LONDON (Reuters) - Scientists say they have solved a crucial puzzle about the AIDS virus after 20 years of research and that their findings could lead to better treatments for HIV. British and U.S.
LONDON, Jan 31 (Reuters) - Scientists say they have solved a crucial puzzle about the AIDS virus after 20 years of research and that their findings could lead to better treatments for HIV. Sign up ...
Offering a promising new way to attack the AIDS virus, research on monkeys suggests that an experimental drug helps keep HIV in check by blocking an enzyme that is crucial to infection. The target is ...
The inhibition of HIV-1’s replicative machinery remains a cornerstone in the battle against AIDS. Central to this approach are inhibitors targeting reverse transcriptase (RT) and integrase. Reverse ...
Salk Institute researchers, in collaboration with National Institutes of Health (NIH) scientists, have discovered the molecular mechanisms by which human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) becomes resistant ...
Athens, Ga. – For the estimated millions of AIDS patients worldwide who are resistant or are developing resistance to currently available medicines, a discovery by a University of Georgia researcher ...
Details from four-year research appear in Nature. A team from Imperial College London and Harvard University report solving the 3-D crystal structure of a retroviral integrase enzyme bound with viral ...
When the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) invades a cell, it produces three essential enzymes that direct the takeover. Two of these—reverse transcriptase and protease—have proved susceptible to ...
A member of a new class of antiretroviral drugs is safe and effective for patients beginning treatment against HIV, according to researchers who have completed a two-year multisite phase III clinical ...
The mechanism behind how HIV can develop resistance to a widely-prescribed group of drugs has been uncovered by new research, with the findings opening the door to the development of more effective ...
Larry Holmes at the age of 43 is lucky to be alive, but after battling AIDS for 14 years he is fearful that his luck is running out. Like thousands of other men who contracted the disease in the 1980s ...