scispace - formally typeset
D

David Baltimore

Researcher at California Institute of Technology

Publications -  882
Citations -  168784

David Baltimore is an academic researcher from California Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: RNA & Virus. The author has an hindex of 203, co-authored 876 publications receiving 162955 citations. Previous affiliations of David Baltimore include Thomas Jefferson University & Johns Hopkins University.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Involvement of a second lymphoid-specific enhancer element in the regulation of immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene expression

TL;DR: The results suggest that the microB element is a new crucial element important for lymphoid-specific expression of the IgH gene but that interaction with another enhancer element is essential for its activity.
Patent

Non-infectious HIV particles and uses therefor

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe a set of constructs comprising mutant HIV genomes having an alteration in a nucleotide sequence which is critical for genomic RNA packaging and non-infectious, immunogenic HIV particles produced by expression of these constructs in mammalian cells.
Patent

MART-1 T cell receptors

TL;DR: In this article, T-cell receptors that recognize MART-1 antigen are provided, which can be used to treat patients suffering from melanoma, for example, to treat melanoma.
Journal ArticleDOI

As good as it gets? The problem of HIV persistence despite antiretroviral drugs.

TL;DR: Some of the possible reasons why HIV persists at different points on the infection timeline are discussed, focusing on the role ongoing replication may have in maintaining the infection despite drugs at early times postexposure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of the Fv-1 locus on the titration of murine leukemia viruses.

TL;DR: The data indicate that the multiple-hit phenomenon described previously may not be an essential part of the Fv-1 gene restriction, and there were about 100-fold less infected BALB/3 T3 cells than NIH/3T3 cells.