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Life

HIV stops new brain cells from growing

15 August 2007

HIV doesn’t just destroy the immune system, it may also stop new brain cells from growing.

For some time we’ve known that HIV can cause a form of dementia, but this had been attributed to the loss of mature brain cells, killed off by an HIV protein called gp120.

Now Stuart Lipton and his colleagues at the Burnham Institute for Medical Research in San Diego, California, have found that gp120 also slows down the division of adult stem cells called neural progenitor cells (aNPCs), thought to be important for memory and learning. When rat aNPCs were exposed to gp120, 15…

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