[HTML] from nih.govJT Weinfurter, GE May, T Soma, AJ Hessell… - Journal of …, 2011 - Am Soc Microbiol Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive individuals can be superinfected with different virus strains. Individuals who control an initial HIV infection are therefore still at risk for subsequent infection with divergent viruses, but the barriers to such superinfection remain unclear. ... Cited by 1 - Related articles - All 6 versions
S Portugal, C Carret, M Recker, AE Armitage… - Nature Medicine, 2011 - nature.com In regions of high rates of malaria transmission, mosquitoes repeatedly transmit liver-tropic Plasmodium sporozoites to individuals who already have blood-stage parasitemia 1 . This manifests itself in semi-immune children (who have been exposed since birth to Plasmodium infection ... All 6 versions
T Doyle, AM Garcia-Diaz, J Ambrose, A Strang… - AIDS, 2011 - journals.lww.com HIV superinfection is defined as infection with a second strain of HIV at least 1 month after primary infection [1] . At the population level, superinfection drives HIV genetic diversification through recombination. At the patient level, it reveals ongoing transmission risk and may result in ... Related articles - All 4 versions
A Rachinger, P Manyenga, JA Burger… - Journal of Infectious …, 2011 - jid.oxfordjournals.org Background. Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) superinfection is infection of an HIV-1 seropositive individual with another HIV-1 strain. The rate at which HIV-1 superinfection occurs might be influenced by sexual behavior. Superinfection might be detected more ... Related articles - All 3 versions
J Goulding, A Godlee, S Vekaria… - Journal of Infectious …, 2011 - jid.oxfordjournals.org Methods and Results. Using a mouse model of bacterial superinfection following influenza, we show that an absence of CD200R (a negative regulator highly expressed by macrophages and dendritic cells), restricts commensal and exogenous bacterial invasiveness and ...