Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.48 (transcriptase)
9,479 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty six patients with Philadelphia chromosome (Ph1) positive chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) treated with IFN-alpha were classified on the basis of the fusion pattern of BCR/ABL chimeric mRNA determined by a reverse-transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) method. The relationship between the fusion pattern of BCR/ABL mRNA and the clinical outcome was also analysed. Twelve patients showed M-bcr exon 3/ABL exon 2 (B3/A2) chimeric mRNA and nine had M-bcr exon 2/ABL exon 2 (B2/A2) mRNA. Eleven of the 12 patients with B3/A2 achieved complete hematological response with IFN-alpha therapy, as did three of the nine patients with B2/A2. The mean duration to blastic crisis was significantly longer in the B3/A2 patients (mean 52.4 months) than in the B2/A2 patients (mean 26.2 months) (p less than 0.01). These results suggest that the fusion pattern of BCR/ABL mRNA may affect the therapeutic response to IFN-alpha and clinical outcome in CML patients.
Leukemia 1992 Sep
PMID:Possible correlation between fusion pattern of BCR/ABL mRNA and clinical response to alpha-interferon in chronic myelogenous leukemia. 151 6

It is proposed here that a form of intracellular immunity can be devised which would protect cells from virus infection and, in particular, could be used as a treatment for the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infected individual. Following in vitro immunization of naive human B lymphocytes with reverse-transcriptase (RT) or HIV transactivator protein (tat), messenger RNA (mRNA) would be isolated from these cells. Using the mRNA molecules as templates, copy DNA (cDNA) molecules encoding the RT or tat-specific immunoglobulins, are prepared and amplified by the polymerase chain reaction. After engineering of the antibody encoding cDNAs to provide appropriate intracellular addressing information, the cDNAs would be used to transfect stem cells of HIV infected individuals in vitro. The presence, in the cytoplasm and nucleus, of antibodies which had been selected to interfere with the reproduction of the virus, would protect these cells from infection. Autologous transplantation of such cells would confer resistance against HIV replication by these stem cells and their progeny in the treated individual. Such a strategy may also be useful against other retroviruses and could provide resistance against retrovirally triggered leukemia.
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PMID:A putative approach for gene therapy against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). 169 89

Reverse transcriptase (RT) transcribes viral RNA into DNA to be integrated into the host genome. To study epidemiological aspects of human leukemias and lymphomas which are known to express retroviruses, clinical specimens in this report were assayed for divalent cation-dependent viral-specific RT. The assay was carried out with cells solubilized with a detergent to release RT enzyme. RT was purified with poly(U)-Sepharose which fixed all DNA polymerases and assayed with 4 synthetic homopolymers, oligonucleotide primed-templates, poly(rA)-oligo(dT)12-18 or poly(dA)-oligo(dT)12-18 with Mg2+, poly(rC)-oligo(dG)12-18 or poly(rCm)-oligo(dG)12-18 with Mn2+ as divalent cation and [methyl-3H]thymidine 5'-triphosphate or deoxy[8-3H]guanosine 5-triphosphate respectively. Radioactivity incorporation of the precipitate allows quantitation of RT activity. One Hodgkin's disease, one out of 2 B lymphomas, one out of 2 T lymphomas, eight out of 12 leukemias were found to be positive for RT activity as well as acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients, known to express RT. The obtained RT activity in hematological malignancies was found to be comparable to positive controls such as RT enzymes purified from avian myeloblastosis and Moloney murine leukemia viruses.
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PMID:Presence of reverse transcriptase in human leukemias and lymphomas. 170 70

Philadelphia-chromosome positive chronic myeloid leukemia cells in chronic phase (CML-CP) or blast crisis (CML-BC) and normal bone marrow cells (NBMC) were incubated in vitro with antisense oligonucleotide specific against the BCR/ABL breakpoint junction to examine the possibility of selective inhibition of leukemia growth. Growth capability was determined in vitro by colony assay in semisolid medium in the presence of interleukin 3 (IL-3) and granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF). The 18-mer antisense directed against the specific BCR/ABL mRNA breakpoint region diminished the colony formation by CML-CP and CML-BC cells, but not by NBMC. Scrambled oligomer did not affect significantly the growth of leukemic and normal cells. If CML-BC cells were mixed with NMBC and incubated with specific BCR/ABL antisense oligomer, leukemic colonies were selectively inhibited, as was shown by reverse, transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) performed to detect BCR/ABL mRNA in single colonies. These results confirm the possibility of selective inhibition of leukemia cells by antisense treatment.
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PMID:Gene-targeted specific inhibition of chronic myeloid leukemia cell growth by BCR-ABL antisense oligodeoxynucleotides. 179 39

Feline leukemia virus, subgroup C/Sarma (FeLV-C/Sarma) induces pure red blood cell aplasia in cats. Although erythroid (BFU-E and CFU-E) and granulocyte/macrophage (CFU-GM) progenitors are infected with this virus, only erythropoiesis is impaired. Two to 3 weeks before the onset of anemia, CFU-E become undetectable in marrow cultures while earlier erythroid progenitors (BFU-E) persist, suggesting that FeLV-C/Sarma (presumably via its envelope glycoprotein gp70) inhibits the differentiation of BFU-E to CFU-E in vivo. To correlate in vitro observations with the progression of disease, prospective studies were performed in six cats. These studies showed that at the time that the frequencies of CFU-E decreased in marrow cultures, BFU-E no longer responded to hematopoietic growth factor(s), although the responses of CFU-GM were unchanged. In further studies, anemic cats received suramin, a reverse-transcriptase inhibitor with other diverse effects. Within 4 to 14 days, erythropoiesis improved and up to 1,616 CFU-E were detected per 10(5) marrow mononuclear cells. However, progenitor cells remained infected, suggesting that suramin modulated erythroid differentiation without inhibiting progenitor infection. These observations led to the hypothesis that the gp70 of FeLV-C/Sarma impairs BFU-E differentiation by interference with ligand/receptor interactions or signal transduction pathways unique to erythroid cells. Understanding this mechanism should provide insights into the interactions controlling early erythropoiesis.
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PMID:Retrovirus-induced feline pure red blood cell aplasia: pathogenesis and response to suramin. 184 31

Reverse transcriptase of murine retroviruses is a monomeric protein of approximately 80,000 daltons, which is encoded by the central portion of the viral pol gene. To prepare large quantities of the enzyme, we have constructed gene fusions between the trpE gene and portions of the pol gene of Moloney murine leukemia virus. The inserted pol gene sequences include the entire coding region for the mature enzyme and various amounts of additional coding sequences. Many of these constructs express high levels of reverse transcriptase activity even though the NH2 and COOH termini of the protein product only approximate the correct termini of the authentic protein.
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PMID:Expression of enzymatically active reverse transcriptase in Escherichia coli. 241 Sep 10

A disease with the characteristics of an erythroblastic leukemia was induced by X-ray irradiation of 300 Rads in C3H mice. The leukemia is transplantable in syngeneic mice by i.v. injection of the spleen cells. The mice show almost pure erythroid cells of various differentiation stages in peripheral blood. The number of total nucleated cells in the peripheral blood increased, but hematocrit and platelet number decreased. Reverse transcriptase activities were measured in spleen and liver of the mice and the data suggested that the leukemia was not induced by retrovirus infection. This leukemia is distinguishable, in this respect, from diseases reported by Friend or Rauscher. The leukemia will offer a good animal model for the studies on non-viral leukemogenesis and disorders of erythropoiesis.
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PMID:Establishment and characterization of a transplantable erythroblastic leukemia in C3H mice. 245 36

Transplantable erythroblastic leukemia was induced by 300-rad irradiation of C3H mice. Conditions for in vitro growth of the leukemic cells were studied. None of interleukin-3, granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor and erythropoietin could support the growth of the cells in vitro. In contrast, the leukemic cells grew into a stroma-dependent cell line, ELM-D, in close contact with the stromal cell layer of 900-rad-irradiated long-term bone marrow culture. A stroma-independent cell line, termed ELM-I-1, was further established from the non-adherent population in the co-culture of the leukemic cells, ELM-D, with stromal cells. Reverse transcriptase activity was not detectable in ELM-D or ELM-I-1 cells. Studies on binding and cross-linking of 125I-erythropoietin showed that ELM-I-1 cells had erythropoietin receptors, and two major radiolabeled protein products with molecular weights of 120 kDa and 140 kDa were detected on sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under reducing conditions.
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PMID:Stromal cell-dependent growth of leukemic cells from murine erythroblastic leukemia. 246 Apr 23

The retroviruses human T-cell lymphotrophic virus-I (HTLV-I) and HTLV-III/LAV (lymphadenopathy-associated virus) are clearly linked to human diseases. Patients with HTLV-I-positive neoplasms may respond transiently to traditional chemotherapy, but are not cured. For patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) there is no curative therapy. In retroviruses of different species, viral propagation crucially depends on reverse transcriptase, an enzyme not present in normal mammalian cells and different from mammalian DNA polymerases, making it a target for specific inhibition. Reverse transcriptase has been well conserved through evolution: an LAV isolate contained a 250-amino-acid-long domain, presumably the reverse transcriptase core sequence, which has 21% homology to Moloney murine leukaemia virus (MoMLV). Because HTLV-III infects only humans and chimpanzees, we substituted murine retroviruses for in vivo evaluation of candidate anti-AIDS drugs after ascertaining similar inhibition in vitro of HTLV-III and MLVs, which were chosen for their short incubation time. The triphosphate of 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine (AZT) is incorporated into complementary DNA by retroviral reverse transcriptase, causing premature chain termination. Here we show that chronic AZT treatment of mice infected with Rauscher murine leukaemia virus complex (RLV) prevents infection of splenocytes and development of splenomegaly, and suppresses viraemia if started soon after inoculation. Starting AZT late in the course of disease still leads to significant prolongation of life; anaemia, however is a significant side-effect. By analogy, AZT may have a role in preventing retroviral disease in humans if started early after infection, and it may lead to significant survival gains even if started later in the course of disease.
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PMID:Suppression of mouse viraemia and retroviral disease by 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine. 346 67

Peripheral blood lymphocytes of domestic cats were co-cultivated with lethally irradiated MT-2 cells, which produced human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-I). Two cat lymphoid cell lines, CaL-1 and CaL-2, established and maintained without exogenously added T-cell growth factor, were characterized after more than 6 months of cultivation. These cells grew in suspension, had a chromosome number of 38 and lacked cytoplasmic and surface immunoglobulins. CaL-2 cells formed E-rosettes. Both cell lines harbored HTLV genomes but not human Alu family sequences, which are highly repetitious in the human genome, suggesting that transfer of human DNA fragments was not necessary for their immortalization or transformation. HTLV antigens were detected in CaL-1 and CaL-2 cells by indirect immunofluorescence assay. CaL-1 and CaL-2 cells both expressed viral proteins with apparent molecular weights of 53 kd, 24 kd and 19 kd, and CaL-2 cells also expressed 28 kd and 20 kd proteins. Reverse transcriptase activity was detected in culture fluid of CaL-2 cells, but not of CaL-1 cells. CaL-2 cells but not CaL-1 cells had syncytium-induced activity. These findings indicated that lymphocytes of cats, especially T lymphocytes, were susceptible to infection with HTLV and to immortalization by HTLV.
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PMID:Immortalization of peripheral blood lymphocytes of cats by human T-cell leukemia virus. 609 83


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