Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

The nucleoside analog 2',3'-dideoxycytidine (ddC) is a potent inhibitor of the reverse transcriptase of human immunodeficiency virus and a DNA chain terminator. In clinical trials in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, ddC treatment has been associated with a dose-limiting and dose-dependent, painful, sensorimotor peripheral neuropathy. In search of an animal model for ddC-induced neurotoxicity we studied 36 New Zealand White rabbits (3 males/3 females/group) given 0, 10, 50, 100, 150, or 250 mg/kg/day of ddC, by oral intubation, for 13 or 18 weeks. Rabbits in the 150 and 250 mg/kg/day groups were sacrificed at 13 weeks because of hematopoietic toxicity. After 16 weeks, rabbits in the 50 and 100 mg/kg/day groups showed hindlimb paresis and/or gait abnormalities. Nerve conduction velocities and amplitudes in the 100 mg/kg/day rabbits were reduced by 30 to 50%. The most prominent pathologic changes in peripheral nerve and ventral roots of ddC-treated rabbits were (a) myelin splitting and intramyelinic edema, (b) demyelination and remyelination of axons, and (c) axonal loss. Treatment-related histologic lesions were not observed in spinal cord, brain, or retina. The pathology in these ddC-treated rabbits is consistent with a peripheral myelinopathy and axonopathy. This represents the first clinical, electrophysiologic, and pathologic description of an animal model of a peripheral neuropathy induced by a nucleoside analog.
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PMID:Peripheral neuropathy induced by 2',3'-dideoxycytidine. A rabbit model of 2',3'-dideoxycytidine neurotoxicity. 130 30

The nucleoside analogue, 2',3'-dideoxycytidine (ddC), an inhibitor of human immunodeficiency virus reverse transcriptase, mediates virologic and immunologic improvements in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome patients. However, in clinical studies ddC treatment is associated with a dose-limiting peripheral neuropathy. The purpose of this study was to characterize the ultrastructural features of the peripheral neuropathy induced in rabbits. Rabbits received 0, 10, 50, or 100 mg/kg/day of ddC for 18 weeks. A prominent ultrastructural change induced by ddC in sciatic nerve and ventral root was separation of myelin lamellae at the intraperiod line and vacuolation and fragmentation of myelin sheaths. Many demyelinated and remyelinated axons were observed. Although pathologic alterations in Schwann cells were evident by the presence of lipid droplets and myelin figures, their formation was not considered a primary event. Axons containing abnormal cytoplasmic components were occasionally observed. Other changes included redundance of Schwann cell basal lamina and the presence of lipid droplets and/or myelin figures within endoneurial fibroblasts and macrophages. The results of this study indicate that ddC induces a myelinopathy in rabbits characterized by myelin splitting and intramyelinic edema and an axonopathy that may be secondary to the myelin changes.
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PMID:Ultrastructure of peripheral neuropathy induced in rabbits by 2',3'-dideoxycytidine. 130 31

To develop the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for the detection of simian T-lymphotropic virus type I (STLV-I) infection, cell lines or peripheral-blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from 2 non-human primate species [African green monkeys (AGM), Cercopithecus aethiops; baboon, Papio cynocephalus] were evaluated for their STLV-I status using oligonucleotide primer pairs and probes specific for the tax and pol gene regions of the closely related human T-lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I). These PCR results were compared with serologic (Western blot assay) and viral culture (p24-antigen capture assay) data. PCR products for both gene regions were detected in established baboon, Japanese macaque and rhesus macaque STLV-I-producing cell lines. STLV-I tax and pol products were also detected in PBMC from 4 of 4 infected AGM and 4 of 4 infected baboons, each of which were also Western-blot-positive and p24-antigen-capture-positive. Of the remaining AGM (n = 7) and baboon (n = 1) which were PCR-negative, each was also Western-blot-negative and p24-antigen-capture-negative. Two seronegative and virus-culture-negative AGM were classified as PCR indeterminate with weak reactivity using tax primers. These primer pairs failed to amplify DNA from uninfected human PBMC, an uninfected human lymphoid cell line, a simian immunodeficiency virus macaque (SIVmac251)-infected cell line and a simian-retrovirus-type-D(SRV-D)-infected cell line. HTLV-II-pol-specific primer pairs failed to amplify DNA from STLV-I-infected cell lines and PBMC from STLV-I-infected monkeys. Further, HTLV-I pol and tax primer pairs successfully amplified RNA from HTLV-I- and STLV-I-infected cell lines by reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR. We have demonstrated excellent specificity in the detection of STLV-I by PCR using these HTLV-I-derived primers and probes. Additionally, our data suggest that the tax and pol gene regions are conserved between HTLV-I and STLV-I strains found among these diverse species of non-human primates.
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PMID:Detection of simian T-lymphotropic virus type I using the polymerase chain reaction. 131 66

Bovine immunodeficiency-like virus (BIV) is a recently identified lentivirus that infects cattle. The virus has structural and genetic similarities to human HIV. The present study demonstrates that BIV can be activated by bovine herpesvirus type 1 (BHV-1), a pathogen frequently associated with cattle diseases. Activation of BIV expression can be detected as increased BIV reverse transcriptase activity, increased in the number of syncytia induced by BIV, and increased in the steady state level of BIV-specific RNA upon BHV-1 super-infection. Additional transactivation studies using the BIV-LTR (long terminal repeat) were conducted. The BIV-LTR was linked to the chloramphenicol acetyl transferase gene (CAT) and transfected into bovine cell cultures in order to quantitate the levels of BIV-LTR expression. When the transfected cells were infected by BHV-1, there was an increase in CAT expression, indicating transactivation of the BIV-LTR by BHV-1. Most of the transactivation activities were abolished with an LTR construct that has deleted the NF-kappa B-like sequence located in the U3 region of the LTR. In order to further demonstrate that activation of the BIV-LTR involves factors that may bind to the LTR sequences, gel retardation assays were carried out using the BIV-LTR U3 region as probe. Our results showed that BHV-1 infection resulted in an induction of factor(s) that binds to the NF-kappa B-like sequence on the BIV-LTR. This suggests that transactivation of BIV by BHV-1 may be mediated by a bovine NF-kappa B-like protein that binds to the target sequence in the BIV promoter region.
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PMID:Activation of bovine immunodeficiency-like virus expression by bovine herpesvirus type 1. 131 80

To investigate whether human immunodeficiency virus type 1 pol gene mutations are selected during prolonged 2',3'-dideoxycytidine (ddC) therapy, we used the polymerase chain reaction to amplify a portion of the reverse transcriptase segment of the pol gene from the peripheral blood mononuclear cell DNA of a patient with AIDS before and after an 80-week course of ddC therapy. The consensus sequence from the second sample contained a unique double mutation (ACT to GAT) in the codon for reverse transcriptase amino acid 69, causing substitution of aspartic acid (Asp) for the wild-type threonine (Thr). A mutation (ACA to ATA) also occurred in the codon for position 165, causing substitution of isoleucine (Ile) for Thr. The GAT (Asp) codon was introduced into the pol gene of a molecular clone of human immunodeficiency virus via site-directed mutagenesis. Following transfection, mutant and wild-type viruses were tested for susceptibility to ddC by a plaque reduction assay. The mutant virus was fivefold less susceptible to ddC than the wild type; cross-resistance to 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine or 2'3'-dideoxyinosine was not found. The Ile-165 mutation did not confer additional ddC resistance. The Asp-69 substitution may have contributed to the generation of resistant virus in this patient.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 pol gene mutations which cause decreased susceptibility to 2',3'-dideoxycytidine. 131 43

An infectious molecular clone of the TM1 strain of feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) was transfected into each of one feline (CRFK), two simian (COS and Vero) and two human (SW480 and HeLa) non-lymphoid cell lines, and virus production was assayed on feline T lymphoblastoid MYA-1 cells by monitoring reverse transcriptase activity. Infectious virus was produced in CRFK, Vero and HeLa cells, but not in COS and SW480 cells. When the basal promoter activity of the FIV long terminal repeat (LTR) was examined in these cell lines by using a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase assay, the activity correlated with the virus production in each cell line. Furthermore, when the activity of the FIV LTR was compared with those of three primate lentivirus LTRs, the highest activity in all the cell lines examined was produced by the LTR of simian immunodeficiency virus from African green monkey (SIVAGM), suggesting that it has a wide expression range. In COS and SW480 cells, the activity of the FIV LTR was much lower than that of the SIVAGM LTR. These results indicate that, whereas the primary block to FIV infection of certain cells may occur at the cell surface, the FIV LTR may also participate in controlling virus replication, as an intracellular mechanism.
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PMID:Production of feline immunodeficiency virus in feline and non-feline non-lymphoid cell lines by transfection of an infectious molecular clone. 131 47

Spliced messages encoded by two distinct strains of feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) were identified. Two of the cDNA clones represented mRNAs with bicistronic capacity. The first coding exon contained a short open reading frame (orf) of unknown function, designated orf 2. After a translational stop, this exon contained the L region of the env orf. The L region resides 5' to the predicted leader sequence of env. The second coding exon contained the H orf, which began 3' to env and extended into the U3 region of the long terminal repeat. The in-frame splicing of the L and H orfs created the FIV rev gene. Site-directed antibodies to the L orf recognized a 23-kDa protein in infected cells. Immunofluorescence studies localized Rev to the nucleoli of infected cells. The Rev-responsive element (RRE) of FIV was initially identified by computer analysis. Three independent isolates of FIV were searched in their entirety for regions with unusual RNA-folding properties. An unusual RNA-folding region was not found at the Su-TM junction but instead was located at the end of env. Minimal-energy foldings of this region revealed a structure that was highly conserved among the three isolates. Transient expression assays demonstrated that both the Rev and RRE components of FIV were necessary for efficient reporter gene expression. Cells stably transfected with rev-deleted proviruses produced virion-associated reverse transcriptase activity only when FIV Rev was supplied in trans. Thus, FIV is dependent on a fully functional Rev protein and an RRE for productive infection.
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PMID:Identification of the Rev transactivation and Rev-responsive elements of feline immunodeficiency virus. 132 7

Feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) has morphological, physical and biochemical characteristics similar to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the cause of AIDS in man. However, it is antigenically and genetically distinct from HIV; an antigenic relatedness with equine infectious anaemia virus has been demonstrated. FIV has been molecularly cloned and sequenced. Diagnostic tests are commercially available and attempts at preparing inactivated, subunit and molecularly engineered vaccines are being made in different laboratories. During FIV infection a transient primary illness can be recognized, with fever, neutropenia and lymphadenopathy. After a long period of clinical normalcy a secondary stage is distinguished with signs of an immunodeficiency-like syndrome. The incubation period for this stage can be as long as 5 years, during which gradual impairment of immune function develops. Many FIV-infected cats are presented for the first time showing vague signs of illness: recurrent fevers, emaciation, lack of appetite, lymphadenopathy, anaemia, leucopenia and behavioural changes. Later, the predominant clinical signs observed are chronic stomatitis/gingivitis, enteritis, upper respiratory tract infections, and infections of the skin. Neoplasias, neurological, immunological and haematological disorder are seen in a smaller proportion. The immunodeficiency-like syndrome is progressive over a period of months to years. Concomitant infection with feline leukaemia virus has been shown to accelerate the progression of disease. In vitro, phenotypic mixing between FIV and an endogenous feline oncovirus (RD114) has been demonstrated which leads to a broadening of the cell spectrum of the lentivirus. Bovine immunodeficiency virus (BIV) has been isolated only once, and all attempts to obtain additional isolates have failed; it has been recovered from the leucocytes of cattle with persistent lymphocytosis, lymphadenopathy, lesions in the central nervous system, progressive weakness and emaciation. As with the feline representative, BIV also was found to possess a lentivirus morphology and to encode a reverse transcriptase with Mg++ preference; it replicates and induces syncytia in a variety of embryonic bovine tissues in vitro. Antigenic analyses have demonstrated a conservation of epitopes between the major core protein of BIV and HIV. The original isolate has been molecularly cloned and sequenced. Besides the three large open reading frames (ORFs) comprising the gag, pol, and env genes common to all replication-competent retroviruses, five additional small ORFs were found. Numerous point mutations and deletions were found, mostly in the env-encoding ORF. These data suggest that, within a single virus isolate, BIV displays extensive genomic variation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Animal immunodeficiency viruses. 133 43

An African lioness from the Zoo of Zurich had to be euthanized because of an inoperable tumor. The serum tested negative for feline leukemia virus (FeLV) p27 antigen by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) but was strongly positive for feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) antibodies by ELISA and Western blot. When her only offspring and mate were tested for FIV, high antibody titers to FIV were also found in their serum. Lymphocytes were prepared from these two lions on different occasions and co-cultivated with specific pathogen free (SPF) cat lymphocytes in the presence of concanavalin A and recombinant human interleukin-2 (IL-2) for 6 weeks. The cell culture supernatants tested negative for Mg(2+)-dependent reverse transcriptase and FIV p24 by a double antibody sandwich ELISA throughout the culture period. Whole blood and buffy coat cells collected from these two lions were transmitted by intraperitoneal injection into two SPF cats. The two cats did not seroconvert for a period of 11 months nor could reverse transcriptase activity and FIV p24 antigen be demonstrated in the supernatant of several lymphocyte cultures. To determine the importance of lentivirus infections in zoo-kept wild felids, 124 serum samples were obtained from African lions, Indian and Siberian tigers, snow leopards, panthers, cheetahs and other wild cats from nine European zoos. In addition, serum samples collected from 12 Asiatic lions originating from Gir forest in the Indian State of Gujarat were included in this study. The sera were tested for antibodies to FIV, FeLV and feline syncytium-forming virus (FeSFV) by ELISA and Western blot using the respective viruses after gradient purification. In addition, some of the sera were also tested for antibodies to equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) and Visna-Maedi virus (VMV). Antibodies to FIV were found in 30/53 (57%) of African lions, one of 18 tigers and one of four panthers. All other sera including those collected from the 12 Asiatic lions were negative for FIV antibodies. Some of the FIV positive lion sera had high antibody titers producing strong bands on Western blot strips even in dilutions of >> 1:1000. The Western blot pattern of the lion sera differed from that of domestic cats in that primarily p24 and to a lesser degree p17 was recognized. Antibodies to FeSFV were found in 14 animals (seven with strong, seven with intermediate, reaction). No correlation was found between FIV and FeSFV infection. Antibodies to FeLV were found in two cheetahs which later turned out to have been vaccinated with Leukocell, a FeLV vaccine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Retrovirus infections in non-domestic felids: serological studies and attempts to isolate a lentivirus. 133 98

The antiviral nucleoside analogue 2',3'-dideoxycytidine (ddC) is a DNA chain terminator and/or inhibitor of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) reverse transcriptase. We evaluated the effects of ddC in 36 New Zealand white rabbits. Three/sex were assigned to a control group and 5 treatment groups (10-250 mg/kg/day) for 13 or 18 weeks. Blood samples were taken 1 week prior to treatment and weekly thereafter to termination with the exception of the 2 highest dose groups, where blood sample collection was terminated at week 13. Selected hematological analytes were measured weekly with the exception of prothrombin time (PT) and activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT). PT and APTT and selected biochemical analytes were measured prior to treatment, at 7 weeks, and after 13 weeks of treatment. All rabbits were necropsied. Giemsa and hematoxylin and eosin sections were prepared from methacrylate-embedded marrow. Hematological effects included decreases in red blood cell count, hemoglobin, hematocrit, and white blood cell count and increases in mean corpuscular volume and red cell distribution width. Platelets, platelet volume, PT, APTT, and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration values were variable or unchanged. Effects were dose-related, most were seen at 1 week, and they persisted to term. Bone marrow histopathologic changes included megalocytosis, erythroid hypoplasia, bizarre erythroid nuclear morphology, nuclear-cytoplasmic asynchrony, and increased mitotic figures. Lymphopenia caused by ddC plateaued at 2 weeks and persisted until termination. Heteropenia (neutropenia) was sporadic. Biochemical values for serum analytes were unchanged by treatment. The principal hematological effect of ddC upon the erythron was characterized as a nonregenerative macrocytic anemia with erythroid hypoplasia and megaloblastic erythropoiesis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Hematological effects of 2',3'-dideoxycytidine in rabbits. 133 36


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