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The benefits of HIV research? Let us count the ways | Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center

The benefits of HIV research? Let us count the ways | Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center | Virology News | Scoop.it
You may not realize you’ve benefited from HIV research. But if you’ve received a treatment that was approved through a recent clinical trial, received a CAR T cell for your cancer, or even just taken Paxlovid, you have.
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Virology News
Topical news snippets about viruses that affect people.  And other things. Like Led Zeppelin. And zombies B-)
Curated by Ed Rybicki
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Scooped by Ed Rybicki
January 19, 2023 6:04 AM
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Cann's Principles of Molecular Virology - 7th Edition

Cann's Principles of Molecular Virology - 7th Edition | Virology News | Scoop.it

Cann's Principles of Molecular Virology, - 7th Edition, revised by EP Rybicki. Print Book. ISBN 9780128227848. Now published!!


"Cann's Principles of Molecular Virology, Seventh Edition provides an easily accessible introduction to modern virology, presenting principles in a clear and concise manner. The new edition provides the history of virology and the fundamentals of the molecular basis of how viruses work.


Instructor review copies: click on this link.

https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/qU2qCNxKq0i0ZNRQxcmeDdo

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Today, 5:45 AM
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Amplicon sequencing with Oxford nanopore technologies as a diagnostic alternative for small ruminant lentiviruses in sheep | Scientific Reports

In Europe, Maedi-Visna disease has high prevalence rates at the individual and flock levels, respectively, and is regarded as one of the most significant infectious disease in sheep. The lack of treatment or a commercial vaccine underscores the need for accurate and reliable diagnostic tools to...
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Today, 5:43 AM
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Intranasal administration of broad-spectrum macrocyclic peptide inhibitor protects against SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variants | Nature Communications

Newly emerging SARS-CoV-2 variants underscore the need for broad-spectrum antiviral solutions. This study shows a macrocyclic peptide inhibitor that locks the SARS-CoV-2 spike trimer into a “closed” conformation by engaging a conserved region, and demonstrates that intranasal administration of the...
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Today, 5:42 AM
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Why some dogs have longer ears than others

Why some dogs have longer ears than others | Virology News | Scoop.it
A new study pinpoints which DNA variants are likely responsible for the length of your pup's ears.
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Today, 5:40 AM
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How protein network cooperatively regulates iron balance in plants

Iron (Fe) is a vital micronutrient for plants, which is required for processes such as photosynthesis and enzyme activity. Plants must carefully manage iron levels to maintain health and productivity. They activate iron uptake genes when deficient and suppress them when iron is excessive to prevent toxicity. This careful balance is known as iron homeostasis.
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Today, 5:39 AM
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AI Developments for T and B Cell Receptor Modeling and Therapeutic Design

This chapter surveys recent advances in the use of protein language models, machine learning, and multimodal integration for immune receptor modeling. We highlight emerging strategies to leverage single-cell and repertoire-scale datasets, and optimize immune receptor candidates for therapeutic design. These developments point toward a new generation of data-efficient, generalizable, and clinically relevant models that better capture the diversity and complexity of adaptive immunity. 
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January 21, 6:06 AM
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Decoded rules of microRNA strand selection reveal conserved, programmable features

MicroRNAs, whose discovery was recognized with the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, are central regulators of gene expression, yet a fundamental question has remained unanswered: how cells choose between the two strands produced from each microRNA precursor.
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January 21, 6:03 AM
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Tiprelestat: Breakthrough in Hospitalized COVID-19 Treatment

Tiprelestat: Breakthrough in Hospitalized COVID-19 Treatment | Virology News | Scoop.it
In a significant advance for COVID-19 treatment, recent findings emerged from the double-blind randomized placebo-controlled COMCOVID trial, which evaluated the efficacy of Tiprelestat in hospitalized patients.
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January 21, 6:01 AM
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Sero-genomic evidence for occult mpox exposure in healthy Nigerian adults | Nature Communications

Sero-genomic evidence for occult mpox exposure in healthy Nigerian adults | Nature Communications | Virology News | Scoop.it
There are limited data on mpox immunity in West Africa. In this study, authors present serological and genomic evidence of residual smallpox vaccination immunity and possibly unrecognized mpox exposure among ostensibly healthy Nigerian adults.
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January 21, 6:01 AM
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Unraveling miRNA’s Role in Viral Immune Defense

Unraveling miRNA’s Role in Viral Immune Defense | Virology News | Scoop.it
In the intricate battlefield of viral infections, microRNAs (miRNAs) have emerged as pivotal regulators orchestrating immune responses.A recent comprehensive review sheds light on the profound roles of miRNAs in modulating immunity across four major viral pathogens: SARS-CoV-2, Hepatitis B virus ...
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January 21, 6:00 AM
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The benefits and risks of maternal RSV vaccination on mortality in South Africa: A modeling study | PLOS Medicine

The benefits and risks of maternal RSV vaccination on mortality in South Africa: A modeling study | PLOS Medicine | Virology News | Scoop.it
Ayaka Monoi and colleagues model the benefits and risks of maternal RSV vaccination by gestational age and show that benefits outweigh risks with vaccination from the third trimester.
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January 21, 5:57 AM
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Complex building blocks of life form spontaneously in space, research reveals

Challenging long-held assumptions, Aarhus University researchers have demonstrated that the protein building blocks essential for life as we know it can form readily in space. This discovery, appearing in Nature Astronomy, significantly raises the statistical probability of finding extraterrestrial life.
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January 21, 5:56 AM
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How light suppresses virulence in an antibiotic-resistant pathogen

Light is a universal stimulus that influences all living things. Cycles of light and dark help set the biological clocks for organisms ranging from single-celled bacteria to human beings. Some bacteria use photosynthesis to convert sunlight into energy just like plants, but other bacteria sense light for less well-known functions.
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Today, 5:46 AM
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How Antigen Processing Shapes SARS-CoV-2 CD4+ T Cell Responses

How Antigen Processing Shapes SARS-CoV-2 CD4+ T Cell Responses | Virology News | Scoop.it
In a groundbreaking study published in “Genome Medicine,” researchers have unveiled significant insights into the mechanisms by which CD4+ T cells respond to SARS-CoV-2, particularly focusing on the immunodominance of specific epitopes derived from the spike (S) and nucleocapsid (N) proteins.
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Today, 5:44 AM
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South African San rock art reveals trance dances and initiation ceremonies

In a study published in Telestes, Dr. Joshua Kumbani and Dr. Margarita Díaz-Andreu categorized the various dance scenes depicted in South African rock art, drawing on ethnographic sources, published studies, and the comprehensive SARADA database to identify dance scenes, thus capturing this invaluable archive for the understanding of the San's various cultural practices.
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Today, 5:43 AM
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Solving Long COVID: How Decades of HIV Research Paved the Way

Solving Long COVID: How Decades of HIV Research Paved the Way | Virology News | Scoop.it
UCSF’s rapid shift to uncover the virus’s hidden effects and seemingly unconnected symptoms put it at the forefront of the field.
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Today, 5:40 AM
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Molecular arrangement strategy targets multiple Alzheimer's disease factors at once

Conventional treatments of Alzheimer's disease, one of the most common forms of dementia, have been largely focused on targeting individual pathological features. However, Alzheimer's disease is a multifactorial disorder driven by multiple, tightly interconnected processes, rendering single-target therapeutic approaches inherently limited. Addressing this challenge, KAIST researchers propose a new strategy that enables the simultaneous regulation of multiple disease-inducing factors simply by rearranging the structural positions of drug candidate molecules without altering their chemical substituents.
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Today, 5:39 AM
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A brief history of sugar

A few thousand years ago, sugar was unknown in the western world. Sugarcane, a tall grass first domesticated in New Guinea around 6000BC, was initially chewed for its sweet juice rather than crystallized. By around 500BC, methods to boil sugarcane juice into crystals were first developed in India.
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Today, 5:38 AM
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Trump policies at odds with emerging understanding of COVID's long-term harm - CBS News

Trump policies at odds with emerging understanding of COVID's long-term harm - CBS News | Virology News | Scoop.it
Studies offer insights into the health risks and burdens faced by people who have had COVID infections. Meanwhile, the Trump administration has narrowed COVID vaccine recommendations and cut research.
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January 21, 6:05 AM
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Experiments bring Enceladus' subsurface ocean into the lab

Through new experiments, researchers in Japan and Germany have recreated the chemical conditions found in the subsurface ocean of Saturn's moon, Enceladus. Published in Icarus, the results show that these conditions can readily produce many of the organic compounds observed by the Cassini mission, strengthening evidence that the distant world could harbor the molecular building blocks of life.
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January 21, 6:02 AM
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Golden Gate method enables fully-synthetic engineering of therapeutically relevant bacteriophages

Bacteriophages have been used therapeutically to treat infectious bacterial diseases for over a century. As antibiotic-resistant infections increasingly threaten public health, interest in bacteriophages as therapeutics has seen a resurgence. However, the field remains largely limited to naturally occurring strains, as laborious strain engineering techniques have limited the pace of discovery and the creation of tailored therapeutic strains.
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January 21, 6:01 AM
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Decoding miRNA-Mediated Immunoregulation in SARS-CoV-2, HBV, HIV, and HSV Infections | Genes & Immunity

Decoding miRNA-Mediated Immunoregulation in SARS-CoV-2, HBV, HIV, and HSV Infections | Genes & Immunity | Virology News | Scoop.it
Eukaryotic cells regulate gene expression through multiple checkpoints, including post-transcriptional mechanisms mediated by microRNAs (miRNAs). These small non-coding RNAs inhibit translation by binding to target mRNAs, often within a complex regulatory network involving other RNA species such...
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January 21, 6:00 AM
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The challenge of tracking asymptomatic Mpox

The challenge of tracking asymptomatic Mpox | Virology News | Scoop.it
The mpox virus appears to be circulating silently in parts of Nigeria, in many cases without the symptoms typically associated with the disease, according to new research led by scientists from the University of Cambridge and partners in Nigeria.
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January 21, 6:00 AM
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Sinking salty ice suggests pathway for life-sustaining conditions in Europa's ocean

A recent study by geophysicists at Washington State University offers insight into how nutrients may reach the subsurface ocean of Europa, one of Jupiter's moons and a leading candidate for extraterrestrial life in the solar system.
Ed Rybicki's insight:
Lime and limpid green, a second scene 
Now fights between the blue you once knew 
Floating down, the sound resounds 
Around the icy waters underground
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January 21, 5:57 AM
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Ancient Jordan mass grave reveals human impact of first known pandemic

"A plague is upon us'' may have been a common phrase in ancient Jordan, where countless people perished from a mysterious malady that would shape both a society and an era of civilization.
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January 21, 5:55 AM
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COVID-19 severity is linked to changes in mitochondrial DNA methylation

COVID-19 severity is linked to changes in mitochondrial DNA methylation | Virology News | Scoop.it
This study examined mitochondrial and nuclear-encoded mitochondrial DNA methylation in Indian patients with severe COVID-19 and found region-specific differential methylation linked to disease severity.
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