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1. Both CD31(+) and CD31(-) Naive CD4(+) T Cells Are Persistent HIV Type 1-Infected Reservoirs in Individuals Receiving Antiretroviral Therapy.

3. HIV transcription persists in the brain of virally suppressed people with HIV.

4. Nanocapsules Comprised of Purified Protein: Construction and Applications in Vaccine Research.

5. Regional Analysis of Intact and Defective HIV Proviruses in the Brain of Viremic and Virally Suppressed People with HIV.

6. DExD/H-box helicases in HIV-1 replication and their inhibition.

7. Persistence of envelopes in different CD4+ T-cell subsets in antiretroviral therapy-suppressed people with HIV.

8. Intact HIV Proviruses Persist in the Brain Despite Viral Suppression with ART.

9. Modular Lentiviral Vectors for Highly Efficient Transgene Expression in Resting Immune Cells.

10. Potential Impact of Human Cytomegalovirus Infection on Immunity to Ovarian Tumours and Cancer Progression.

11. Longitudinal analysis of subtype C envelope tropism for memory CD4 + T cell subsets over the first 3 years of untreated HIV-1 infection.

12. Understanding the mechanisms driving the spread of subtype C HIV-1.

13. CXCR4-Using HIV Strains Predominate in Naive and Central Memory CD4 + T Cells in People Living with HIV on Antiretroviral Therapy: Implications for How Latency Is Established and Maintained.

14. Whole Transcriptome Analysis of Aedes albopictus Mosquito Head and Thorax Post-Chikungunya Virus Infection.

15. RNASeq Analysis of Aedes albopictus Mosquito Midguts after Chikungunya Virus Infection.

16. Possible clearance of transfusion-acquired nef /LTR-deleted attenuated HIV-1 infection by an elite controller with CCR5 Δ32 heterozygous and HLA-B57 genotype.

17. Low levels of HIV-1 envelope-mediated fusion are associated with long-term survival of an infected CCR5-/- patient.

18. Analysis and dissociation of anti-HIV effects of shRNA to CCR5 and the fusion inhibitor C46.

19. Analysis of Clinical HIV-1 Strains with Resistance to Maraviroc Reveals Strain-Specific Resistance Mutations, Variable Degrees of Resistance, and Minimal Cross-Resistance to Other CCR5 Antagonists.

20. HIV-1 and SIV Predominantly Use CCR5 Expressed on a Precursor Population to Establish Infection in T Follicular Helper Cells.

21. Frequency and Env determinants of HIV-1 subtype C strains from antiretroviral therapy-naive subjects that display incomplete inhibition by maraviroc.

22. Toxicity and in vitro activity of HIV-1 latency-reversing agents in primary CNS cells.

23. i-bodies, Human Single Domain Antibodies That Antagonize Chemokine Receptor CXCR4.

24. Genotypic Prediction of Co-receptor Tropism of HIV-1 Subtypes A and C.

25. CNS-specific regulatory elements in brain-derived HIV-1 strains affect responses to latency-reversing agents with implications for cure strategies.

26. Molecular Gymnastics: Mechanisms of HIV-1 Resistance to CCR5 Antagonists and Impact on Virus Phenotypes.

27. Inhibition of catechol-O-methyl transferase (COMT) by tolcapone restores reductions in microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) and synaptophysin (SYP) following exposure of neuronal cells to neurotropic HIV.

28. T cell therapies-are T memory stem cells the answer?

29. HIV-1 transcriptional regulation in the central nervous system and implications for HIV cure research.

30. Reliable genotypic tropism tests for the major HIV-1 subtypes.

31. Ex vivo response to histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors of the HIV long terminal repeat (LTR) derived from HIV-infected patients on antiretroviral therapy.

32. Differences in coreceptor specificity contribute to alternative tropism of HIV-1 subtype C for CD4(+) T-cell subsets, including stem cell memory T-cells.

33. Is the central nervous system a reservoir of HIV-1?

34. Covariance of charged amino acids at positions 322 and 440 of HIV-1 Env contributes to coreceptor specificity of subtype B viruses, and can be used to improve the performance of V3 sequence-based coreceptor usage prediction algorithms.

35. Designer antigens for elicitation of broadly neutralizing antibodies against HIV.

36. Site-selective solid-phase synthesis of a CCR5 sulfopeptide library to interrogate HIV binding and entry.

37. Inhibition of two temporal phases of HIV-1 transfer from primary Langerhans cells to T cells: the role of langerin.

38. Stem memory T cells (TSCM)-their role in cancer and HIV immunotherapies.

39. Distinct HIV-1 entry phenotypes are associated with transmission, subtype specificity, and resistance to broadly neutralizing antibodies.

40. HIV-1 entry and trans-infection of astrocytes involves CD81 vesicles.

41. Quantifying susceptibility of CD4+ stem memory T-cells to infection by laboratory adapted and clinical HIV-1 strains.

42. HIV-1 envelope-receptor interactions required for macrophage infection and implications for current HIV-1 cure strategies.

43. Linkages between HIV-1 specificity for CCR5 or CXCR4 and in vitro usage of alternative coreceptors during progressive HIV-1 subtype C infection.

44. The magnitude of HIV-1 resistance to the CCR5 antagonist maraviroc may impart a differential alteration in HIV-1 tropism for macrophages and T-cell subsets.

45. Longitudinal Analysis of CCR5 and CXCR4 Usage in a Cohort of Antiretroviral Therapy-Naïve Subjects with Progressive HIV-1 Subtype C Infection.

46. A common mechanism of clinical HIV-1 resistance to the CCR5 antagonist maraviroc despite divergent resistance levels and lack of common gp120 resistance mutations.

47. The NRTIs lamivudine, stavudine and zidovudine have reduced HIV-1 inhibitory activity in astrocytes.

48. CoRSeqV3-C: a novel HIV-1 subtype C specific V3 sequence based coreceptor usage prediction algorithm.

49. Reduced basal transcriptional activity of central nervous system-derived HIV type 1 long terminal repeats.

50. Affinofile profiling: how efficiency of CD4/CCR5 usage impacts the biological and pathogenic phenotype of HIV.

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