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Establishing an Active HIV Infection in a Rat Model

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Transcripción

Begin with an anesthetized rat, disinfect its shaved head, and secure it in a stereotaxic apparatus.

Make a midline incision to expose the skull.

Mark two positions on the skull and drill small holes.

Attach a syringe with chimeric viruses containing ecotropic HIV RNA within a lentiviral vector to the stereotaxic apparatus.

Insert the needle into the hole, targeting the brain cortex cells, including microglia, the brain's immune cells.

Slowly inject the viruses for their even distribution in the cortex.

Post-injection, suture the incision, disinfect the area, and allow the rat to recover.

The injected virus interacts with the brain cell receptors, fuses, and releases HIV RNA into the cytoplasm.

The RNA is reverse-transcribed into DNA and integrates into the cell's DNA.

The infected cell expresses the viral components, producing new RNA and proteins.

These assemble and release as new viruses, which increase the viral load in the brain, establishing an active HIV infection.

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Establishing an Active HIV Infection in a Rat Model

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