The adaptive potential of HIV-1 is a vital mechanism to evade host immune responses and antiviral treatment. However, high evolutionary rates during persistent infection can impair transmission efficiency and alter disease progression in the new host, resulting in a delicate trade-off between within-host virulence and between-host infectiousness. This trade-off is visible in the disparity in evolutionary rates at within-host and between-host levels, and preferential transmission of ancestral donor viruses. Understanding the impact of within-host evolution for epidemiological studies is essential for the design of preventive and therapeutic measures. Herein, we review recent theoretical and experimental work that generated new insights into ...
Background: The first stages of HIV-1 infection are essential to establish the diversity of virus po...
The intra-host evolutionary and population dynamics of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-...
The intra-host evolutionary and population dynamics of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-...
The adaptive potential of HIV-1 is a vital mechanism to evade host immune responses and antiviral tr...
International audienceBACKGROUND: HIV evolves rapidly at the epidemiological level but also at the w...
The central problem for researchers of HIV-1 evolution is explaining the apparent design of the viru...
HIV-1 is the single most important sexually transmitted disease in humans from a global health pers...
Why some individuals develop AIDS rapidly whereas others remain healthy without treatment for many y...
Transmission lies at the interface of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) evolution within a...
Human Immunode ciency Virus (HIV) has a high mutation rate which allows it to evolve rapidly in res...
<div><p>Transmission lies at the interface of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) evolution ...
An important component of pathogen evolution at the population level is evolution within hosts. Unle...
<div><p>It has been suggested that HIV-1 has evolved its set-point virus load to be optimized for tr...
HIV-1 is a rapidly replicating retrovirus that faces two distinct fitness landscapes: within-host HI...
Background: The first stages of HIV-1 infection are essential to establish the diversity of virus po...
Background: The first stages of HIV-1 infection are essential to establish the diversity of virus po...
The intra-host evolutionary and population dynamics of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-...
The intra-host evolutionary and population dynamics of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-...
The adaptive potential of HIV-1 is a vital mechanism to evade host immune responses and antiviral tr...
International audienceBACKGROUND: HIV evolves rapidly at the epidemiological level but also at the w...
The central problem for researchers of HIV-1 evolution is explaining the apparent design of the viru...
HIV-1 is the single most important sexually transmitted disease in humans from a global health pers...
Why some individuals develop AIDS rapidly whereas others remain healthy without treatment for many y...
Transmission lies at the interface of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) evolution within a...
Human Immunode ciency Virus (HIV) has a high mutation rate which allows it to evolve rapidly in res...
<div><p>Transmission lies at the interface of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) evolution ...
An important component of pathogen evolution at the population level is evolution within hosts. Unle...
<div><p>It has been suggested that HIV-1 has evolved its set-point virus load to be optimized for tr...
HIV-1 is a rapidly replicating retrovirus that faces two distinct fitness landscapes: within-host HI...
Background: The first stages of HIV-1 infection are essential to establish the diversity of virus po...
Background: The first stages of HIV-1 infection are essential to establish the diversity of virus po...
The intra-host evolutionary and population dynamics of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-...
The intra-host evolutionary and population dynamics of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-...