I think we should put the same weight now on the co-factors as we have on HIV.
About Luc Montagnier
Luc Montagnierwas a French virologist and joint recipient, with Francoise Barre-Sinoussi and Harald zur Hausen, of the 2008 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his discovery of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). He worked as a researcher at the Pasteur Institute in Paris and as a full-time professor at Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China.
More quotes from Luc Montagnier
Our goal is not to completely eradicate the infection – that would be very difficult – but to produce a vaccine that will prevent not infection but disease. I think this is more possible.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
I am very puzzled by the fact that young people are getting infected again. They don’t take precautions despite an enormous amount of information. It’s like riding a race car at 200 kilometers an hour. Some people like the risk.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
It’s clear that prevention will never be sufficient. That’s why we need a vaccine that will be safe.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
I’ve participated in meetings where there were concerns by ethical experts. There is no clear solution.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
The center will be fully operational in two years’ time, but probably in the middle of the year we will have a temporary laboratory of 4,000 square feet.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
The idea of the live-virus vaccine is to produce in a continuous way some viral antigens.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
Another interesting field, which is my own, is cofactors, not only to the disease but also to transmission. I am still puzzled by the fact that you get more sexual transmission in some ethnic populations. One way to answer this is to look for genetic factors.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
We don’t know why, but there are some gradients of infection.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
What perhaps should receive more attention is the effect of the treatment on the virus.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
I think we should put the same weight now on the co-factors as we have on HIV.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
That is why it is so important not only to have excellent treatment but also to try to get back the immune defense, because there you have a natural defense that takes place everywhere.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
We are working with a biotech company, Calypte, which has designed a urine test for the HIV antibody.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
One could not have isolated this retrovirus without knowledge of other retroviruses, that’s obvious. But I believe we have answered the criteria of isolation.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
It’s easier to learn things for life by the age of 12 and not the age of 18. This is just my guess.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
They don’t actually see the real world, where 95% of the people with HIV are not treated and are dying. And even though we have some blue sky now in our country, the sky could become cloudy again very soon.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
It’s very difficult in our society. You cannot impose certain behavioral changes. Education can do it at the right time, probably by high school. After that it is too late.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
My proposal now is to test a vaccine first on people who have been infected, and if you show some efficacy at this level, you might be able to go further to study uninfected people in a population with a high rate of infection.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
Basic research is very useful, but it should be more geared toward application than it was before.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
AIDS does not inevitably lead to death, especially if you suppress the co-factors that support the disease. It is very important to tell this to people who are infected.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
AIDS win be our first priority, but in two years’ time we don’t know where AIDS research will stand, so we are also thinking of activity on other diseases.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
Psychological factors are critical in supporting immune function. If you suppress this psychological support by telling someone he’s condemned to die, your words alone will have condemned him.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
What seems to be clear to me is that after the primary infection most of the cells die indirectly, but at the later stage, when the viral load is very high, the virus kills a lot of cells directly.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)
Since most of the transmission is sexual transmission, you have a regional or local response to the virus.
French virologist and joint recipient of the Nobel Prize of Physiology or Medicine (2008)