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Deciphering Molecular Barriers to Immune Elimination of HIV During Antiretroviral therapy: "The issue is in the Tissues"
Dr. Zaza Ndhlovu is a viral Immunologist. He received his PhD in Molecular Microbiology and Immunology at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore Maryland, and did his post-doctoral training at Harvard University. He is an Assistant Professor at the Ragon Institute of Mass General, MIT, and Harvard, Faculty member at ARHI and adjunct Associate Professor at the University of KwaZulu Natal. He is also a visiting scientist at the Center for Infectious Diseases in Zambia and an HHMI international research scholar. His lab uses lymph node and large blood donations from a cohort of individuals who initiate therapy immediately upon diagnosis of acute HIV infection to identify where the HIV reservoir resides within tissues and define immune components that mediate HIV reservoir suppression. This work is critical to efforts to develop a cure for HIV. Using serial excisional lymph node and leukapheresis samples obtained from individuals initiating ART during hyperacute HIV infection, the Ndhlovu lab defines the interplay between early virological and cellular immune responses and the impact of these interactions on viral control, reservoir establishment, cellular distribution, and decay dynamics, which informs vaccine strategies. He has won numerous awards including Howard Hughes International Scholar Award and Gates Foundation Grand challenge Award.