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Our research interests revolve around many different subjects
relevant to obtaining a better understanding of the interaction
of retroviruses with their host cells and organisms. In
our laboratory at Tufts University, we are engaged in studies
using simple retroviruses (avian and murine viruses) to
elucidate the nature of the retrovirus-receptor interaction;
the mechanism and specificity of integration of viral DNA
into host DNA; control of viral gene expression; mechanism
of retroviral genetic variation; and evolution of the host-virus
relationship, as revealed by the "fossil" record
provided by endogenous proviruses found in the normal DNA
of all vertebrates and many other species.
We have also been interested in the complex relationship
between HIV and the infected host. Modeling of this interaction
implies that virus and infected cells turn over very rapidly,
at about one generation per day. Thus, large numbers of
cells are infected and die every day, and their progeny
viruses go on to infect another cell. This turnover has
important implications for drug resistance. Together with
the high mutation rate shared by all RNA viruses, it creates
the means for accumulation of many viral variants, potentially
including drug-resistant variants, even before the onset
of drug treatment. Such preexisting mutants would be the
principal cause of early treatment failure. The manner in
which such mutants are expected to arise is strongly dependent
on the structure of the HIV population in infected individuals
- its effective size and distribution among different sites
of replication.
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