Dr. Sudhir Paul is a scientist at the very forefront of HIV research. A graduate of AIIMS, he is currently Professor and Director of the Chemical Immunology Research Center at the University of Texas Medical School in Houston. Below is an excerpt from an article that describes why his research holds a great deal of promise, followed by a video that is part of a fund-raising drive led by the Covalent Immunology Foundation (CIF) to finance the final phase of his research—(expensive) clinical trials that could lead to a cure and a vaccine for HIV (see another video here).
Scientists working to develop a vaccine for the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) report they have created the first antigen that induces protective antibodies capable of blocking infection of human cells by genetically-diverse strains of HIV. The new antigen differs from previously-tested vaccines by virtue of its chemically-activated property that enables close sharing of electrons and produces strong covalent bonding. Researchers used a mouse model to generate the antibodies. The report by researchers at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston is online and will appear in a print issue of the Journal of Biological Chemistry in November. (Read more)
Dr. Paul also happens to be the husband of Ruchira Paul, a former co-editor on Shunya’s Notes. We wish him success in his life’s work.

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