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Summary of presentations at the NIH/NIAID New Humanized Rodent Models 2007 Workshop

Harris Goldstein email

Departments of Pediatrics and Microbiology & Immunology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York, 10461, USA

author email corresponding author email

AIDS Research and Therapy 2008, 5:3doi:10.1186/1742-6405-5-3

Published: 31 January 2008

Abstract

It has long been recognized that a small animal model susceptible to HIV-1 infection with a functional immune system would be extremely useful in the study of HIV/AIDS pathogenesis and for the evaluation of vaccine and therapeutic strategies to combat this disease. By early 2007, a number of reports on various rodent models capable of being infected by and responding to HIV including some with a humanized immune system were published. The New Humanized Rodent Model Workshop, organized by the Division of AIDS (DAIDS), National Institute Allergy and Infection Diseases (NIAID), NIH, was held on September 24, 2007 at Bethesda for the purpose of bringing together key model developers and potential users. This report provides a synopsis of the presentations that discusses the current status of development and use of rodent models to evaluate the pathogenesis of HIV infection and to assess the efficacy of vaccine and therapeutic strategies including microbicides to prevent and/or treat HIVinfection.


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