HIV enzyme that the virus uses to insert its genetic material into that of an infected cell.
A viral enzyme that integrates the viral genetic code into the host cell's DNA.
An enzyme that integrates retroviral cDNA into the genome of the host cell.
An enzyme that allows viral DNA to be spliced into the host cell's genes.
This enzyme inserts HIV's gene into a cell's normal DNA operating after reverse transcriptase has created a DNA version or RNA form of HIV genes present in the virus particles. Plays a vital role in the HIV-infection process.
HIV enzyme that catalyzes the insertion of HIV's DNA transcript into the nucleus and DNA of the infected cell.
an enzyme that is responsible for a site-specific recombination that inserts one molecule of DNA into another
Integrates HIV proviral DNA into the DNA of the host cell. Target for new drugs.
an HIV enzyme used by the virus to integrate its genetic material into the host cell's DNA.
a viral enzyme that enables the integration of viral genetic material into a host cell's DNA.
An enzyme that catalyses the insertion or removal of a piece of DNA into/from a larger piece of DNA.
A little-understood enzyme that plays a vital role in the HIV infection process. Integrase inserts HIV's genes into a cell's normal DNA.
Integrase is an enzyme produced by a retrovirus that enables its genetic material to be integrated into the DNA of the infected cell. It is a key component in the pre-integration complex (PIC). The integrase protein contains three domains: an N-terminal HH-CC zinc finger domain believed to be partially responsible for multimerization, a central catalytic domain and an C-terminal DNA binding domain.