Special Feature

User Panel

My Panel

My Panel

Bookmark Science Articles

Recent News
Bookmark / Share This Science Site

Regulation of HIV-1 latency by T-cell activation.

Regulation of HIV-1 latency by T-cell activation. Research Abstract Details 

Research Abstract Table of Contents

Jump to the:

  • Abstract Text of This Paper
  • Journal Published
  • MeSH Keywords of This Abstract
  • Chemicals and Substances Used in this Paper
  • Grants and Granting Agency of this Research
  • Database Accession Numbers Used in this Paper
  • Related Papers
  • Related Research Tags
  • Rate this Research Paper
  • Regulation of HIV-1 latency by T-cell activation. Abstract Text:

    samuel a williamsSamuel A Williams,warner c greeneWarner C Greene,

    HIV-infected patients harbor approximately 10(5)-10(6) memory CD4 T-cells that contain fully integrated but transcriptionally silent HIV proviruses. While small in number, these latently infected cells form a drug-insensitive reservoir that importantly contributes to the life-long persistence of HIV despite highly effective antiviral therapy. In tissue culture, latent HIV proviruses can be activated when their cellular hosts are exposed to select proinflammatory cytokines or their T-cell receptors are ligated. However, due to a lack of potency and/or dose-limiting toxicity, attempts to purge virus from this latent reservoir in vivo with immune-activating agents, such as anti-CD3 antibodies and IL-2, have failed. A deeper understanding of the molecular underpinnings of HIV latency is clearly required, including determining whether viral latency is actively reinforced by transcriptional repressors, defining which inducible host transcription factors most effectively antagonize latency, and elucidating the role of chromatin in viral latency. Only through such an improved understanding will it be possible to identify combination therapies that might allow complete purging of the latent reservoir and to realize the difficult and elusive goal of complete eradication of HIV in infected patients.

    Regulation of HIV-1 latency by T-cell activation. Publishing Authors By Initials

    sa williamsSA Williams,wc greeneWC Greene,

    For similar biological phenomena, cell phenomena, and immunity: biological phenomena: microbiologic phenomena: viral physiology: virus latency research abstracts see: biological phenomena, cell phenomena, and immunity: biological phenomena: microbiologic phenomena: viral physiology: virus latency research

    PUBMED ID PMID:

    MEDLINE DATE:

    Regulation of HIV-1 latency by T-cell activation. Journal Published:

    PUBLICATION TYPE: Review

    Journal: Cytokine

    VOLUME: 39

    Page Numbers: 63-74

    Journal Abbreviation: Cytokine

    ISSN: 1043-4666

    DAY: 20

    MONTH: 07

    YEAR: 2007

    Regulation of HIV-1 latency by T-cell activation. Information

    Number of References: 141

    LANGUAGE: eng

    NlmUniqueID: 9005353

    Regulation of HIV-1 latency by T-cell activation. Keywords Mesh Terms:

    KEYWORDS: Virus Latency

    MESH TERMS: biosynthesis

    Chemical & Substance for Abstract: Regulation of HIV-1 latency by T-cell activation. Information

    Substance Name: RNA Polymerase II

    Registry Number: EC 2.7.7.-

    Grant and Affiliation Information for Regulation of HIV-1 latency by T-cell activation.

    AFFILIATION: Gladstone Institute of Virology and Immunology, University of California, 1650 Owens Street, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA.

    Country: United States

    United States Research PublicationUnited States Research Publication

    AGENCY:

    GRANT:

    ACRONYM:

    MEDLINETA: Cytokine

    REFSOURCE:

    DATABASENAME:

    ACCESSION NUMBER:

    Number Hits: 0

    Regulation of HIV-1 latency by T-cell activation Related Publications

     

    Molecular Station USER Menu

    Welcome to Molecular Station!

    You have to register before you can post on our forums or use our advanced features. Register Now! Its Free and Fast!

    Already registered? Login now below.

    User Name:

    Password:

    Already registered and Forgot your password? Click below to recover it.

    Recover Lost Password

    Join now - it's fast and free!

    Molecular Station is THE largest network of researchers, scientists and science lovers anywhere!

    Research Terms of Usage and Disclaimer
    Home
    Features

    Protocols

    DNA Forum

    Science Forum

    DNA Forum
    Biology Forum

    Science News


    [CaRP] XML error: Invalid document end at line 2

    For more click here:Science News