Tadpoles display preferences for different environments but the sensory modalities that govern these choices are not well understood. Here, we examined light preferences and associated sensory mechanisms of albino and wild-type tadpoles. We found that albino tadpoles spent more time in darker environments compared to the wild type, although they showed no differences in overall activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo counter HIV latency, it is important to develop a better understanding of the full range of host factors promoting latency. Their identification could suggest new strategies to reactivate latent proviruses and subsequently kill the host cells ("shock and kill"), or to permanently silence these latent proviruses ("block and lock"). We recently developed a screening strategy termed "Reiterative Enrichment and Authentication of CRISPRi Targets" (REACT) that can unambiguously identify host genes promoting HIV latency, even in the presence of high background "noise" produced by the stochastic nature of HIV reactivation.
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