News

Research Produces Images Of AIDS Virus That May Shape Vaccine Date: May 28, 2006 Source: Florida State University Summary: As the world marks the 25th year since the first diagnosed case of AIDS ...
Researchers provide the as yet closest look at the structure of immature HIV Scientists have produced a three-dimensional reconstruction of HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), which shows the ...
In stunning color images using time-lapse microscopy, researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago have for the first time captured the very earliest stages of HIV infection in living cells.
Remarkable time-lapse pictures show, for the first time ever, HIV at work in a human cell. The pictures offer proof that the virus uses the cell's own machinery to be dragged inside the cell. An ...
An HIV-positive woman who has received a transplant of umbilical cord stem cells has no signs of HIV, and the infection is in long-term remission.
A young man holds a red ribbon representing HIV, with an inset image of the human immunodeficiency virus. New treatments and possibly even a vaccine for HIV are on the horizon in 2025.
A research team led by Dr Denis Beckford-Vera of the University of San Francisco, California, have undertaken a first in-human study to identify areas of HIV replication using a new scanning technique ...
The HIV variant might be more contagious, but it responds to treatment like similar strains and is not necessarily more deadly.
Despite the many counter-narratives of HIV and AIDS that artists and activists have been producing since the 1980s, this mainstream visual imaginary still informs how we picture HIV today and ...
New electron microscopy images reveal the assembly of HIV (Nanowerk News) Scientists at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) and the University Clinic Heidelberg, Germany, have produced a ...
Immature HIV is a precursor of the infectious virus, which can cause AIDS. The study, published in the 22-26 June online edition of PNAS, describes how the protein coat that packages the virus' ...