Search

Your search keyword '"HIV-1 physiology"' showing total 13,225 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Descriptor "HIV-1 physiology" Remove constraint Descriptor: "HIV-1 physiology" Topic hiv-1 Remove constraint Topic: hiv-1
13,225 results on '"HIV-1 physiology"'

Search Results

1. HIV-1 budding requires cortical actin disassembly by the oxidoreductase MICAL1.

2. Cyclophilin A facilitates HIV-1 integration.

3. Electron tomography visualization of HIV-1 virions trapped by fusion inhibitors to host cells in infected tissues.

4. IFI27 inhibits HIV-1 replication by degrading Gag protein through the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway.

5. Rapid biphasic decay of intact and defective HIV DNA reservoir during acute treated HIV disease.

6. Epitranscriptomic m 6 A modifications during reactivation of HIV-1 latency in CD4 + T cells.

7. Pro-inflammatory macrophages suppress HIV replication in humanized mice and ex vivo co-cultures.

8. Host cell glycosylation selects for infection with CCR5- versus CXCR4-tropic HIV-1.

9. Dasatinib interferes with HIV-1 proviral integration and the inflammatory potential of monocyte-derived macrophages from people with HIV.

10. Transcriptomic study reveals alteration in the expression of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) during reversal of HIV-1 latency in monocytic cell line.

11. HSV1-induced enhancement of productive HIV-1 replication is associated with interferon pathway downregulation in human macrophages.

12. Human genital dendritic cell heterogeneity confers differential rapid response to HIV-1 exposure.

13. HIV-induced RSAD2/Viperin supports sustained infection of monocyte-derived macrophages.

14. The HIV-1 vpr R77Q Mutant Induces Apoptosis, G 2 Cell Cycle Arrest, and Lower Production of Pro-Inflammatory Cytokines in Human CD4+ T Cells.

15. Minimally Modified HIV-1 Infection of Macaques: Development, Utility, and Limitations of Current Models.

16. HIV-1 Vpr-induced DNA damage activates NF-κB through ATM-NEMO independent of cell cycle arrest.

17. The avengers: SAMHD1 cooperates with MX2/MxB to defend against HIV-1.

18. Guanylate-binding protein 5 antagonizes viral glycoproteins independently of furin processing.

19. Expanding Insights: Harnessing Expansion Microscopy for Super-Resolution Analysis of HIV-1-Cell Interactions.

20. Regulatory T cells modulate monocyte functions in immunocompetent antiretroviral therapy naive HIV-1 infected people.

21. Isotretinoin promotes elimination of translation-competent HIV latent reservoirs in CD4T cells.

22. Interventions during Early Infection: Opening a Window for an HIV Cure?

23. Mimicry games: NPC-like MX2 condensates trap viruses.

24. MX2 forms nucleoporin-comprising cytoplasmic biomolecular condensates that lure viral capsids.

25. Tsg101 UEV Interaction with Nedd4 HECT Relieves E3 Ligase Auto-Inhibition, Promoting HIV-1 Assembly and CA-SP1 Maturation Cleavage.

26. HIV-1 assembly - when virology meets biophysics.

27. Transcription start site choice regulates HIV-1 RNA conformation and function.

28. Nef defect attenuates HIV viremia and immune dysregulation in the bone marrow-liver-thymus-spleen (BLTS) humanized mouse model.

29. The Assembly of HTLV-1-How Does It Differ from HIV-1?

30. Kinetic Studies on the Interaction of HIV-1 Gag Protein with the HIV-1 RNA Packaging Signal.

31. Putting a Kink in HIV-1 Particle Infectivity: Rocaglamide Inhibits HIV-1 Replication by Altering Gag-Genomic RNA Interaction.

32. Optimization of Cellular Transduction by the HIV-Based Pseudovirus Platform with Pan-Coronavirus Spike Proteins.

33. Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV-1) Targets Astrocytes via Cell-Free and Cell-Associated Infection.

34. New Therapies and Strategies to Curb HIV Infections with a Focus on Macrophages and Reservoirs.

35. A naturally occurring 22-amino acid fragment of human hemoglobin A inhibits autophagy and HIV-1.

36. Probing Gag-Env dynamics at HIV-1 assembly sites using live-cell microscopy.

37. Sexual behavior is linked to changes in gut microbiome and systemic inflammation that lead to HIV-1 infection in men who have sex with men.

38. HIV-1 adapts to lost IP6 coordination through second-site mutations that restore conical capsid assembly.

39. Exceptional, naturally occurring HIV-1 control: Insight into a functional cure.

40. Elasticity of the HIV-1 core facilitates nuclear entry and infection.

41. Release of P-TEFb from the Super Elongation Complex promotes HIV-1 latency reversal.

42. Acetylation of SAMHD1 at lysine 580 is crucial for blocking HIV-1 infection.

43. Analysis of the effect of HDAC inhibitors on the formation of the HIV reservoir.

44. The evolution of envelope function during coinfection with phylogenetically distinct human immunodeficiency virus.

45. Exploring HIV-1 Maturation: A New Frontier in Antiviral Development.

46. The HIV-1 capsid serves as a nanoscale reaction vessel for reverse transcription.

47. HIV-1 control in vivo is related to the number but not the fraction of infected cells with viral unspliced RNA.

48. Transcription of HIV-1 at sites of intact latent provirus integration.

49. Interactome of the HIV-1 proteome and human host RNA.

50. Genetic variants of IL-10 promoter influence susceptibility to HIV-1 infection and disease progression in the Polish population: IL-10 polymorphisms and HIV-1.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources