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1. Phenotypic signatures of immune selection in HIV-1 reservoir cells.

2. Progressive transformation of the HIV-1 reservoir cell profile over two decades of antiviral therapy.

3. False-Positive Human Immunodeficiency Virus Test Results in Patients Receiving Lentivirus-Based Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-Cell Therapy: Case Report, Review of the Literature, and Proposed Recommendations.

4. Parallel analysis of transcription, integration, and sequence of single HIV-1 proviruses.

5. Signatures of immune selection in intact and defective proviruses distinguish HIV-1 elite controllers.

6. Intact HIV-1 proviruses accumulate at distinct chromosomal positions during prolonged antiretroviral therapy.

7. Preferential susceptibility of Th9 and Th2 CD4+ T cells to X4-tropic HIV-1 infection.

8. Clonal expansion of genome-intact HIV-1 in functionally polarized Th1 CD4+ T cells.

9. Differences in the Selection Bottleneck between Modes of Sexual Transmission Influence the Genetic Composition of the HIV-1 Founder Virus.

10. Prolonged Antiretroviral Therapy Preserves HIV-1-Specific CD8 T Cells with Stem Cell-Like Properties.

11. Emergence of individual HIV-specific CD8 T cell responses during primary HIV-1 infection can determine long-term disease outcome.

12. Tumor necrosis factor α is associated with viral control and early disease progression in patients with HIV type 1 infection.

13. Impaired Nef function is associated with early control of HIV-1 viremia.

14. Long-term antiretroviral treatment initiated at primary HIV-1 infection affects the size, composition, and decay kinetics of the reservoir of HIV-1-infected CD4 T cells.

15. Induction of Gag-specific CD4 T cell responses during acute HIV infection is associated with improved viral control.

16. HIV-1 persistence in CD4+ T cells with stem cell-like properties.

17. Susceptibility to CD8 T-cell-mediated killing influences the reservoir of latently HIV-1-infected CD4 T cells.

18. Temporal effect of HLA-B*57 on viral control during primary HIV-1 infection.

19. Acute HIV-1 infection: a call to action.

20. A monoclonal antibody against lymphocyte function-associated antigen-1 decreases HIV-1 replication by inducing the secretion of an antiviral soluble factor.

21. Frequent and strong antibody-mediated natural killer cell activation in response to HIV-1 Env in individuals with chronic HIV-1 infection.

22. Shelterin dysfunction and p16(INK4a)-mediated growth inhibition in HIV-1-specific CD8 T cells.

23. CD4 T-cell regeneration in HIV-1 elite controllers.

24. Differential regulation of toll-like receptor pathways in acute and chronic HIV-1 infection.

25. HIV-specific cytolytic CD4 T cell responses during acute HIV infection predict disease outcome.

26. Dendritic cell dysfunction during primary HIV-1 infection.

27. epitopes immediately below the base of the V3 loop of gp120 as targets for the initial autologous neutralizing antibody response in two HIV-1 subtype B-infected individuals.

28. Inhibition of HIV-1 integration in ex vivo-infected CD4 T cells from elite controllers.

29. CD4+ T cells from elite controllers resist HIV-1 infection by selective upregulation of p21.

30. Transcriptional profiling of CD4 T cells identifies distinct subgroups of HIV-1 elite controllers.

31. HIV-1-specific interleukin-21+ CD4+ T cell responses contribute to durable viral control through the modulation of HIV-specific CD8+ T cell function.

32. The major genetic determinants of HIV-1 control affect HLA class I peptide presentation.

33. Epigenetic regulation of telomerase expression in HIV-1-specific CD8+ T cells.

34. Human immunodeficiency virus type 1-specific CD8+ T-cell responses during primary infection are major determinants of the viral set point and loss of CD4+ T cells.

35. Case records of the Massachusetts General Hospital. Case 11-2009. A 47-year-old man with fever, headache, rash, and vomiting.

36. Telomerase activity of HIV-1-specific CD8+ T cells: constitutive up-regulation in controllers and selective increase by blockade of PD ligand 1 in progressors.

37. Antigen load and viral sequence diversification determine the functional profile of HIV-1-specific CD8+ T cells.

38. Genetic and immunologic heterogeneity among persons who control HIV infection in the absence of therapy.

39. Recognition of a defined region within p24 gag by CD8+ T cells during primary human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection in individuals expressing protective HLA class I alleles.

40. Selective depletion of high-avidity human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-specific CD8+ T cells after early HIV-1 infection.

41. Fully differentiated HIV-1 specific CD8+ T effector cells are more frequently detectable in controlled than in progressive HIV-1 infection.

42. Mutually exclusive T-cell receptor induction and differential susceptibility to human immunodeficiency virus type 1 mutational escape associated with a two-amino-acid difference between HLA class I subtypes.

43. Greater CD4 T-cell gains after one year of antiretroviral therapy are associated with lower HIV-1 pol replication capacity.

44. HLA Alleles Associated with Delayed Progression to AIDS Contribute Strongly to the Initial CD8(+) T Cell Response against HIV-1.

45. Infection of CD127+ (interleukin-7 receptor+) CD4+ cells and overexpression of CTLA-4 are linked to loss of antigen-specific CD4 T cells during primary human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection.

46. T cell receptor cross-recognition of an HIV-1 CD8+ T cell epitope presented by closely related alleles from the HLA-A3 superfamily.

47. Longitudinal analysis of clinical markers following antiretroviral therapy initiated during acute or early HIV type 1 infection.

48. Expansion and contraction of HIV-specific CD4 T cells with short bursts of viremia, but physical loss of the majority of these cells with sustained viral replication.

49. Sequential deregulation of NK cell subset distribution and function starting in acute HIV-1 infection.

50. Selective escape from CD8+ T-cell responses represents a major driving force of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) sequence diversity and reveals constraints on HIV-1 evolution.

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