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Marcelo A. Soares

Researcher at Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

Publications -  160
Citations -  4367

Marcelo A. Soares is an academic researcher from Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. The author has contributed to research in topics: Drug resistance & Virus. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 146 publications receiving 3803 citations. Previous affiliations of Marcelo A. Soares include Rio de Janeiro Federal Institute of Education, Science and Technology & University of Alabama at Birmingham.

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Geographic and temporal trends in the molecular epidemiology and genetic mechanisms of transmitted HIV-1 drug resistance: an individual-patient- and sequence-level meta-analysis

Soo-Yon Rhee, +72 more
- 07 Apr 2015 - 
TL;DR: Most TDR strains in SSA and SSEA arose independently, suggesting that ARV regimens with a high genetic barrier to resistance combined with improved patient adherence may mitigate TDR increases by reducing the generation of new ARV-resistant strains.
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Global and regional molecular epidemiology of HIV-1, 1990–2015: a systematic review, global survey, and trend analysis

Joris Hemelaar, +181 more
TL;DR: The distribution of HIV-1 subtypes and recombinants changed over time in countries, regions, and globally as well as at a global level during 2005-15, where subtype B increased, subtypes A and D were stable, and subtypes C and G and CRF02_AG decreased.
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Human Papillomavirus E6 Triggers Upregulation of the Antiviral and Cancer Genomic DNA Deaminase APOBEC3B

TL;DR: The hypothesis that human papillomavirus (HPV) infection causes A3B upregulation is tested and a model in which high-risk HPV E6, possibly through functional inactivation of TP53, causes derepression of A3 B gene transcription and elevated A2B enzyme levels is suggested.
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The regulation of primate immunodeficiency virus infectivity by Vif is cell species restricted: a role for Vif in determining virus host range and cross‐species transmission

TL;DR: Using human cells as virus producers, it was found that the HIV‐1 Vif protein could modulate the infectivity of HIV-1 itself, HIV‐2 and SIV isolated from African green monkeys (SIVAGM) and the finding that the replication of murine leukemia virus could also be stimulated by HIV‐ 1 Vif expression in human cells further supported this notion.