, we have the platform to ask the biggest questions in the field,” Rathore said, “and hopefully learn how to eliminate hidden HIV that current drugs can’t reach.”

The post CRISPR Screens Map Human T‑Cell Genes That Promote or Block HIV Infection appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.

Policy implications for halting human trafficking and sexual exploitation at U.S. colleges and universities: results from a 12-campus survey

Human trafficking is a priority concern in the U.S, but few research studies have investigated the nature and extent of its occurrence on U.S. college campuses nor strategies to stop it. The objective of this research was to identify its occurrence (force/coercion/fraud into sex exchanges for something of monetary or other value) among college students in San Diego County and Imperial Valley, California, where some of the highest documented rates of human trafficking occur nationally, and its implications for policy. Methods: College students (n = 971) from 12 campuses in Southern California responded to fliers posted on their campuses by completing online self-administered surveys. Results: Nearly one in five students (18%) surveyed reported experiencing human trafficking in college. In bivariate analyses, trafficked students were more likely to be BIPOC, LGBTQ, foster youth, fraternity/sorority members, use illicit substances, experience abuse (physical, emotional, sexual, or being told to recruit others), transport/sell drugs, perform labor, and exchange sex for grades/schoolwork. Multiple logistic regression analyses (adjusting for age, sexual orientation, race) revealed those trafficked were more likely as college students to exchange sex across the U.S.-Mexico border (OR = 4.02; CI: 2.52-6.17), be inhibited to seek academic counseling (OR = 2.58; CI = 1.63-4.10), acquire a sexually transmitted infection (OR:1.63; CI: 1.04-2.57), wonder how they would afford their next meal (OR:1.20; CI: 1.03-1.40), and feel pressure from others (i.e., instructors, peers) to engage in sex (OR:2.69; CI:11.75-4.12). Conclusions: Strategies may need to: 1) expand Title IX implementation to encompass human trafficking/sexual exploitation information at all universities, and 2) amend or introduce state laws mandating human trafficking prevention awareness training at schools to include colleges/universities.

Cibisatamab and FAP-4-1BBL in microsatellite-stable colorectal cancer: a phase 1b trial

Nature Medicine, Published online: 20 April 2026; doi:10.1038/s41591-026-04380-z

As presented at the 2026 AACR Annual Meeting: in a phase 1b trial, patients with microsatellite-stable colorectal cancer received a FAP-4-1BB ligand together with the CEA-directed T cell engager cibisatamab; the treatment was safe, and biomarker analysis showed induction of immunity in line with the biological rationale.

[Editorial] An opportunity to confront multimorbidity

The notion of compression of morbidity was the guiding principle of public health a generation ago. If one could postpone the onset of chronic disease and disability to a later age, the total lifetime burden of illness could be reduced, compressing it into a shorter period at the end of life. The goal was to increase not only lifespans, but also healthspans. Public health systems are designed to enable individuals to live long, healthy lives, before experiencing a brief, sudden decline in their final months.

[Comment] The potential of online alcohol interventions for older adults

The adverse effects of high levels of alcohol consumption on cognitive function have been documented, including using Mendelian randomisation.1 Maintaining cognitive function is a priority for individuals as they age. However, the increasing size and health needs of the ageing population globally brings challenges for provision of preventive and therapeutic interventions.

[Comment] Achieving equity requires investment in vulnerable populations

It is well known that both mental health conditions (MHCs)1 and low income2 increase the risk for communicable and non-communicable diseases. However, previous studies have not comprehensively investigated potential interactions in the effects of mental disorders and income on physical health. In their Article, Linda Ejlskov and colleagues assessed the risks of a broad range of physical health conditions (PHCs) across income strata in people with and without MHCs.3 According to their results, MHCs and low income seem to operate as independent, additive risk factors, with some notable exceptions.

[Comment] The unattributable burden of disease

Non-communicable diseases remain the leading cause of mortality and disability worldwide and account for most health loss in high-income countries, including Italy.1 Cardiovascular diseases, cancers, diabetes, and chronic respiratory diseases are largely driven by modifiable behavioural, metabolic, and environmental exposures.2 Characterising the distribution of these risk factors and quantifying their contribution to population health is central to modern epidemiology and public health.

[Comment] Can multimorbidity research progress from description to intervention?

The concept of multimorbidity, the co-occurrence of two or more long-term conditions, has become an important focus for research in the burden of ill-health associated with ageing. A burgeoning literature shows that the prevalence of multimorbidity is substantial, even though estimates vary according to definition and method of ascertainment.1 Not many studies have taken a longitudinal approach and evaluated the incidence of multimorbidity. In The Lancet Public Health, Eirion Slade and colleagues2 report on the incidence of multiple long-term conditions, also known as multimorbidity, in an electronic health records dataset for nearly the whole of England, UK.