HIV's undercover route to infection : Nature News

HIV enters human cells through a more complicated route than was previously believed, scientists report today.

The work, led by biophysicist Gregory Melikyan of the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore, has implications for drug treatments that aim to block the virus's entry into cells. Full Story »

Posted by Glenn LaBauve
Tags Help
Editorial Help
Posted by: Posted by Glenn LaBauve - Apr 30, 2009 - 9:03 PM PDT
Content Type: Article
Edit Lock: This story can be edited
Edited by: Glenn LaBauve - Apr 30, 2009 - 9:03 PM PDT

Reviews

Show All | Notes | Comments | Quotes | Links
Glenn LaBauve
4.1
by Glenn LaBauve - Apr. 30, 2009

A quick look at how researchers may have to rethink their treatment of hiv infection/prevention

See Full Review » (12 answers)
Wendy Garofoli
3.8
by Wendy Garofoli - May. 6, 2009

This story about the ways in which HIV infection spreads is well-reported but a little difficult to understand. Hayden uses quite a lot of scientific and medical jargon (though, to be fair, the readers of Nature probably understand that jargon much better than a general audience). I would have liked to see more in the story about the implications of the findings. What does this mean for creating a vaccine? Hayden scratches the surface, but doesn't quite give a definitive answer. Perhaps the science is still too new.

See Full Review » (6 answers)

Comments on this story Help (BETA)

NT Rating | My Rating

Ratings

3.9

not enough reviews
from 2 reviews (20% confidence)
Quality
3.9
Facts
4.0
Fairness
4.0
Sourcing
4.0
Style
4.0
Context
4.0
Depth
3.5
Enterprise
4.0
Relevance
4.0
Popularity
4.1
Recommendation
3.5
Credibility
5.0
# Reviews
1.0
# Views
5.0
# Likes
1.0
# Emails
1.0
More
How our ratings work »
(See these related stories.)

Links Help

No links yet. Please review this story to add some!