I want to know something. Why dose are bodies have replicators in the first place? If we have anti replicating drugs that inhibit the virus from replicating then that means the replication is shut down all together for any kind of replication? So why do we need this replicator?
@Dusty696969 replication is not just a characteristic of viruses. For example, your skin constantly dies and regenerates. As for reverse transcriptase, i believe that it's important for something, but i dont remember what at the moment. Evolutionarily it's probably good for variation but that's just a guess
@vcxshgfd I know we are constantly regenerating cells, (I.E. Skin) I thought maybe we have these replicators as we are being created in the womb of our mothers but are still there through out life, but if what you are saying " it helps to regenerate cells like skin", then wouldn't a aids victim stop creating skin cells when given the anti replication drugs? Because I don't know what kind of DNA RNA our bodies need to replicate for the virus to use them to recreate themselves? Thanks for response
@Dusty696969 I'm not sure I'm the most qualified person to answer, and I'm french, so please excuse my poor grammar, but I'm fairly sure that a aids victim wouldn't stop regenerating skin cells (or any kinf of cell) when given the anti reverse transcriptase drug because the enzyme (Reverse Transcriptase) blocked by that kind of aids drug isn't used in the human cells. RT transforms RNA into DNA and we just need the DNA to RNA enzyme (RNA polymerase). RT is only usefull to retroviruses like HIV.
@Dusty696969 Well, sorry i took so long, just watched your comment. I'm a french medicine student, i don't know if you know it:
HIV is a retrovirus, it means that he doesn't have DNA, he just has RNA, but with just RNA, he can't replicate, he needs to convert RNA to DNA to create new HIV cells. That's why he uses an enzyme "transcriptase reverse" who penetrate our cells and convert the RNA to DNA in our cells. The new virus'DNA created is uncluded in OUR DNA
@XuchiwaX So what you are saying is anti replicating drugs don't work on retrovirus? So there not replicating they reverse transcript the DNA to create more virus?? But isn't there ain't transcriptase inhibitors?
@Dusty696969 And then, when we replicate our cells, we also replicate our DNA to create new cells and because of HIV's DNA include in our cells' DNA, we replicate the DNA of the virus :/The reverse transcriptors inhibiting are just here to prevent the virus 'RNA conversion to DNA, because if it doesn't convert, it's not include in OUR DNA and can't be spending in our body. This reverse transcriptase inhibitor doesn't stop the replication of our cells. Hope you understood, sorry for my english :)
@XuchiwaX Also then wouldn't anti transcriptor inhibitors stop skin cell or any kind of cell that is needed to recreate in our bodies stopped in there tracks?
@XuchiwaX SO it just stops the virus RNA from being spliced into our DNA thus causing are own bodies to recreate the virus. Sneaky little things aren't they.
@vcxshgfd You don"t remember why reverse transcriptase is important ? It's said in the video. The virus needs it to convert its RNA to DNA and its DNA is include in the DNA of OUR cells, and when our cells are replicating, we are replicating the DNA of the virus by the same way. A virus can't live without an other cell, it can't replicate its cells by itself.
The medicine hold the "thumb" open, Why can't they figure out how to Chop that god damn thumb OFF
hitcan79 4 weeks ago
Damn virus RNA.
Dusty696969 1 month ago
I want to know something. Why dose are bodies have replicators in the first place? If we have anti replicating drugs that inhibit the virus from replicating then that means the replication is shut down all together for any kind of replication? So why do we need this replicator?
Dusty696969 6 months ago
@Dusty696969 replication is not just a characteristic of viruses. For example, your skin constantly dies and regenerates. As for reverse transcriptase, i believe that it's important for something, but i dont remember what at the moment. Evolutionarily it's probably good for variation but that's just a guess
vcxshgfd 6 months ago
@vcxshgfd I know we are constantly regenerating cells, (I.E. Skin) I thought maybe we have these replicators as we are being created in the womb of our mothers but are still there through out life, but if what you are saying " it helps to regenerate cells like skin", then wouldn't a aids victim stop creating skin cells when given the anti replication drugs? Because I don't know what kind of DNA RNA our bodies need to replicate for the virus to use them to recreate themselves? Thanks for response
Dusty696969 6 months ago
Comment removed
hugokko 1 month ago
This has been flagged as spam show
@Dusty696969 I'm not sure I'm the most qualified person to answer, and I'm french, so please excuse my poor grammar, but I'm fairly sure that a aids victim wouldn't stop regenerating skin cells (or any kinf of cell) when given the anti reverse transcriptase drug because the enzyme (Reverse Transcriptase) blocked by that kind of aids drug isn't used in the human cells. RT transforms RNA into DNA and we just need the DNA to RNA enzyme (RNA polymerase). RT is only usefull to retroviruses like HIV.
hugokko 1 month ago
@Dusty696969 Well, sorry i took so long, just watched your comment. I'm a french medicine student, i don't know if you know it:
HIV is a retrovirus, it means that he doesn't have DNA, he just has RNA, but with just RNA, he can't replicate, he needs to convert RNA to DNA to create new HIV cells. That's why he uses an enzyme "transcriptase reverse" who penetrate our cells and convert the RNA to DNA in our cells. The new virus'DNA created is uncluded in OUR DNA
XuchiwaX 1 month ago
@XuchiwaX So what you are saying is anti replicating drugs don't work on retrovirus? So there not replicating they reverse transcript the DNA to create more virus?? But isn't there ain't transcriptase inhibitors?
Dusty696969 1 month ago
@Dusty696969 And then, when we replicate our cells, we also replicate our DNA to create new cells and because of HIV's DNA include in our cells' DNA, we replicate the DNA of the virus :/The reverse transcriptors inhibiting are just here to prevent the virus 'RNA conversion to DNA, because if it doesn't convert, it's not include in OUR DNA and can't be spending in our body. This reverse transcriptase inhibitor doesn't stop the replication of our cells. Hope you understood, sorry for my english :)
XuchiwaX 1 month ago
@XuchiwaX Also then wouldn't anti transcriptor inhibitors stop skin cell or any kind of cell that is needed to recreate in our bodies stopped in there tracks?
Dusty696969 1 month ago
@Dusty696969 Never mind I miss understood. I get it
Dusty696969 1 month ago
@XuchiwaX SO it just stops the virus RNA from being spliced into our DNA thus causing are own bodies to recreate the virus. Sneaky little things aren't they.
Dusty696969 1 month ago
@Dusty696969 And now, I just saw the video, don't have all understand but I think, I said the same things :/
XuchiwaX 1 month ago
@vcxshgfd You don"t remember why reverse transcriptase is important ? It's said in the video. The virus needs it to convert its RNA to DNA and its DNA is include in the DNA of OUR cells, and when our cells are replicating, we are replicating the DNA of the virus by the same way. A virus can't live without an other cell, it can't replicate its cells by itself.
XuchiwaX 1 month ago
@Dusty696969 It's not an anti replicating drug ! just a drug who stop the conversion of the virus' RNA to virus'DNA.
XuchiwaX 1 month ago
Fucking hell. i never would have thought that would be possible
maneatingsquirls 9 months ago
In spanish, please?
Thanks....
ELIVIRASEN 11 months ago
YEAH! LET'S KICK HIV'S ASS
zulubabo 1 year ago 8
@zulubabo TWO PEOPLE HAVE BEEN "cured" SO FAR, SHIT'S OFF THE WALL YO.
Draffknk 1 year ago
thats spooky, a finger, a palm and a thumb region... resembling a hand...
yipyip2001 1 year ago