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Query: EC:2.7.7.49 (
reverse transcriptase
)
31,746
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
One of the defining characteristics of
herpes simplex
virus type 1 (HSV-1) infection is the ability of the virus to establish a lifelong latent state in neurons. We previously demonstrated (R. Ramakrishnan, A.J. Fink, G. Jiang, P. Desai, J. C. Glorioso, and M. Levine, J. Virol. 68:1864-1873, 1994) by in situ PCR that many more neurons contain viral genomes than are detected by in situ hybridization for HSV latency-associated transcripts (LATs). To determine whether all cells which contain genomes express LATs, we examined trigeminal ganglia for LATs 1 and 8 weeks after corneal scarification with ribonucleotide reductase-deficient HSV-1 by in situ
reverse transcriptase
PCR. The number of LAT-positive cells detected by in situ
reverse transcriptase
was substantially greater than the number of cells positive by in situ hybridization and appeared to be similar to the number of cells containing HSV genomes by in situ PCR and the number of ganglionic neurons that project to the cornea as detected by retrograde labeling with Fluorogold. These results demonstrate LAT expression in many neurons containing HSV-1 genomes.
...
PMID:Detection of herpes simplex virus type 1 latency-associated transcript expression in trigeminal ganglia by in situ reverse transcriptase PCR. 870 93
A series of pyridobenzothiodiazepindioxides such as the 11-ethyl-6,8,9-trimethyl-6,11-dihydro-pyrido[2,3-f] [2,1,5]benzothiodiazepine-5,5-dioxide and arylpiridodiazepines such as the 6,7-dihydro-7-methyl-12-ethyl-pyrido[2,3-b] pyrido(2',3'-4,5]furo[2,3-f][1,4]diazepin-6(12H)-thio and the 6,7-dihydro-7-methyl-12-ethyl-pyrido[2,3-b]pyrido- [2,3-4,5]thieno[2,3-f][1,4] diazepin-6(12H)-thione were found to inhibit human immunodeficiency virus type 1 [HIV-1(IIIB)] replication at a concentration of 0.003-0.04 microM without being cytotoxic at a 3,000- to 15,000-fold higher concentration. These compounds proved effective against a variety of HIV-1 strains, including those that are resistant to 3'-azido-3' deoxythymidine (AZT), but not against HIV-2, simian immunodeficiency virus or
herpes simplex
virus. An HIV-1 strain containing the 188 Tyr-->His mutation in the
reverse transcriptase
displayed severely reduced sensitivity to the compounds. The specificity of these compounds is due to an interaction with the reverse transcription process. The 6,7-dihydro-7-methyl-12-ethyl-pyrido[2,3-b]pyrido [2,3-4,5]thieno[2,3-f][1,4]diazepin-6(12H)-thione (MEN 10979) enhanced the anti-HIV-1 activity of AZT and dideoxyinosine (ddI) in a synergistic manner. The new arylpyrido-diazepine and -thiodiazepine derivatives appear to be drug candidates for the treatment of HIV-1 infection.
...
PMID:New arylpyrido-diazepine and -thiodiazepine derivatives are potent and highly selective HIV-1 inhibitors targeted at the reverse transcriptase. 878 3
Amplification of viral nucleic acids from the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) has considerably improved the diagnosis of several acute, subacute and chronic viral infections of the nervous system. In
herpes simplex
virus (HSV) encephalitis (HSE) the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) has become the method of choice for the rapid, non invasive diagnosis. Other herpes virus associated diseases which can now be reliably diagnosed are encephalitis, ventriculoencephalitis, polymyeloradiculitis, myelitis and an inflammatory polyradiculoneuropathy caused by cytomegalovirus (CMV), HSV, varicella-zoster virus (VZV) or Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), EBV associated primary B-cell-lymphoma of the brain, acute aseptic meningitis in young adults allied with VZV, and meningoencephalitis with recurrent seizures due to human herpes virus type 6 (HHV-6). In AIDS patients, PCR has helped to differentiate lesions either due to the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) itself or to opportunistic infections such as progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) caused by JC virus (JCV) or CMV related complications. HIV can be detected early in the course of infection in the CSF and the amount of proviral DNA in CSF cells seems to be correlated with the severity and/or progression of neurological signs and symptoms. Acute epidemic aseptic meningitis caused by enterovirus infections can now be reliably diagnosed and typed by
reverse transcriptase
PCR (RT-PCR). Meningitis cases caused by vaccination with the Jeryl Lynn and Urabe vaccine strain of mumps virus have been identified using RT-PCR and sequencing of the amplified products (amplicon).
...
PMID:Clinical implications of nucleic acid amplification methods for the diagnosis of viral infections of the nervous system. 879 10
The deoxyguanosine analog penciclovir (PCV; 9-[4-hydroxy-3-hydroxymethyl-but-1-yl]guanine), has shown potent antiviral activity against herpes viruses and hepadnaviruses. Efficacy against chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection has been demonstrated in an animal model and in recent clinical trials of famciclovir, the oral form of PCV. The antiviral activity of PCV is believed to be dependent on the intracellular formation of PCV-triphosphate (PCV-TP) which is presumed to inhibit HBV replication by interfering with viral DNA polymerase activity. The (S)-enantiomer is preferentially formed in herpes virus-infected cells, and is the more active against the
herpes simplex
virus; however, little is known about the biochemical mechanisms of PCV phosphorylation or of interference with viral replication in HBV-infected cells. Here, we report that in contrast with
herpes simplex
virus, the (R)-enantiomer of PCV-TP is a more potent inhibitor of HBV DNA polymerase-
reverse transcriptase
(pol-RT) in vitro than the (S)-enantiomer. In assays for HBV DNA pol-RT activity, in which purified viral core particles were the enzyme source, the IC50s for (R)- and (S)-enantiomers of PCV-TP were 2.5 micromol/L and 11 micromol/L, respectively. The estimated Kis for (R)- and (S)- PCV-TP were approximately 0.03 micromol/L and approximately .04 micromol/L, respectively, about 3-fold lower than the Km for deoxyguanosine triphosphate (dGTP) in the same system. In addition, we report that PCV metabolism is similar in both control (HepG2) and in HBV-transfected (2.2.15) hepatoblastoma cells in vitro, indicating that cellular enzyme(s) catalyze PCV phosphorylation. Peak PCV-TP concentrations of about .4 micromol/L were reached in both cell types in less than 12 hours, and intracellular PCV-TP was exceptionally stable with a half-life of about 18 hours. These observations provide a mechanistic basis for the potent activity of PCV against HBV.
...
PMID:Inhibition of hepatitis B virus DNA polymerase by enantiomers of penciclovir triphosphate and metabolic basis for selective inhibition of HBV replication by penciclovir. 890 66
The synthesis as well as the antimicrobial and antiviral activities of new (N-heteroaryl)arylmethanamines and their Schiff bases are reported. None of the tested compounds shown activity against
Herpes simplex
virus type 2 and against Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria. Weak or moderate activity on poliovirus Sabin type 1, on
reverse transcriptase
and against Cryptococcus neoformans was shown by some of the tested compounds. Viceversa several synthesized compounds exhibited a moderate or good activity against strains of Candida albicans, while only some of the tested compounds were found moderately active against strains of Candida sp. Instead numerous new compounds 3 or 4 were active as control against isolates of plant pathogenic fungi. The obtained results are discussed on the basis of structure-activity relationships.
...
PMID:Synthesis and microbiological evaluations of (N-heteroaryl) arylmethanamines and their Schiff bases. 898 54
For many years, acyclovir has been used to treat
herpes simplex
and varicella zoster infections in adults and children, although new drugs with improved bioavailability and dosage regimens (ie, famciclovir, valaciclovir) are replacing it for the outpatient management of these conditions in adults. Acyclovir remains the treatment of choice for severe herpes infections in both immunocompetent and immunosuppressed patients. Data on the newer antiherpes drugs in children are not available. Treatment of severe cytomegalovirus infections with ganciclovir and foscarnet is difficult because of toxicity; whether improved formulations of these drugs or newer agents prove clinically useful remains to be seen. For the most part, treatment of other herpesviruses is not indicated. The major advance in pediatric HIV treatment is the reduction in vertical transmission with peripartum zidovudine, although the optimal use of antiretrovirals in this situation remains to be determined. The nucleoside analogues zidovudine, zalcitabine, didanosine, and stavudine have been assessed in HIV-infected children; pediatric data about appropriate combinations (eg, with the protease inhibitors and the nonnucleoside
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors) and dosage regimens lag well behind the adult literature. The effectiveness of ribavirin in respiratory syncytial virus disease is uncertain. Preliminary data suggest that interferons may have a role in the management of chronic hepatitis B and C.
...
PMID:Advances in antiviral therapy. 908 51
Direct delivery of the
herpes simplex
virus thymidine kinase (HSVtk) gene, in combination with the prodrug ganciclovir (GC), has been used for the treatment of localised, inoperable tumours. Several groups have shown that when rodent tumours are ablated in vivo with suicide genes, anti-tumour immunity can also be generated. Hence, this approach may also be useful in treating disseminated disease. Here we have studied the mechanisms associated with this anti-tumour immunity. In B16 HSVtk+ tumours being killed in vivo with GC treatment, we observed the induction of a pronounced intratumoural infiltrate of macrophages, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. In addition, using
reverse transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction, expression of interleukin (IL)-2, IL-12, interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) but not IL-4, IL-6 or IL-10, was observed, a profile of cytokine expression which resembles that of a Th1 immune response. To complement these findings, we also investigated the mechanisms by which expression of HSVtk leads to cell death. Our data show that B16/HSVtk+ cells die predominantly by necrosis, rather than apoptosis, on exposure to GC, a process which may be associated with the generation of anti-tumour inflammatory responses. From these data we propose a model for the induction of anti-tumour immunity using suicide genes and discuss the development of improved vectors for gene therapy to augment these effects in vivo.
...
PMID:Generation of an anti-tumour immune response in a non-immunogenic tumour: HSVtk killing in vivo stimulates a mononuclear cell infiltrate and a Th1-like profile of intratumoural cytokine expression. 913 53
Latent infections of neurons by
herpes simplex
virus form reservoirs of recurrent viral infections that resist cure. In latently infected neurons, viral gene expression is severely repressed; only the latency-associated transcripts (LATs) are expressed abundantly. Using sensitive
reverse transcriptase
PCR assays, we analyzed the effects of a deletion mutation in the LAT locus on viral gene expression in latently infected mouse trigeminal ganglia. The deletion mutation, which reduced expression of the major LATs 10(5)-fold, resulted in a approximately 5-fold increase in accumulation of transcripts from the immediate-early gene encoding ICP4, an essential transactivator of viral gene expression. The LAT deletion also resulted in a >10-fold increase in the accumulation of transcripts from the early gene encoding thymidine kinase, whose expression during productive infection stringently depends on ICP4, and positively affected the correlation of the levels of these transcripts with the levels of ICP4 transcripts. We also detected transcripts antisense to ICP4 RNA, which were in substantial excess to ICP4 transcripts in ganglia latently infected with wild-type virus. In contrast to its effects on productive-cycle transcripts, the LAT deletion reduced the accumulation of these antisense transcripts approximately 15-fold. Thus, a viral function associated with the LAT locus represses the accumulation of transcripts from at least two productive-cycle genes in latently infected mouse ganglia. We discuss possible mechanisms and consequences of this repression.
...
PMID:A viral function represses accumulation of transcripts from productive-cycle genes in mouse ganglia latently infected with herpes simplex virus. 922 77
We have developed murine leukemia virus (MLV)-based self-inactivating and self-activating vectors to show that the previously demonstrated high-frequency direct repeat deletions are not unique to spleen necrosis virus (SNV) or the neomycin drug resistance gene. Retroviral vectors pKD-HTTK and pKD-HTpTK containing direct repeats composed of segments of the
herpes simplex
virus type 1 thymidine kinase (HTK) gene were constructed; in pKD-HTpTK, the direct repeat flanked the MLV packaging signal. The generation of hypoxanthine-aminopterin-thymidine-resistant colonies after one cycle of retroviral replication demonstrated functional reconstitution of the HTK gene. Quantitative Southern analysis indicated that direct repeat deletions occurred in 57 and 91% of the KD-HTTK and KD-HTpTK proviruses, respectively. These results demonstrate that (i) deletion of direct repeats occurs at similar high frequencies in SNV and MLV vectors, (ii) MLV psi can be efficiently deleted by using direct repeats, (iii) suicide genes can be functionally reconstituted during reverse transcription, and (iv) the psi region may be a hot spot for
reverse transcriptase
template switching events.
...
PMID:Psi- vectors: murine leukemia virus-based self-inactivating and self-activating retroviral vectors. 922 21
Many antiviral drugs must be metabolized to their active form by cellular enzymes. Their antiviral activity may therefore be limited by an inefficient metabolism, leading to low intracellular concentration of the active form or to the accumulation of toxic intermediate metabolites. Gene transfer might be used to overcome such limitations by transducing a gene able to increase intracellular drug metabolism. To prove such a concept, we chose the well-studied paradigm of zidovudine (AZT) metabolism and anti-HIV activity. AZT-triphosphate is the active form of AZT, acting through inhibition of HIV reverse transcription. In human cells, the rate-limiting step for AZT phosphorylation is catalyzed by the thymidylate kinase. We thus tested the capacity of
herpes simplex
virus type 1 thymidine kinase, which possesses a thymidylate kinase activity, to improve AZT metabolism and antiviral activity. Our results show enhanced AZT phosphorylation in HSV-1 TK-expressing lymphoid and monoblastoid cells, which correlated with significantly improved antiviral activity against different strains of HIV-1. The antiviral activity of Foscarnet, another
reverse transcriptase
inhibitor that does not require phosphorylation, remained unchanged. These results suggest that gene transfer might be envisioned for genetic pharmacomodulation of antiviral drugs.
...
PMID:Use of herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase to improve the antiviral activity of zidovudine. 928 20
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