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Early events of HIV-1 infection : can signalling be the next therapeutic target?

journal contribution
posted on 2011-06-01, 00:00 authored by K Jones, R Smyth, C Pereira, P Cameron, S Lewin, A Jaworowski, Johnson Mak
Intracellular signaling events are signposts of biological processes, which govern the direction and action of biological activities. Through millions of years of evolution, pathogens, such as viruses, have evolved to hijack host cell machinery to infect their targets and are therefore dependent on host cell signaling for replication. This review will detail our current understanding of the signaling events that are important for the early steps of HIV-1 replication. More specifically, the therapeutic potential of signaling events associated with chemokine coreceptors, virus entry, viral synapses, and post-entry processes will be discussed. We argue that these pathways may represent novel targets for antiviral therapy.

History

Journal

Journal of neuroimmune pharmacology

Volume

6

Issue

2

Pagination

269 - 283

Publisher

Springer New York LLC

Location

New York, N. Y.

ISSN

1557-1890

eISSN

1557-1904

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, Springer