CXCR4-Using HIV Strains Predominate in Naive and Central Memory CD4 <sup>+</sup> T Cells in People Living with HIV on Antiretroviral Therapy: Implications for How Latency Is Established and Maintained
Michael Roche(The University of Melbourne), Sharon R. Lewin(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Gabriela Khoury(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Jenny L. Anderson(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Paul Cameron(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Steven G. Deeks(University of California, San Francisco), Kieran Cashin(RMIT University), Carolin Tumpach(The University of Melbourne), Melissa J. Churchill(Burnet Institute), Matthew J. Gartner(RMIT University), Paul R. Gorry(RMIT University), Jori Symons(The Royal Melbourne Hospital)
Cited by 21
Related Papers
Effect of Early versus Deferred Antiretroviral Therapy for HIV on Survival
|New England Journal of Medicine|2009|1.1k
Systemic Effects of Inflammation on Health during Chronic HIV Infection
|Immunity|2013|835
Immune activation set point during early HIV infection predicts subsequent CD4+ T-cell changes independent of viral load
|Blood|2004|787
Defective proviruses rapidly accumulate during acute HIV-1 infection
|Nature Medicine|2016|774
HIV infection
|Nature Reviews Disease Primers|2015|609