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Target Concepts:
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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)
Nonnucleoside reverse-
transcriptase
inhibitors (NNRTIs) can rapidly select for drug-resistant human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) variants, although their effect on HIV-1 quasi-species diversity is unknown. To determine if changes in
env
gene diversification occur with NNRTI therapy, we used the heteroduplex tracking assay (HTA) to study HIV-1
env
sequence diversity in 2 groups of patients: those who were on no therapy or were on chronic antiretroviral therapy and those who had just initiated NNRTIs. Forty-nine paired samples from 46 patients were analyzed. Fourteen of 32 paired samples from the NNRTI group and 9 of 17 paired samples from the control group had HTA changes (P>.10). There was no correlation between HTA change and sampling time interval, baseline virus load, change in virus load, or development of NNRTI resistance. Thus, we found no significant correlation of NNRTI therapy with changes in
env
HTA patterns, suggesting that these treatments had little short-term impact on HIV-1 quasi-species diversity.
...
PMID:Analysis of env sequence evolution in human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients receiving therapy with nonnucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors. 1110 43
To assess the molecular epidemiology of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), a screening method was developed for identification of non-B subtypes from sequence data obtained for resistance testing. The method is based on the evaluation of the percentage of divergence of a given sequence from the reference B subtype HXB2. Analysis of 1720 reverse-
transcriptase
(RT) and 1824 protease sequences stored in a database allowed for the determination of a threshold level of divergence from HXB2 above which a non-B subtype could be unambiguously characterized regardless of the pattern of resistance mutations (>8.6% for RT; >10.8% for protease). This conclusion was validated by phylogenetic analysis of RT, protease, and
env
genes. Overall, 72 (4.2%) and 73 (4.0%) non-B sequences were identified in the RT and protease coding regions, respectively. This method allows for the rapid detection of non-B subtypes among retrospective, recent, and future RT and/or protease sequence databases.
...
PMID:Use of drug resistance sequence data for the systematic detection of non-B human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) subtypes: how to create a sentinel site for monitoring the genetic diversity of HIV-1 at a country scale. 1129 61
Only some twenty years has passed since the first discovery of severe immunodeficiency among previously healthy homosexual men through the discovery of the causing virus and till the status today where the knowledge on the HIV virus and the pathogenic mechanisms induced by the virus are extensive, though still incomplete. Furthermore, steadily better treatments have been introduced at a paste that is probably without precedents. These processes have been fuelled by various molecular biological methods. The abilities to quantify viremia and to sequence virus and hence describe the evolution of the virus represent valuable tools for understanding the pathogenic processes. The current thesis describes some of the findings obtained. While it was initially thought that the virological profile mimicked the clinical with an acute infection followed for years by clinical latency and only after on average ten years signs of severe immunodeficiency, this understanding has been revised. There is no virological latency. The viral replication is on going throughout the infection. However, the virological profile does resemble the clinical. Viremia is high shortly after infection; hereafter declines, and stabilises around what has been termed the viral set point. This level of viremia is predictive of the clinical course of the infection. We have shown that the viremic levels, measured both as HIV RNA load and proviral DNA load, early in infection carry significant information about the course of the infection. It is; however, not only early viral loads that carry prognostic information, also viral load during late-stage infection is clinically informative. Viral load measurements have evolved as the major tool for monitoring the efficacy of antiretroviral therapy. HIV RNA has been shown to be a good surrogate marker for the clinical efficacy of antiretroviral treatment. How to use the measurements most optimally has however not been fully delineated. Various methods for describing virological response might yield different results, and it is recommended that the pros and cons of the various methods be investigated. In a cohort of patients who had obtained good virological suppression on antiretroviral therapy followed prospectively for two years we found that only few patients experienced high-grade viremia. Furthermore, baseline HIV DNA differed between the patients with various longitudinal HIV RNA profiles. The patients with the most pronounced HIV RNA suppression had lowest proviral load at baseline, with a clear gradient across the groups. The interplay between proviral load and treatment response deserves further investigations. Resistance can develop against all the available antiretrovirals. The high turnover rate of HIV along with the error-prone reverse transcriptase leads to the possibility of steady accumulation of resistance mutations if the viremic suppression is incomplete. While the interplay between viremia and resistance development is clear-cut for some antiretrovirals i.e. Lamivudine, the pattern is more complex for i.e. Zidovudine. With the availability of assays for resistances testing the knowledge on this issue has been ever evolving. How to use resistance testing in the clinical monitoring of patients remains to be clarified. Resistance testing can aid in the process of choosing salvage therapy for patients experiencing virological failure. Whether resistance testing will be of clinical benefit in other situations remains to be determined. Investigation of the viral sequences and evolution herein has not only been used for resistance analyses, but also for tracing the spread of the infection. HIV-1 exists in many subtypes, with various geographic distributions. Hence subtype analyses have been used to investigate the introduction and spread of the HIV infection into many countries. Phylogenetic analyses have also been used to investigate nosocomial transmission events. We used analyses of
env
and gag sequences to trace a case of nosocomial infection at the Department of Infectious Diseases, Rigshospitalet, Denmark. The study underlines the importance of steady awareness of the infection control precautions and possible breaks herein. The usefulness of this type of analyses was confirmed. In the early years of the AIDS epidemic various replicative patterns were described. Virus obtained from patients with late-stage infection often had virus that could induce syncytium formation (SI) when cultured, while virus obtained from patients in the early stages of infection did not have this ability. A correlation between the SI ability and the ability to yield high virus titres rapidly as well as the ability to establish infection in certain cell lines was found. Patients infected with SI virus experience more rapid clinical deterioration. We found that patients harbouring SI virus have HIV RNA loads no different from patients harbouring NSI virus. This is in line with the findings of other groups. Though patients harbouring SI virus had a more rapid development of resistance when treated with nucleoside reserve
transcriptase
inhibitor (NRTI's) monotherapy, this was not the case when treated with highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). HAART is today considered the treatment modality of choice; both for established HIV-infection and in cases where post exposure prophylaxis (PEP) is given in order to prevent establishment of infection after exposure. In a case of transfusion of HIV-contaminated though HIV antibody negative blood the recipient was treated with HAART. As the risk of infection is close to 100% under these circumstances the fact that the recipient remained uninfected is probably attributable to the prompt initiation and thorough maintenance of PEP. PEP is recommended to health care workers after percutaneous HIV exposure as well as after sexual exposure. Even with NRTI monotherapy PEP has been shown to be efficacious. While the explanation for the dichotomy (SI vs. NSI) was for many years unresolved, it is now known that this is due to the requirements of the virus for different co-receptors for cell entry. SI virus uses mainly CXCR4 while NSI virus uses CCR5. Being heterozygous for a 32 basepair deletion in the gene encoding CCR5 leads to slower disease progression. We have shown that heterozygotes have lower HIV RNA levels in the early years of the infection, possibly explaining the clinical advantage of having the deletion. HIV replicates in activated cells, and there is an intriguing interplay between HIV replication and immune activation. HIV-infected patients have elevated levels of immunoglobulins. HIV induces polygonal immunoglobulin production. We found that patients experiencing good virological suppression of HAART had lower IgA levels than patients with less complete viral suppression. Whether IgA can be used as a marker for imminent viral break-through remains to be determined. The full understanding of the interplay between immune activation and HIV replication awaits further studies. The finding of increased viremia in conjunction with acute bacterial or viral infection led to concerns about the safety of vaccinating HIV-infected patients against influenza and pneumococcal infection. We found no difference in HIV RNA levels measured before and median 42 days after anti-pneumococcal vaccination. This is in line with many other studies showing either no or only transient increases in viremia. In conclusion, the knowledge on HIV virology has expanded tremendously. This has led to significant improvements in treatments in the Western World leading to declines in HIV morbidity and mortality. The ability to quantify viral load and to perform sequence analyses represent valuable tools both for understanding the pathogenic actions of the virus and for the clinical monitoring of HIV-infected patients. The optimal usage of these tools in the clinical setting, however, still remains to be defined. The progresses obtained have unfortunately been restricted to the Western World and the calamities of HIV is spreading and worsening in the Developing World. The progress in the development of a vaccine has been disappointing and it is urgently necessary that the progresses obtained within the fields of prevention and treatment are translated into useful strategies in the parts of the world mostly affected by the HIV pandemic.
...
PMID:Molecular biological assessment methods and understanding the course of the HIV infection. 1462 50
Retroviruses-derived elements in the human genome constitute 90% of non-coding mobile sequences. Reverse
transcriptase
(RT) plays an essential role in their transposition as do long terminal repeats (LTRs), which contain promotors, enhancers, and regulatory sequences. Some retroelements (pseudogens and retrogenes, e.g. SINE) are non-autonomic and do not possess their own RT. These elements are dependent on autonomic elements (retroposons, e.g. LINE, retrotransposons, exo- and endogenous retroviruses). The genome of retroviruses is composed of gag, pol, and
env
genes flanked by long terminal repeats. Endogenous retroviruses are probably the remnants of ancient germ cell infection by exogenous retroviruses and are transmissible to the next generation in a Mendelian way. Most of them are defective (because of mutation accumulation), but some are still active and their expression is regulated by different factors (UV radiation, inflammatory cytokines, steroid hormones, and exogenous virus products). Retroelements as well as their gene products exert influence on the organism's functions. They influence the plasticity and evolution of genomes, are a source of promotors and regulatory sequences, but they also supply additional signals of transcription initiation, mRNA splicing, and STOP codons. One of the positive aspects of human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) is the participation of their products in normal syncytiotrophoblast formation. They also block exogenous retrovirus replication by receptor interference or antisense mRNA. Their presence is considered to be connected with a number of autoimmunological diseases (multiple sclerosis, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, systemic lupus erythematosus), cancer, or even psychiatric disorders (schizophrenia). There are also other problems connected with the potential role of ERVs in genomic therapy (with retroviruses vectors) and transplantology (xenotransplantation).
...
PMID:[Retroviruses-derived sequences in the human genome. Human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs)]. 1719 6
We report a case (IC) of multidrug-resistant (MDR) HIV-1 infection in which the identification of the source patient (S) was supported by phylogenetic analysis of the pol gene and by the similarity of
env
sequences. HIV isolates from IC and S were characterized as non-syncytium viruses: a X4 variant (R(11) E(26)) was identified in both cases according to the V3 loop sequence. The pol mutational profile of IC included multiple protease and reverse-
transcriptase
inhibitor mutations similar to those in S. The lamivudine/tenofovir/tipranavir/ritonavir/enfuvirtide association was effective for IC but not for S.
...
PMID:A multidrug-resistant (MDR) HIV type 1 infection in a homosexual man and identified source patient. 1796 Nov 18
A tissue culture cell line infected with multidrug-resistant (MDR) human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) produced only noninfectious particles because of a lethal mutation in
env
. The defective MDR provirus was rescued by superinfection with either wild-type HIV-1 or a second replication-defective virus lethally mutated in capsid. Drug-resistance phenotyping revealed that the MDR viruses dominated if even single reverse-
transcriptase
inhibitors were present, reflecting linkage of the various drug resistance mutations on a single viral nucleic acid backbone. These results are most likely attributable to recombination during second rounds of infection and suggest that defective HIV-1 variants may nonetheless constitute part of the HIV-1 reservoir.
...
PMID:Multidrug-resistant variants of HIV type 1 (HIV-1) can exist in cells as defective quasispecies and be rescued by superinfection with other defective HIV-1 variants. 1975 98
Retroviruses express Gag and Pol proteins by translation of unspliced genome-length viral RNA. For some retroviruses, transport of unspliced viral RNA to the cytoplasm is mediated by small regulatory proteins such as human immunodeficiency virus Rev, while other retroviruses contain constitutive transport elements in their RNAs that allow transport without splicing. In this study, we found that the betaretrovirus Jaagsiekte sheep retrovirus (JSRV) encodes within the
env
gene a trans-acting factor (Rej) necessary for the synthesis of Gag protein from unspliced viral RNA. Deletion of
env
sequences from a JSRV proviral expression plasmid (pTN3) abolished its ability to produce Gag polyprotein in transfected 293T cells, and Gag synthesis could be restored by cotransfection of an
env
expression plasmid (DeltaGP). Deletion analysis localized the complementing activity (Rej) to the putative Env signal peptide, and a signal peptide expression construct showed Rej activity. Two other betaretroviruses, mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) and human endogenous retrovirus type K, encode analogous factors (Rem and Rec, respectively) that are encoded from doubly spliced
env
mRNAs. Reverse
transcriptase
-PCR cloning and sequencing identified alternate internal splicing events in the 5' end of JSRV
env
that could signify analogous doubly spliced Rej mRNAs, and cDNA clones expressing two of them also showed Rej activity. The predicted Rej proteins contain motifs similar to those found in MMTV Rem and other analogous retroviral regulatory proteins. Interestingly, in most cell lines, JSRV expression plasmids with Rej deleted showed normal transport of unspliced JSRV RNA to the cytoplasm; however, in 293T cells Rej modestly enhanced export of unspliced viral RNA (2.8-fold). Metabolic labeling experiments with [(35)S]methionine indicated that JSRV Rej is required for the synthesis of viral Gag polyprotein. Thus, in most cell lines, the predominant function of Rej is to facilitate translation of unspliced viral mRNA.
...
PMID:Jaagsiekte sheep retrovirus encodes a regulatory factor, Rej, required for synthesis of Gag protein. 1977 24
Porcine endogenous retrovirus (PERV) varies between pig breeds. Screening and analysis of PERV in putative pig breeds may provide basic parameters to evaluate the biological safety of xenotransplantation from pigs to humans. In this study, PERV was investigated among the conservation population of the Ningxiang pig. The result revealed that the genotype of PERV distribution was subtype A, 100%; subtype B, 100%; and subtype C, 100%. The
env
sequences of PERV-A and -B showed 11 clones detected by KpnI and MboI digestion, indicating that there existed multiple variants of PERV-A and -B in the Ningxiang pig. Reverse
transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction results showed that PERV had transcriptional activity in these individuals. In addition, PERV A/C recombinant was detected in most individuals of Ningxiang pig. Because PERV A/C recombinants increase the potential infectious risk, the breed may not be a proper donor for xenotransplantation.
...
PMID:Investigation of porcine endogenous retrovirus in the conservation population of Ningxiang pig. 2000 5
Long-terminal repeat (LTR) retrotransposons typically contain gag, pol, or gag-pol, and in some case
env
genes. In this work, we used data mining of the Botrytis cinerea genomic sequence and a molecular approach to identify Boty-like LTR retrotransposons in B. cinerea containing an antisense gene (brtn) between pol and the 3'-LTR. Reverse
transcriptase
PCR (RT-PCR) revealed that some brtn-like genes could be expressed, at least in B. cinerea T4. We conducted BLAST comparisons and conserved-domain analysis, but the function of putative BRTN is presently unknown. Boty-like LTR retrotransposons in Sclerotinia sclerotiorum, called ScscLRET and containing brtn homologs at positions similar to brtn, were detected by homology searches and data mining of the S. sclerotiorum 1980 genomic sequence. Thus, this study demonstrated that some fungal LTR retrotransposons contain additional antisense genes.
...
PMID:Boty-like retrotransposons in the filamentous fungus Botrytis cinerea contain the additional antisense gene brtn. 2180 3
The negative-sense asp open reading frame (ORF) positioned opposite to the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)
env
gene encodes the 189 amino acid, membrane-associated ASP protein. Negative-sense transcription, regulated by long terminal repeat sequences, has been observed early in HIV-1 infection in vitro. All subtypes of HIV-1 were scanned to detect the negative-sense asp ORF and to identify potential regulatory sequences. A series of highly conserved upstream short open reading frames (sORFs) was identified. This potential control region from HIV-1(NL4-3), containing six sORFs, was cloned upstream of the reporter gene EGFP. Expression by transfection of HEK293 cells indicated that the introduction of this sORF region inhibits EGFP reporter expression; analysis of transcripts revealed no significant changes in levels of EGFP mRNA. Reverse
transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction analysis (RT-PCR) further demonstrated that the upstream sORF region undergoes alternative splicing in vitro. The most abundant product is spliced to remove sORFs I to V, leaving only the in-frame sORF VI upstream of asp. Sequence analysis revealed the presence of typical splice donor- and acceptor-site motifs. Mutation of the highly conserved splice donor and acceptor sites modulates, but does not fully relieve, inhibition of EGFP production. The strong conservation of asp and its sORFs across all HIV-1 subtypes suggests that the asp gene product may have a role in the pathogenesis of HIV-1. Alternative splicing of the upstream sORF region provides a potential mechanism for controlling expression of the asp gene.
...
PMID:Potential control of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 asp expression by alternative splicing in the upstream untranslated region. 2245 94
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