Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) targets important cells of our immune system, making infected individuals more ...
Researchers at the Max Planck Institute of Biophysics and Heidelberg University have observed largely intact HIV-1 capsids as ...
Scientists have unveiled insights into how HIV-1, the virus responsible for AIDS, skillfully hijacks cellular machinery for its own survival. By dissecting the molecular interplay between the virus ...
Coauthor Yamina Bennasser and her colleagues characterized a sequence in the HIV-1 genome that encodes a rare siRNA precursor ... In addition, they found that the virus prevents RNA silencing through ...
Because the AIDS-causing pathogen HIV integrates its genome into that of infected host cells, individuals cannot realistically be cleared of virus once infection is established. Thus, anti-HIV ...
HIV can linger in the body for a decade or longer before the onset of AIDS, so experts have conjectured that the virus arrived in the country years before it was recognized. But precisely when and ...
HIV-1, like other viruses ... near the critical “frameshift site” in the viral genome. This frameshift site is essential for the virus to produce the correct proportions of two key proteins ...