Biology 1001A Lecture 2: HIV-Lecture 2

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Can never successfully destroy the diseases they cause: whether viruses are always pathogenic, many viruses can benefit/protect their host. Ex: infection of some nonpathogenic viruses protects humans. Diseases is very high: the general mechanisms by which vaccines protect against diseases. The way hiv viruses are treated now: many drugs are used instead of one, since the mutation rate is very high. What a universal vaccine should be like: target parts of the virus that do not change after mutation, memory cells activate when they recognize that hiv is present produce antibodies that attach to. Hiv viruses to prevent it from infecting cells: t- cells start killing the infected cells and viruses. Hiv resistance allele: allele ccr5 delta (part of the protein is missing) 32, most popular in europe because the black death, small pox diseases selected for this mutation. Its genome consists of 8 separate pieces of rna. When an individual is infected by 2 viruses, rna.

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