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Sebastian Bonhoeffer

Researcher at ETH Zurich

Publications -  275
Citations -  27281

Sebastian Bonhoeffer is an academic researcher from ETH Zurich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Virus. The author has an hindex of 77, co-authored 265 publications receiving 24659 citations. Previous affiliations of Sebastian Bonhoeffer include University of Oxford & École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne.

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Viral dynamics in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection

TL;DR: Almost complete replacement of wild-type virus in plasma by drug-resistant variants occurs after fourteen days, indicating that HIV-1 viraemia is sustained primarily by a dynamic process involving continuous rounds of de novo virus infection and replication and rapid cell turnover.
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Quantitation of HIV-1-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes and plasma load of viral RNA.

TL;DR: With the use of the tetrameric complexes, a significant inverse correlation was observed between HIV-specific CTL frequency and plasma RNA viral load and suggest a considerable cytopathic effect of the virus in vivo.
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Cooperation and Competition in the Evolution of ATP-Producing Pathways

TL;DR: It is shown that ATP production with a low rate and high yield can be viewed as a form of cooperative resource use and may evolve in spatially structured environments and argued that the high ATP yield of respiration may have facilitated the evolutionary transition from unicellular to undifferentiated multicellular organisms.
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Viral dynamics in hepatitis B virus infection

TL;DR: The total daily production of plasma virus is, on average, higher in chronic HBV carriers than in HIV-infected patients, but the half-life of virus-producing cells is much shorter in HIV.
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Analysis of total human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-specific CD4(+) and CD8(+) T-cell responses: relationship to viral load in untreated HIV infection

TL;DR: Overall frequencies of HIV-specific T cells are not the sole determinant of immune-mediated protection in HIV-infection, and a positive correlation was identified between the plasma viral load and the total HIV-, Env-, and Nef-specific CD8+ T-cell frequency.