ag5@pucc-k (Basket Case) (12/28/84)
<<>> From today's (28 December 1984) Chicago Tribune: NEW YORK -- Scientists say they have found at least part of the reason the AIDS virus targets a key immune system cell, and an expert on the disease says the discovery may help interfere with the infection process. Acquired immune deficiency syndrome cripples the immune system by killing a certain kind of white blood cell, and the research demonstrates that the suspected virus latches on to a particular protein on the surface of that cell to begin infection. Dr. Robert Gallo, an AIDS expert at the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, MD, said identifying the "receptor" protein for the virus was significant. "If you know a lot about the receptor, it opens up ideas you didn't have before," he said Thursday. "You can start doing things that might interfere with the virus infection of the cell." --end--of--article-- ... for whatever it's worth. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------ Henry C. Mensch | User Confuser | Purdue University User Services {ihnp4|decvax|ucbvax|seismo|purdue|cbosgd|harpo}!pur-ee!pucc-i!ag5 ------------------------------------------------------------------ "Never eat more than you can lift!" -- Miss Piggy