Reply
Sat 10 Jul, 2010 09:00 am
Context:
Finding individual antibodies that can neutralize HIV strains anywhere in the world has been difficult because the virus continuously changes its surface proteins to evade recognition by the immune system. As a consequence of these changes, an enormous number of HIV variants exist worldwide. Even so, scientists have identified a few areas on HIV's surface that remain nearly constant across all variants. One such area, located on the surface spikes used by HIV to attach to immune system cells and infect them, is called the CD4 binding site. VRC01 and VRC02 block HIV infection by attaching to the CD4 binding site, preventing the virus from latching onto immune cells.
@oristarA,
Before the virus can occupy/invade/move inside immune cells, they attach themselves to the outside.
'latch onto sth' means 'sth attaches itself to sth'.