To involve students in thinking about the problem of AIDS (which is important in the view of nondecreasing infection rates), we established a practical lab using a simplified adaptation of Thomas's (2004) method to determine the polymorphism of HIV co-receptor CCR5 from students' own epithelial cells. CCR5 is a receptor involved in inflammatory processes, which has been misused by some pathogens, including HIV, to enter host cells. As a result, a defective allele CCR5-Δ32 has been enriched in some populations. The interesting story and hands-on work with their own tissue absorbed students in this 2-hour practical.
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1 November 2013
A Simplified Technique for Evaluating Human CCR5 Genetic Polymorphism
Lukáš Falteisek,
Jan Černý,
Vanda Janštová
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The American Biology Teacher
Vol. 75 • No. 9
November 2013
Vol. 75 • No. 9
November 2013
CCR5
genotyping
HIV resistance
PCR
polymerase chain reaction
polymorphism
secondary school