The study shows how 'uncloaking' the virus using an experimental drug triggers an immune response that stops the virus from replicating in cells grown in the laboratory.
The findings could lead to new treatments and help to improve existing therapies for HIV infection, researchers said.
The innate immune system is the body's first line of defence against infection and incorporates an alarm system present in all cells of the body that detects the presence of 'foreign' material from invading bacteria and viruses.
HIV infects vital cells of the immune system so its ability to replicate undetected without triggering this alarm system has puzzled scientists since the discovery of the virus.
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The team identified two molecules inside host cells that are recruited by HIV after infection that stop the virus from reproducing its genetic material too early.
The effect is to shield the virus from the alarm system and stop the innate immune system from kicking into action.
Targeting the cloaking molecules and not the virus itself makes it much more difficult for the virus to mutate and become resistant to this treatment approach, a significant problem with standard HIV therapies.
"HIV is extremely adept at hiding from our body's natural defences, which is part of the reason the virus is so dangerous. Now we've identified the virus' invisibility cloak, and how to expose it, we've uncovered a weakness that could be exploited for new HIV treatments," professor Greg Towers, a Wellcome Trust Senior Research Fellow at University College London (UCL) and lead author of the study, said.
"We're also interested to see whether blocking these cloaking molecules can help to boost immune responses to experimental vaccines against HIV or be used to protect against HIV transmission," said Towers.