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Targeting HIV
Barton Haynes, Frederic M. Hanes Professor of medicine and immunology,
has been selected to lead the Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Immunology
(CHAVI), a consortium of universities and academic medical centers
established in July by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases (NIAID). The center's goal will be to solve major problems
in HIV vaccine development and design.
CHAVI will receive $15 million in its first year and may receive
a total of more than $300 million over seven years, according to
NIAID, part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). CHAVI's
mission is to address major obstacles to HIV vaccine development
and to design, develop, and test novel HIV vaccine candidates.
The award is aimed at helping to transform HIV research in the
U.S. into a more cooperative and collaborative system.
NIAID established CHAVI in response to recommendations of the Global
HIV Vaccine Enterprise, a virtual consortium endorsed by world
leaders at a G-8 summit in June 2004.
The Global HIV Vaccine Enterprise was originally proposed by NIAID
director Anthony Fauci, Haynes, Richard Klausner, executive director
of the global health program for the Gates Foundation, and other
prominent HIV vaccine researchers and public-health officials in
a June 2003 commentary in Science magazine.
Haynes, who is director of the Human Vaccine Institute at Duke,
has studied HIV for more than fifteen years. He is an internationally
recognized leader in basic T- and B-cell immunology, retrovirus
research, and HIV vaccine development.
www.dukemednews.org
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