Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.7.7.49 (
reverse transcriptase
)
31,746
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Vpr is a virion-associated protein which facilitates HIV-1 infection of nondividing cells by contributing to the nuclear transport of the preintegration complex (PIC). Vpr was also shown to induce a cell cycle G2 arrest in infected proliferating cells that optimizes HIV-1 long terminal repeat (LTR)-directed gene expression and viral production. However, it is unclear whether this activity is mediated primarily early by virion-associated Vpr or alternatively late during infection when Vpr is de novo expressed. We report here that in the absence of de novo expression, virion-associated Vpr induces a transient G2 arrest that can subsequently lead to cell killing by apoptosis. Interestingly, the induction of both cell cycle G2 arrest and apoptosis by virion-associated Vpr requires viral entry but not viral replication, since
reverse transcriptase
and
protease inhibitor
treatments do not prevent these Vpr effects. These results raise the possibility that in vivo both infectious and noninfectious viruses contribute to the dysfunction and killing of CD4(+) cells. In addition, our results reveal that virion-associated Vpr stimulates viral replication in proliferating cells after establishing a cell cycle G2 arrest by increasing LTR-directed gene expression. Importantly, this Vpr-mediated LTR activation appears to be a requirement for subsequent optimal Tat transactivation. Taken together, these results strongly suggest that in addition to participating in the HIV PIC nuclear transport in nondividing cells, virion-associated Vpr activates HIV-1 LTR-directed gene expression by manipulating the host cell cycle. From this, we conclude that Vpr functions as an immediate-early protein during HIV-1 infection.
...
PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Vpr functions as an immediate-early protein during HIV-1 infection. 1019 6
Molluscum contagiosum (MC), a cutaneous infection caused by a DNA virus belonging to the poxvirus group, affects about 5-10% of patients with HIV disease, often showing extensive, severe lesions, unresponsive to therapy [1]. During the follow-up of three patients with AIDS for MC recalcitrant to therapy, we noted their cutaneous lesions cleared 5-6 months after they had begun Highly Active Anti-Retroviral Therapy (HAART). This therapy includes an HIV
protease inhibitor
(indinavir) and two
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors [2, 3].
...
PMID:Resolution of disseminated molluscum contagiosum with Highly Active Anti-Retroviral Therapy (HAART) in patients with AIDS. 1021 Jul 87
Application of a highly sensitive PCR-based
reverse transcriptase
(RT) assay to the analysis of the infection of CD4+ cell lines with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) demonstrated that virus production can be detected as early as 24 h after infection. Most of the signal at 24 h was due to virus production, as it could be substantially reduced by prior treatment with the RT inhibitor zidovudine. Virus production at 24 and 48 h was unaffected by the
protease inhibitor
indinavir. Infection of unstimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) with a macrophage-tropic HIV-1 isolate yielded increasing virus production for 2-3 weeks, while infection with a T-cell line-tropic isolate yielded only low and sporadic virus production. Productive infection of unstimulated PBMC by the macrophage-tropic virus required functional Gag matrix and Vpr proteins; therefore, the monocyte-derived macrophage is probably the virus-producing cell in these cultures.
...
PMID:Detection of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 after infection of unstimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells. 1021 53
The efficacy of sequential
protease inhibitor
therapy was studied in 16 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) 1-infected persons in whom saquinavir with multiple nucleoside
reverse transcriptase
(RT) inhibitors (NRTI) had failed. Nelfinavir plus two NRTIs (new or continued) resulted in minimal (0.59 log RNA copies/mL) and transient (8 weeks) suppression of plasma HIV RNA levels. Rapid failure was surprisingly associated with baseline presence of protease gene mutation L90M (P=.04) in the absence of D30N and with RT mutations D67N (P<.01), K70R/S (P=.02), and K219Q/W/R/E (P<.01). Ten patients were subsequently switched to indinavir plus nevirapine and 2 NRTIs, resulting in a median 1.62 log reduction in plasma HIV RNA, with 3 patients maintaining 400 copies/mL for 24 weeks. These results suggest that nelfinavir may have limited utility after saquinavir failure, particularly without potent concomitant therapy. Combining an NRTI with a new
protease inhibitor
for rescue may improve response.
...
PMID:Clinical resistance patterns and responses to two sequential protease inhibitor regimens in saquinavir and reverse transcriptase inhibitor-experienced persons. 1022 55
There are 3 groups of drugs available for the treatment of patients with HIV disease. These are the nucleoside
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors ('nucleoside analogues') [zidovudine, didanosine, zalcitabine, lamivudine and abacavir]; the non-nucleoside
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors (nevirapine, delavirdine and efavirenz); and the protease inhibitors (saquinavir, ritonavir, indinavir, nelfinavir and amprenavir). The preferred initial regimen should reduce and maintain plasma HIV RNA below the level of detection. Presently, the regimen of choice consists of 2 nucleoside analogues plus a
protease inhibitor
with high in vivo efficacy. An alternative combination consists of 2 nucleoside analogues plus a non-nucleoside
reverse transcriptase
inhibitor. Drug interactions are one of the major problems associated with these multidrug regimens. Changes in plasma concentrations of the nucleoside analogues are unlikely to be of clinical relevance as drug effect is mainly dependent on the rate and extent of intracellular phosphorylation. Combinations of zidovudine plus stavudine, and probably zalcitabine plus lamivudine, should be avoided as competition for phosphorylating enzymes may occur. The antiviral efficacy of some nucleoside analogues, e.g. stavudine, may be compromised by prior treatment with other nucleosides (e.g. zidovudine). However, these data need to be clarified in further studies. It is unlikely that administration of other antiretrovirals will influence the activity of nucleoside analogues. Protease inhibitors are metabolised by hepatic cytochrome P450 (CYP) 3A4. Combination
protease inhibitor
therapy can result in drug interactions mediated by enzyme inhibition. Ritonavir is the most potent inhibitor, saquinavir the least. The protease inhibitors also interact with the non-nucleoside
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors. Nevirapine and efavirenz induce drug metabolising enzymes and may reduce plasma concentrations of protease inhibitors. A study in healthy volunteers showed that nelfinavir concentrations are increased by combination with efavirenz. Delavirdine inhibits drug metabolising enzymes and increases the plasma concentration of coadministered protease inhibitors. The nucleoside analogues would not be expected to interact with the protease inhibitors. Apart from the ability of didanosine to reduce the area under the concentration-time curve of delavirdine, there are no reports of clinically significant interactions of other antiretrovirals with the non-nucleoside
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors. Triple therapy is the current standard of care for patients with HIV disease. However, studies of quadruple therapy are already under way. Drug interactions are likely to remain one of the major considerations when selecting a therapeutic regimen for patients with HIV.
...
PMID:Pharmacokinetics and potential interactions amongst antiretroviral agents used to treat patients with HIV infection. 1032 Sep 51
The objectives of this study were to provide individual and population-based unit cost estimates of HIV treatment and care by stage of HIV infection for adults in England and estimate the financial impact of the use of combination antiretroviral therapy. Individual unit cost estimates were calculated, based on 1997 activity data, and linked to the number of diagnosed HIV-infected individuals using statutory medical services by clinical stage of HIV infection in England during 1997 to obtain population-based cost estimates; these were compared with 1996 estimates. Most clinical guidelines now recommend the use of 3 antiretroviral agents, but cost estimates for mono and dual therapy were included as baseline estimates. Baseline costs for treating AIDS patients with zidovudine (AZT) monotherapy were estimated at pound sterling 16,830 (95% CI 14,633-18,985) per patient-year which was substantially lower than the 1996 estimate; costs for asymptomatic individuals and people with symptomatic non-AIDS were pound sterling 4450 (95% CI 3521-5612) and pound sterling 7289 (95% CI 6169-8386) per respective patient-year which did not differ substantially from 1996. The total annual population cost estimate for HIV service provision amounted to pound sterling 128 million (95% CI pound sterling 109m to pound sterling 147m), if all patients with HIV disease were treated with AZT monotherapy only. For all eligible patients to be treated with 2 nucleoside
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors (NRTI) (AZT and didanosine (ddI) or zalcitabine (ddC)), cost estimates amounted to pound sterling 161m (95% CI pound sterling 141m to pound sterling 181m), while for triple therapy, annual estimated expenditure amounted to pound sterling 185m (95% CI pound sterling 165m to pound sterling 206m) when a non-nucleoside
reverse transcriptase
inhibitor (NNRTI) (nevirapine) was included or pound sterling 205m (95% CI pound sterling 186m to pound sterling 235m) when a
protease inhibitor
was included. Compared with 1996 population-based cost estimates, the estimates for monotherapy decreased by 14%, by 11% for dual therapy, by 10% for triple therapy which included a NNRTI and by 9% if a
protease inhibitor
was used as part of a triple therapy regimen. Similarly, compared with 1996 estimates, the proportion of total costs attributable to treating asymptomatic individuals increased by 5% and 2-3% for people with symptomatic non-AIDS, while the proportion attributable for treating people with AIDS decreased by 8-9%.
...
PMID:Changing cost of English HIV service provision 1996-1997. NPMS Steering Group. National Prospective Monitoring System. 1041 77
To analyze the emergence and role of the lamivudine (3TC)-selected HIV-1
reverse transcriptase
(RT) M184V mutation under triple therapy, we performed a retrospective study of 40 nucleoside RT inhibitor-pretreated and 16 drug-naive patients who were switched to combined treatment with zidovudine (ZDV) plus 3TC plus a
protease inhibitor
(PI). Plasma viral load and pol genotype were analyzed at baseline and after 24 and 48 weeks of combination therapy. Emergence of the M184V RT mutation at week 48 was detected in 3 of 16 (18.7%) initially drug-naive subjects as opposed to 21 of 40 (52.5%) ZDV-pretreated patients. Multivariate logistic analysis detected HIV-1 RNA load at week 24 as the best predictor of subsequent selection of the M184V mutant (p = .0121). Among ZDV-resistant study subjects at week 24 (n = 17), those with mutant RT M184V codon had a more favorable HIV-1 RNA slope than those with wild-type RT 184M codon (p = .0551). This trend was observed, although in a less evident manner, even in pretreated ZDV-sensitive patients. These findings suggest that development of the 3TC-resistance M184V mutation under triple therapy with 3TC, ZDV, and a PI may have unexpected beneficial effects in vivo in addition to those associated with resensitization of ZDV-resistant virus to ZDV.
...
PMID:Development and significance of the HIV-1 reverse transcriptase M184V mutation during combination therapy with lamivudine, zidovudine, and protease inhibitors. 1042 Dec 43
A therapeutic dilemma arises once HIV-infected patients develop a break-through of HIV-replication under potent antiretroviral therapy. Therefore, we studied whether patients (n = 12) who failed double nucleoside
reverse transcriptase
(NRTI) plus indinavir or ritonavir triple therapy can be rescued when therapy is switched to double
protease inhibitor
(PI) treatment (nelfinavir and hard gel saquinavir) and stavudine. With the rescue regimen HIV-RNA levels initially dropped from 148,571 +/- 45,258 copies/ml to 9,310 +/- 6, 965 copies/ml at week 4 (p = 0.0117). However, virus load subsequently increased to almost baseline levels (131,230 +/- 37,743 copies/ml) at week 12. Likewise, CD4-cell counts could only be stabilized initially (baseline 267 +/- 51; week 4 296 +/- 65 cells/microl), but gradually declined thereafter (216 +/- 34 cells/microl week 12). Before therapy was switched, the viral protease gene from 5 analyzed patients showed 3-5 amino acid substitutions. Moreover, 4 of these patients had one amino acid substitution associated with resistance to nelfinavir. Our data suggest that HIV-infected patients resistant to indinavir or ritonavir and double NRTI combination therapy respond to double PI nelfinavir/saquinavir and D4T rescue therapy only initially but have no sustained benefit.
...
PMID:Failure of double protease inhibitor therapy as a salvage therapy for HIV-infected patients resistant to conventional triple therapy. 1042 64
In order to analyze the impact of protease gene polymorphism on response to regimens containing a
protease inhibitor
, the entire protease coding domain from 58 human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-infected patients who were
protease inhibitor
naive was sequenced before therapy was started. Plasma HIV-1 RNA levels were measured at baseline and at month 3 and month 6 after treatment. All patients were treated with a combination of two
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors and a
protease inhibitor
(saquinavir EOF [n = 28], ritonavir [n = 16], or indinavir [n = 14]). Before treatment, 30 different positions whose codons differed from the subtype B consensus sequence were observed. Major mutations associated with
protease inhibitor
resistance were not observed. No statistical correlation between the number of amino acid differences and the treatment efficacy at month 3 (-2.4 log) or month 6 (-2.7 log) was observed. At baseline, genotypic analysis of the HIV-1 protease gene of patients who have never received a
protease inhibitor
does not allow prediction of the efficacy of regimens containing a
protease inhibitor
.
...
PMID:Polymorphism of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease gene and response of HIV-1-infected patients to a protease inhibitor. 1044 74
Recently, potent combination antiviral therapies consisting of
reverse transcriptase
inhibitor (RTI) drugs and
protease inhibitor
(PI) drugs, have been developed which can rapidly suppress HIV below the limit of detection. Two phases of plasma viral decay after initiation of treatment have been observed in clinical studies. Some researchers have suggested that the viral decay rates may reflect the potency (efficacy) of antiviral therapies. In this paper we model the effect of RTI drugs and PI drugs as inhibition rates of cell infection and infectious virus production, respectively, based on the biological mechanisms of these two different types of drugs. Through rigorous mathematical derivation, we show that the two viral decay rates are monotone functions of the treatment effects of these antiviral therapies. We derive approximation formulas for the relationships between viral decay rates and treatment effects. Computer simulations show that the approximation formulas approximate the true values very well. These formulas may be used to study what factors really affect the viral decay rates. The results in this paper provide a theoretical justification for using both viral decay rates for evaluation of the treatment efficacy of antiviral therapies.
...
PMID:Relationships between antiviral treatment effects and biphasic viral decay rates in modeling HIV dynamics. 1046 32
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