International audienceRegulation of the retroviral protein production largely depends upon regulation of the alternative splicing of the viral transcript. The Tat protein is required for transcription of full-length HIV-1 RNA and therefore is essential for virus multiplication. However, as the Tat protein has apoptotic properties, virus HIV-1 limits tat mRNA production through a strong down regulation of splicing at site A3, an HIV-1 splicing site specifically dedicated to tat mRNA production. Splicing at this site is modulated by a complex array of silencer and enhancer elements contained in a long stem-loop structure SLS3, which is located downstream from site A3. Earlier studies have shown that the main inhibitory element ESS2 is a stron...
<p>HIV-1 relies on both viral and cellular host factors for expression of its genome. Tat specific ...
The synthesis of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) mRNAs is a complex process by which mor...
ABSTRACT The main obstacle to an HIV cure is the transcriptionally inert proviruses that persist in ...
International audienceRegulation of the retroviral protein production largely depends upon regulatio...
International audienceRetroviral protein production depends upon alternative splicing of the viral t...
Transcription of the HIV-1 proviral DNA and subsequent processing of the primary transcript results ...
Alternative splicing plays a key role in the HIV-1 life cycle and is essential to maintain an equili...
International audienceAlternative splicing plays a key role in the production of numerous proteins b...
International audienceAlternative splicing plays a key role in the production of numerous proteins b...
Splicing is a key step for virus HIV-1 multiplication. Four donor and eight acceptor splicing sites ...
HIV-1 pre-mRNA splicing depends upon 4 donor and 8 acceptor sites, which are used in combination to ...
International audienceAn equilibrium between spliced and unspliced primary transcripts is essential ...
L'épissage de l'ARN du HIV-1 joue un rôle majeur pour sa multiplication. A partir de 4 sites donneur...
HIV-1 gene expression requires both viral and cellular factors to control and coordinate transcrip-t...
HIV-1 gene expression requires both viral and cellular factors to control and coordinate transcrip-t...
<p>HIV-1 relies on both viral and cellular host factors for expression of its genome. Tat specific ...
The synthesis of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) mRNAs is a complex process by which mor...
ABSTRACT The main obstacle to an HIV cure is the transcriptionally inert proviruses that persist in ...
International audienceRegulation of the retroviral protein production largely depends upon regulatio...
International audienceRetroviral protein production depends upon alternative splicing of the viral t...
Transcription of the HIV-1 proviral DNA and subsequent processing of the primary transcript results ...
Alternative splicing plays a key role in the HIV-1 life cycle and is essential to maintain an equili...
International audienceAlternative splicing plays a key role in the production of numerous proteins b...
International audienceAlternative splicing plays a key role in the production of numerous proteins b...
Splicing is a key step for virus HIV-1 multiplication. Four donor and eight acceptor splicing sites ...
HIV-1 pre-mRNA splicing depends upon 4 donor and 8 acceptor sites, which are used in combination to ...
International audienceAn equilibrium between spliced and unspliced primary transcripts is essential ...
L'épissage de l'ARN du HIV-1 joue un rôle majeur pour sa multiplication. A partir de 4 sites donneur...
HIV-1 gene expression requires both viral and cellular factors to control and coordinate transcrip-t...
HIV-1 gene expression requires both viral and cellular factors to control and coordinate transcrip-t...
<p>HIV-1 relies on both viral and cellular host factors for expression of its genome. Tat specific ...
The synthesis of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) mRNAs is a complex process by which mor...
ABSTRACT The main obstacle to an HIV cure is the transcriptionally inert proviruses that persist in ...