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1. Mechanism and Kinetics of HIV-1 Protease Activation

2. Analysis of Individual Viral Particles by Flow Virometry

3. Premature Activation of the HIV-1 Protease Is Influenced by Polymorphisms in the Hinge Region

4. Extracellular vesicles carry SARS‐CoV‐2 spike protein and serve as decoys for neutralizing antibodies

5. Global phosphoproteomics of CCR5-tropic HIV-1 signaling reveals reprogramming of cellular protein production pathways and identifies p70-S6K1 and MK2 as HIV-responsive kinases required for optimal infection of CD4+ T cells

6. COVID-19 and Cardiovascular Disease

7. The NIH Somatic Cell Genome Editing program

8. Nanoscale flow cytometry reveals interpatient variability in HIV protease activity that correlates with viral infectivity and identifies drug-resistant viruses

9. The HIV-1 Viral Protease Is Activated during Assembly and Budding Prior to Particle Release

10. SARS-CoV-2 and ACE2: The biology and clinical data settling the ARB and ACEI controversy

12. A Targeted Mass Spectrometry Assay for Detection of HIV Gag Protein Following Induction of Latent Viral Reservoirs

13. Global phosphoproteomics of CCR5-tropic HIV-1 signaling reveals reprogramming of cellular protein production pathways and identifies p70-S6K1 and MK2 as HIV-responsive kinases required for optimal infection of CD4+ T cells

14. A combination HIV reporter virus system for measuring post-entry event efficiency and viral outcome in primary CD4+ T cell subsets

15. Entry inhibitors and their use in the treatment of HIV-1 infection

16. High sensitivity detection and sorting of infectious human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) particles by flow virometry

17. Primary Infection by a Human Immunodeficiency Virus with Atypical Coreceptor Tropism

18. Phenotypic and Immunologic Comparison of Clade B Transmitted/Founder and Chronic HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins

19. HIV-1 Resistance to CCR5 Antagonists Associated with Highly Efficient Use of CCR5 and Altered Tropism on Primary CD4 + T Cells

20. Comparisons of CD8 + T Cells Specific for Human Immunodeficiency Virus, Hepatitis C Virus, and Cytomegalovirus Reveal Differences in Frequency, Immunodominance, Phenotype, and Interleukin-2 Responsiveness

21. Human Immunodeficiency Virus Viremia Induces Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cell Activation In Vivo and Diminished Alpha Interferon Production In Vitro

22. Changes in Paracrine Interleukin-2 Requirement, CCR7 Expression, Frequency, and Cytokine Secretion of Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Specific CD4+T Cells Are a Consequence of Antigen Load

23. Central memory CD4+ T cells are preferential targets of double infection by HIV-1

24. Diminished Production of Monocyte Proinflammatory Cytokines during Human Immunodeficiency Virus Viremia Is Mediated by Type I Interferons

25. Advances in understanding immunologic control of HIV infection

26. Diminished Proliferation of Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Specific CD4+T Cells Is Associated with Diminished Interleukin-2 (IL-2) Production and Is Recovered by Exogenous IL-2

27. The Histone Deacetylase Inhibitor Vorinostat (SAHA) Increases the Susceptibility of Uninfected CD4+ T Cells to HIV by Increasing the Kinetics and Efficiency of Postentry Viral Events

28. CD4+ Memory Stem Cells Are Infected by HIV-1 in a Manner Regulated in Part by SAMHD1 Expression

29. Multifaceted mechanisms of HIV inhibition and resistance to CCR5 inhibitors PSC-RANTES and Maraviroc

30. Transmitted/Founder and Chronic Subtype C HIV-1 Use CD4 and CCR5 Receptors with Equal Efficiency and Are Not Inhibited by Blocking the Integrin α4β7

31. Molecular mechanisms of HIV entry

32. Molecular Mechanisms of HIV Entry

33. Engineering HIV-Resistant Human CD4+ T Cells with CXCR4-Specific Zinc-Finger Nucleases

34. A Maraviroc-Resistant HIV-1 with Narrow Cross-Resistance to Other CCR5 Antagonists Depends on both N-Terminal and Extracellular Loop Domains of Drug-Bound CCR5▿

35. HIV Type 1 from a Patient with Baseline Resistance to CCR5 Antagonists Uses Drug-Bound Receptor for Entry

36. Entry inhibitors in the treatment of HIV-1 infection

37. Qualitative host factors associated with immunological control of HIV infection by CD8 T cells

38. Introduction to entry inhibitors in the management of HIV infection

39. Molecular basis for positive and negative signaling by the natural killer cell receptor 2B4 (CD244)

40. HIV: Cell Binding and Entry

41. Su.72. Immunodominance of Hla B57-Restricted Cd8+ T-Cell Responses in Cmv/Hiv Co-Infected B*57+ Long-Term Nonprogressors Is Unique to Hiv

42. HIV Type 1 from a Patient with Baseline Resistance to CCR5 Antagonists Uses Drug-Bound Receptor for Entry.

43. Transmitted/founder and chronic subtype C HIV-1 use CD4 and CCR5 receptors with equal efficiency and are not inhibited by blocking the integrin α4β7.

44. Engineering HIV-resistant human CD4+ T cells with CXCR4-specific zinc-finger nucleases.

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