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Biology Faculty Publications

2012

Biological

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

A Hunter Virus That Targets Both Infected Cells And Hiv Free Virions: Implications For Therapy, Cody Greer, Gisela García-Ramos Dec 2012

A Hunter Virus That Targets Both Infected Cells And Hiv Free Virions: Implications For Therapy, Cody Greer, Gisela García-Ramos

Biology Faculty Publications

The design of 'hunter' viruses aimed at destroying human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infected cells is an active area of research that has produced promising results in vitro. Hunters are designed to target exposed viral envelope proteins in the membranes of infected cells, but there is evidence that the hunter may also target envelope proteins of free HIV, inducing virus-virus fusion. In order to predict the effects of this fusion on therapy outcomes and determine whether fusion ability is advantageous for hunter virus design, we have constructed a model to account for the possibility of hunter-HIV fusion. The study was based …


Skin Regeneration In Adult Axolotls: A Blueprint For Scar-Free Healing In Vertebrates, Ashley W. Seifert, James R. Monaghan, S. Randal Voss, Malcolm Maden Apr 2012

Skin Regeneration In Adult Axolotls: A Blueprint For Scar-Free Healing In Vertebrates, Ashley W. Seifert, James R. Monaghan, S. Randal Voss, Malcolm Maden

Biology Faculty Publications

While considerable progress has been made towards understanding the complex processes and pathways that regulate human wound healing, regenerative medicine has been unable to develop therapies that coax the natural wound environment to heal scar-free. The inability to induce perfect skin regeneration stems partly from our limited understanding of how scar-free healing occurs in a natural setting. Here we have investigated the wound repair process in adult axolotls and demonstrate that they are capable of perfectly repairing full thickness excisional wounds made on the flank. In the context of mammalian wound repair, our findings reveal a substantial reduction in hemostasis, …