Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.49 (reverse transcriptase)
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The use of exclusionary techniques in the procurement of donors for bone allografts greatly reduces chances for disease transmission. Furthermore, treatment of HIV with either chemical agents or strong acids will effectively inactivate the AIDS virus. These data are taken as indirect proof that the risk of obtaining AIDS from a freeze-dried bone allograft is highly remote. The purpose of this study is to obtain direct evidence that the processing of a demineralized freeze-dried bone allograft would render the allograft safe for human use. In Part I, human cortical bone was obtained from a cadaveric source and tested to be free of HIV contamination. The bone was spiked with 5.26 x 10(9) viral particles. This corresponded to 148 micrograms of total viral protein. In Part II, cortical bone was procured from a donor who died of AIDS. In both Parts I and II, the cortical bone was ground to yield particle sizes of 90 to 500 microns. Test samples were treated with a virucidal agent and demineralized in HCl. Control samples were left untreated. All samples were cocultivated with stimulated peripheral blood lymphocytes and assayed for p24 core protein, reverse transcriptase, and viral gag gene by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). In Part I, the HIV spiking experiment, untreated virus infected particulate bone was positive for HIV replication. Treated samples were negative when assayed for HIV. Bone samples in Part II, HIV infected bone, were positive by PCR. Replication of viable HIV could not be demonstrated after treatment. It was concluded that demineralization and treatment with a virucidal agent inactivates HIV in spiked and infected bone.
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PMID:HIV inactivation in a bone allograft. 128 53

Following attachment and entry of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) into a host cell, the HIV genomic RNA is reverse transcribed to cDNA. This step may be inhibited by hypericin, a compound that induces alterations of the retroviral capsid. Incubation of HIV with hypericin rendered the virus noninfectious. The replication of HIV was blocked early; HIV cDNA could not be detected in cells challenged with hypericin-treated HIV. Hypericin did not inhibit the binding of recombinant gp120 to CD4+ cells, nor did hypericin inhibit syncytium formation. However, reverse transcriptase activity could not be released from hypericin-treated virions. Western blot analysis revealed altered mobility of the HIV major capsid protein (p24) following hypericin treatment. Hypericin-treated recombinant HIV p24 exhibited similar altered mobility. The inactivation of HIV infectivity and the alterations in p24 mobility required hypericin incubations in the presence of visible light. Collectively, these data suggest that photochemical alterations of the HIV capsid may contribute to the hypericin-mediated inactivation of HIV. Such alterations may inhibit the release of RT activity from treated HIV, and prevent uncoating and subsequent reverse transcription of the HIV genome within a target cell.
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PMID:Inactivation of the human immunodeficiency virus by hypericin: evidence for photochemical alterations of p24 and a block in uncoating. 128 9

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

A possible approach to control of bovine lymphoproliferative disease caused by bovine leukaemia virus (BLV) may be the development of an "antiviral information immunity" based on the effect of anti-sense RNA (asRNA). A numbers of constructs were obtained, under control of various promotors (herpesvirus thymidine kinase, T-antigen SV40 promoter), carrying as DNA against gene X, the expression product of which is a transactivator of viral transcription from the BLV LTR promotor. As a model system for the analysis of antiviral activity of constructs developed, cloned continuous cell lines of BLV-producing FLK cells were used. The level of BLV expression in cells transfected with the constructs was determined by various parameters. Differences were detected in different clones obtained from non-transfected cells, as well as variation between transfected clones, as measured by reverse transcriptase, competitive radio-immunoassay for BLV p24, the viral particle count on agar membrane, and the tumorigenicity for nude mice. The differences in inhibition of expression of BLV genes and their products may be explained in terms of the site of integration of asDNA and the number of integrated copies.
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PMID:An investigation of the effect of antisense RNA gene on bovine leukaemia virus reproduction in cell culture. 133 48

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

A semimicromethod was established for isolating human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in plasma using 48-well plates and a pool of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from several donors as targets for infection, which increases the efficiency of isolation by reducing the effect of variability due to diverse donor cell susceptibility to HIV infection. The addition of H9 cells to the PBMC cultures did not affect measurable titers. Nevertheless, it potentiated strongly virus replication in terms of p24 production in the supernatant of the wells with HIV isolates, thus facilitating interpretation of the results. The titration of a virus strain of a known titre and reverse transcriptase activity in parallel provided a constant parameter of efficiency and reproducibility within each experiment, permitting comparison with results from other laboratories. The reproducibility of the method was highly significant (r = 0.97, P < 0.001); 68% of the 22 plasma samples from HIV-infected individuals tested by this method were positive. The presence of plasma HIV titer correlated well (P < 0.02) with the low count of CD4+ cells of less than 300/mm3, but not with the presence of the p24 antigen in the serum.
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PMID:Efficient and reproducible new semimicromethod for the detection and titration of HIV in human plasma. 136 19

Human fetal thymuses were obtained from abortuses of HIV-1 seronegative females. Thymocytes were isolated and cultured for 2 days with PHA. Thereafter, the culture was divided and half of the cells were exposed to the HIV-1 RF isolate for 4 h. After this incubation period, the HIV-1 exposed and nonexposed control cells were cultured in RPMI 1640 supplemented with IL-2 for 30 days and subsequently maintained in RPMI without the addition of growth factors. Long term culture of both HIV-1 exposed and control thymocytes has yielded two cell lines that have been maintained for more than 3 yr without the addition of growth factors. Flow cytometry using mAb that recognize T cell differentiation markers was used to analyze cell phenotypes. The HIV-1 exposed thymocyte cell line (E88/RF) was shown to be HIV-1 infected by p24 ELISA, reverse transcriptase activity, immunocytochemistry, in situ hybridization, polymerase chain reaction, electron microscopy, and to produce infectious particles by a syncytial forming assay. The non-HIV-1-exposed thymocyte cell line (T412) has remained negative by all criteria for HIV-1 infection. Flow cytometry showed the T412 cells to be positive for the T cell markers CD45, CD38, and CD4 but negative for all other markers tested. The E88/RF cells are positive for CD45 and CD38 but negative for CD4 and other markers. These data report the isolation of two human fetal thymocyte cell lines; one uninfected and susceptible to HIV-1 infection, and the other persistently and productively infected with HIV-1 with little cytopathology. These findings suggest that HIV-1 can persistently infect early T cells and may alter T cell differentiation.
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PMID:Persistent productive HIV-1 infection of a CD4- human fetal thymocyte line. 137 48

Beside the risk of infection via HIV-1-contaminated blood, ophthalmologists are especially interested in the possibility of HIV-1 infection via tears. Therefore we tried to isolate HIV-1 from tears of 50 HIV-1-infected persons in different stages of disease by reverse transcriptase (RT) and by p24-antigen (p24-AG) in the cultures. Simultaneously we tried to isolate HIV-1 in the supernatant from peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL), which was successful in 32 of the 50 examined specimens. HIV-1 could not be isolated from the tears of these persons. In addition, polymerasechain-reaction (PCR) was performed to detect proviral sequences (gag, pol, env) of HIV-1 in tears and blood of ten HIV-1-infected patients. While in all the examined patients gag, pol and env could be detected in the blood samples, only one tear sample was found positive for gag and pol DNA fragments. These results indicate that tears of HIV-1-positive contain extremely low quantities of tissue culture infectious doses (TCID) of HIV-1 in contrast to PBL. HIV-1 infection via tears therefore appears to be unlikely.
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PMID:Infrequent detection of HIV-1 components in tears compared to blood of HIV-1-infected persons. 138 31

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) has been implicated as the etiologic agent of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and is a member of the sub-family Lentivirinae within the family Retroviridae. HIV type 1 (HIV-1) contains three major genes, gag, pol and env, which code for (1) core proteins, (2) a protease, reverse transcriptase and integrase, and (3) envelope glycoproteins, respectively. The core proteins p17, p24 and p15 are derived from gag precursor, p55, by endoproteolytic cleavage. The two nucleic-acid-binding proteins p7 and p9 are synthesized from p15 by proteolytic cleavage. These two structural proteins are apparently needed for the ribonucleoprotein-core formation. The envelope glycoproteins gp120 and gp41 (gp120-gp41 complex) are also generated by cleavage env precursors, gp160. The assembly of HIV-1 particles, like other retroviruses, appears to involve the association of the env precursor gp160 with the gag proteins. There are several factors which influence the assembly and budding process of HIV-1. In this article, we describe important events in HIV-1 morphogenesis and factors which influence this aspect of the HIV-1 life cycle.
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PMID:Morphogenesis of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. 138 14

We have isolated a lymphoid cell line, MDS, from the pleural exudate of a patient with chronic myelomonocytic leukemia. The cells are biphenotypic, containing various T-cell and myeloid markers, and are surface negative for CD4 and CD8 but have low CD4 mRNA. The cells grow in suspension with a doubling time of 15 hr, have been karyotyped as trisomy 21, are negative for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), and are tumorigenic in the nude mouse. We have isolated two stable HIV-1-producing cell lines, MDS-T, by transfecting MDS cells with pHXBc2, and MDS-I, by infecting MDS cells with HIV-1IIIB. In 24 hr, 1 x 10(5) MDS-T or MDS-I cells produce 46 ng of p24 per ml and reverse transcriptase that is capable of incorporating 0.2 pmol of [32P]TTP into oligo(dT).poly(A). Ultrastructural studies showed numerous mature viral particles in MDS-T and MDS-I cells that are capable of infecting T cells. HIV-1 infection could be inhibited by 25% in the MDS cells with the anti-CD4 antibody Leu 3a. For over a year MDS-T and MDS-I cells have been producing high concentrations of HIV-1 in culture. A subclone derived from the MDS cells behaves like the parent cells when transfected or infected with HIV-1. In contrast to other T-cell lines, neither phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate nor tumor necrosis factor alpha stimulated the replication of HIV-1, whereas bromoadenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate or interferon alpha caused 50% and 80% inhibition of reverse transcriptase production, respectively. These chronically infected T-cell lines are a useful model system to study the effect of anti-HIV agents and cellular factors required for HIV-1 replication.
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PMID:Productive nonlytic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 replication in a newly established human leukemia cell line. 143 50


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