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

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

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

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

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

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

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

8. 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.

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

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

11. 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.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

21. HIV-1 predisposed to acquiring resistance to maraviroc (MVC) and other CCR5 antagonists in vitro has an inherent, low-level ability to utilize MVC-bound CCR5 for entry.

22. Conformational alterations in the CD4 binding cavity of HIV-1 gp120 influencing gp120-CD4 interactions and fusogenicity of HIV-1 envelopes derived from brain and other tissues.

23. Virucidal activity of the dendrimer microbicide SPL7013 against HIV-1.

24. Coreceptors and HIV-1 pathogenesis.

25. Genetic and functional heterogeneity of CNS-derived tat alleles from patients with HIV-associated dementia.

26. Both CD31(+) and CD31⁻ naive CD4(+) T cells are persistent HIV type 1-infected reservoirs in individuals receiving antiretroviral therapy.

27. High viral fitness during acute HIV-1 infection.

28. A novel, rapid method to detect infectious HIV-1 from plasma of persons infected with HIV-1.

29. Transmission of HIV-1 drug-resistant variants: prevalence and effect on treatment outcome.

30. Enhanced CD4+ cellular apoptosis by CCR5-restricted HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein variants from patients with progressive HIV-1 infection.

31. Measuring and monitoring apoptosis and drug toxicity in HIV patients by ligation-mediated polymerase chain reaction.

32. Bioinformatic prediction programs underestimate the frequency of CXCR4 usage by R5X4 HIV type 1 in brain and other tissues.

33. Replication-dependent pathogenicity of attenuated nef-deleted HIV-1 in vivo.

34. Pathogenicity and immunogenicity of attenuated, nef-deleted HIV-1 strains in vivo.

35. Viral phenotypes and antibody responses in long-term survivors infected with attenuated human immunodeficiency virus type 1 containing deletions in the nef and long terminal repeat regions.

36. Phenotype and envelope gene diversity of nef-deleted HIV-1 isolated from long-term survivors infected from a single source.

37. Persistence of attenuated HIV-1 rev alleles in an epidemiologically linked cohort of long-term survivors infected with nef-deleted virus.

38. Changes in the V3 region of gp120 contribute to unusually broad coreceptor usage of an HIV-1 isolate from a CCR5 Delta32 heterozygote.

39. The CD16+ monocyte subset is more permissive to infection and preferentially harbors HIV-1 in vivo.

40. CXCR4 or CCR5 tropism of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 isolates does not determine the immunological milieu in patients responding to antiretroviral therapy.

41. HIV-1 entry inhibitors: classes, applications and factors affecting potency.

42. Impaired complement-mediated phagocytosis by HIV type-1-infected human monocyte-derived macrophages involves a cAMP-dependent mechanism.

43. Longitudinal analysis of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 nef/long terminal repeat sequences in a cohort of long-term survivors infected from a single source.

44. Enhanced replicative capacity and pathogenicity of HIV-1 isolated from individuals infected with drug-resistant virus and declining CD4+ T-cell counts.

45. Is there a role for plant-made vaccines in the prevention of HIV/AIDS?

46. In vivo replication kinetics of a nef-deleted strain of HIV-1.

47. Longitudinal analysis of nef/long terminal repeat-deleted HIV-1 in blood and cerebrospinal fluid of a long-term survivor who developed HIV-associated dementia.

48. The role of viral coreceptors and enhanced macrophage tropism in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 disease progression.

49. 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

50. CD4 and MHC class I down-modulation activities of nef alleles from brain- and lymphoid tissue-derived primary HIV-1 isolates

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