Lao Tzu
New member
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/09/12/1063268551542.html?from=storyrhs&oneclick=true
I can't remember the exact details, but the black plague, smallpox and AIDS all enter the host cells the same way. There was a documentary about it a while ago. Apparently when the black plague was really powerful some people were immune to it. These people passed on their genes and it turns out those genes changes certain cells (i forget which ones) to make it impossible/harder for the black plague bacteria to enter. The AIDS virus enters the same way so some people are now immune to AIDS who inherited these genes. Smallpox uses the same entryway and according to that article the blood of individuals with smallpox was 4x less likely to get AIDS on exposure than the blood of individuals not. So why aren't we using smallpox vaccines as well as retrovirals and condoms?
I can't remember the exact details, but the black plague, smallpox and AIDS all enter the host cells the same way. There was a documentary about it a while ago. Apparently when the black plague was really powerful some people were immune to it. These people passed on their genes and it turns out those genes changes certain cells (i forget which ones) to make it impossible/harder for the black plague bacteria to enter. The AIDS virus enters the same way so some people are now immune to AIDS who inherited these genes. Smallpox uses the same entryway and according to that article the blood of individuals with smallpox was 4x less likely to get AIDS on exposure than the blood of individuals not. So why aren't we using smallpox vaccines as well as retrovirals and condoms?

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