Northeastern research on HIV infection could lead to better drugs to treat the virus

By Alena Kazub April 29, 2024

It has been more than 40 years since the beginning of the HIV/AIDS epidemic and scientists still don’t fully understand how HIV enters and replicates in human cells, which has hindered the development of treatments.

New research by a team of physicists led by Northeastern University professor Mark Williams is working on a solution.

There is no cure for HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, but there are treatments that can reduce the amount of HIV in a patient’s body and get the virus under control.

Williams’ team recently confirmed a key mechanism in the infection of cells that could lead to better drugs.

“The goal of this research is to understand the [retroviral] lifecycle much better so that better drugs for HIV can be developed,” Williams says. “And this is a great part of the lifecycle to attack with drugs.”

Read more from Northeastern Global News.

Photo by Alyssa Stone/Northeastern University

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