Scientists have identified a new way to reactivate latent HIV which could help overcome one of the biggest obstacles to finding a cure for the deadly virus. Researchers at the Gladstone Institutes found that increasing the random activity or noise associated with HIV gene expression - without increasing the average level of gene expression - can reactivate latent HIV. When HIV infects an immune cell it inserts its genetic material into the DNA of the infected cell. In most cases the immune cell's machinery makes copies of the viral genetic material a process known as transcription. This eventually leads to