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 simian acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (SAIDS) in macaques at the Washington Regional Primate Research Center is associated with a type D retrovirus known as SAIDS-D/WA. We tested the ability of 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine (AZT), 2',3'-dideoxycytidine (ddC), and 2',3'-dideoxyadenosine (ddA) to inhibit the in vitro cytopathic effect (syncytium formation) and infectivity of the SAIDS-D/WA virus. Raji cell cultures were infected with virus and treated with various concentrations of AZT, ddC, and ddA. The ability of these drugs to inhibit replication of the SAIDS-D/WA virus in Raji cells was monitored by syncytium formation, expression of viral antigen, and reverse transcriptase assay. At concentrations of 4, 40, and 400 microM, AZT completely blocked the viral infectivity and inhibited the cytopathic effect of SAIDS-D/WA. Likewise, ddC was inhibitory at concentrations of 5 and 50 microM and ddA was inhibitory at 100 and 200 microM. AZT, ddC, and ddA became cytostatic to Raji cells with increasing drug concentrations. AZT also partially inhibited SAIDS-D/WA replication in previously infected Raji cell cultures, and viral inhibition increased in response to the concentration of AZT. These data indicate that AZT, ddC, and ddA are effective antiretroviral agents that merit further evaluation, including clinical trials, in animal models with AIDS-like diseases.
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PMID:Antiviral effects of 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine, 2',3'-dideoxycytidine, and 2',3'-dideoxyadenosine against simian acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-associated type D retrovirus in vitro. 246 24

Simian acquired immunodeficiency syndrome is a fatal immunosuppressive disease caused by type D retroviruses such as simian acquired immunodeficiency syndrome retrovirus type 1 (SRV-1). The disease is characterized by generalized lymphadenopathy, opportunistic infections, and lymphoid depletion with defects in both humoral and cell-mediated immunity. To understand how SRV-1 infection relates to the immune defect, we studied in vivo-infected lymphocytes from SRV-1-positive macaques with and without clinical signs of immunosuppressive disease. B and T helper/inducer and T suppressor/cytotoxic lymphocytes were purified by panning or by flow cytometry. Neutrophils were purified by dextran sedimentation, and platelets were purified by low-speed centrifugation. In vitro infection studies were also done with HUT78, H9, K562, rhesus lung fibroblast, rhesus monkey kidney, and bat lung cells. SRV-1 in lymphocytes or culture supernatants was detected by the induction of syncytia in cocultivated Raji cells and was confirmed by immunofluorescence, electron microscopy, or reverse transcriptase assay. We found that B and T helper/inducer lymphocytes were infected in all animals tested. The number of infected T suppressor/cytotoxic cells was generally lower than that of the other cell subsets, and not all animals in this subset had SRV-1 infections. All other cells exposed in vitro to SRV-1, except bat lung cells, were able to be infected. These findings show that SRV-1 has a broad cell tropism for lymphoid and nonlymphoid cell types.
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PMID:Simian retrovirus D serogroup 1 has a broad cellular tropism for lymphoid and nonlymphoid cells. 296 65

Saliva and urine specimens from rhesus monkeys with SAIDS were found to contain a type D retrovirus related to Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (MPMV) which has been linked etiologically to SAIDS. Virus isolates from saliva and urine were shown to have the characteristics of the SAIDS agent by their reverse transcriptase divalent cation preference for synthetic template-primers, production of characteristic cytopathology in Raji cells and antigenic relatedness to MPMV as determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and competition radioimmunoassay (RIA). Electron micrographs of parotid tissue from an animal with SAIDS also showed budding particles with type D retrovirus morphology. A tissue culture grown virus isolate from urine of an animal with SAIDS, produced SAIDS when inoculated into two normal juvenile rhesus monkeys. Since saliva and urine of monkeys with SAIDS contain infectious SAIDS virus, they are likely sources of virus by which the disease is naturally transmitted. Thus, care should be taken to avoid contact of normal and infected animals.
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PMID:Transmission of simian acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (SAIDS) with type D retrovirus isolated from saliva or urine. 608 68

Cats were classified into 4 categories by immunofluorescence antibody assay for the presence of feline leukemia virus (FeLV) and histologically as a) normal, FeLV-, b) normal, FeLV+, c) lymphosarcoma (LSA), FeLV+, and d) LSA, FeLV-. Determinations by Raji cell radioimmunoassay modified for cat serum revealed circulating immune complex (CIC) levels of healthy cats to be less than or equal to 50 micrograms equivalent aggregated cat immunoglobulin/ml (microgram/ml). In contrast, sera of cats in groups b, c, and d all contained significantly higher CIC levels (up to 12,000 micrograms/ml) associated with marked hypocomplementemia and C activation occurring via the classical pathway. Sera from FeLV+, LSA+ cats with high levels of CIC and sera of healthy cats were fractionated according to size and bouyant density by centrifugation through 10 to 40% sucrose gradients. Analysis of fractions from LSA+, FeLV+ sera revealed that both immune complexes (ICs), FeLV reverse transcriptase (RT), and IgG were present in fractions corresponding to a bouyant density of 1.15 to 1.18 g/ml. The CIC containing fractions activated C by the classical pathway. Sera from normal cats did not have CIC or RT and none of the fractions activated the classical pathway. These data suggest that vital antigen-antibody complexes are present in sera of viremic cats with LSA and these complexes activate the C system.
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PMID:Circulating immune complexes associated with naturally occurring lymphosarcoma in pet cats. 625 67

The constitutive production of interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) subtypes by the lymphoblastoid cell lines, Namalwa, Daudi and Raji, was investigated using sensitive and semi-quantitative flow cytometric techniques. Further, we sought to determine whether the previously described failure of these cell lines to produce IFN-alpha-4 was a result of the deletion of the IFN A4 gene. Cytoplasmic production of IFN-alpha-2 and IFN-alpha-4 was assessed using IFN-alpha subtype-specific antipeptide antibodies and FITC-labelled secondary antibodies in indirect immunofluorescence-flow cytometry studies. The constitutive production of IFN-alpha-2 was detected in all three cell lines. Significant increases in fluorescence representing increased production of IFN-alpha-2 and possibly other IFN-alpha subtypes were detected after induction by Sendai virus. Approximately 100 per cent of cells in the Namalwa, Daudi and Raji cell populations contained IFN-alpha-2 before and after induction. However, no cells from the same cell populations contained the IFN-alpha-4 subtype. Analysis of genomic DNA isolated from the lymphoblastoid cells using the Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) and oligonucleotide primers specific for IFN A2 or IFN A4 confirmed the presence of the genes encoding both IFN-alpha subtypes. Furthermore, using reverse transcriptase-PCR amplification, mRNAs for both IFN-alpha-2 and IFN-alpha-4 were detected. Therefore, in contrast to some leukaemias and derived cell lines where IFN A genes have been deleted, these cell lines of B cell lineage exhibit selective expression of IFN A genes, as a result of altered transcriptional/translational control of IFN-alpha expression.
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PMID:Post-transcriptional regulation of interferon-alpha 4 subtype production by lymphoblastoid cells. 768 81

Recently G alpha 16, a new guanosine triphosphate (GTP) binding protein alpha subunit has been described to be specifically expressed in human hematopoietic cells. Expression of G alpha 16 was observed in human cell lines of myelomonocytic and T-lymphocytic origin, but not in human B-cell lines Raji and IM9. We studied the expression of G alpha 16 in human B cells corresponding to different stages of B-cell differentiation by means of reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and Western blotting. The human Burkitt's lymphoma cell lines Raji, Ramos, BJAB, the lymphoblastoid cell line SKW6.4, and the plasmocytoma cell line U266 were devoid of G alpha 16. In contrast, G alpha 16 was detected in the human progenitor B cell lines Reh and Nalm-6. Using the mu+, k- cell line BLIN-1 (pre-B cell phenotype) and its derived subclone 1E8 (surface mu+, k+; B-cell phenotype) G alpha 16 expression was found to disappear on transition from pre-B to B-cell differentiation stage. The analysis of a broad panel of human neoplastic B lymphocytes ranging from progenitor B-acute lymphatic leukemia (pre-pre-B-ALL), common acute leukemias (cALL), pre-B-ALL, mature B-ALL to low grade B-cell lymphoma (chronic lymphocytic leukemia of B-cell type, leukemic centrocytic non-Hodgkins lymphoma [NHL], hairy cell leukemia) showed that G alpha 16 expression is limited to progenitor and pre-B-ALL cells. Therefore, we conclude that within B-cell differentiation, G alpha 16 is expressed solely during early B cell ontogeny and downregulated during differentiation. Thus, G alpha 16 might be an important regulator involved in signaling processes in progenitor B cells.
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PMID:G protein subunit G alpha 16 expression is restricted to progenitor B cells during human B-cell differentiation. 770 90

Suramin, a polysulfonated naphthylurea, is an antitrypanosomal and antifilarial drug. Because of its anti-reverse transcriptase activity and antiproliferative activity, suramin is also used for the treatment of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and cancer. In spite of these uses, very little is known about its effects on the immune system. In this report, we investigated the effects of suramin on peripheral blood mononuclear cells. We found that natural killer (NK) cell-mediated cytotoxicity against human erythroblastoid cell line K562 was completely inhibited by suramin in a dose-dependent manner. It also completely blocked lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cell-mediated cytotoxicity against the human B lymphoblastoid cell lines Raji and Daudi. The cytotoxicity against the human melanoma tumor cell line A-375 mediated by unstimulated and stimulated monocytes was also suppressed by suramin. Maximum inhibition of monocyte-mediated cytotoxicity was observed when suramin was present during both the activation and the effector phases of cytotoxicity. Besides its effects on cell-mediated cytotoxicity, suramin also inhibited the cytotoxic effects of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) against different tumor cell lines. Furthermore, we found that suramin interferes with the binding of TNF with its receptor. Thus our results indicate that suramin overall downregulates the immune system by inhibiting cell-mediated and TNF-mediated cytotoxicity against different tumor cells.
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PMID:Suramin inhibits tumor cell cytotoxicity mediated through natural killer cells, lymphokine-activated killer cells, monocytes, and tumor necrosis factor. 813 36

Equilibrative nucleoside transport processes in mammalian cells are categorized as either nitrobenzylthioinosine (NBMPR)-sensitive (es) or NBMPR-insensitive (ei). Inhibition of the es process arises from binding of NBMPR to a high-affinity site(s) on the es transporter that can be identified by photoaffinity labeling with [3H]NBMPR. This study examined the equilibrative nucleoside transport processes of cultured human erythroleukemia (K562) cells. The presence of NBMPR binding sites (4.8 +/- 0.9 x 10(5)/cell, Kd = 0.3 nM), together with the identification of polypeptides by specific photolabeling of membranes with [3H]NBMPR, indicated that K562 cells possess es nucleoside transporters (ca 500,000 copies/cell). The photolabeled polypeptides of K562 cells migrated with lower relative mobility (peak M(r) value, 63,000) than did those of human erythrocytes (peak M(r) value, 53,000). This difference in apparent M(r) was abolished by prolonged treatment of membrane proteins with N-glycosidase F, suggesting that equilibrative nucleoside transport in K562 cells and erythrocytes is mediated by the same, or a closely related, es isoform. A cDNA encoding the es nucleoside transporter of human placenta (termed hENT1) was recently isolated by a strategy based on the N-terminal sequence of the es transporter of human erythrocytes. hENT-like mRNA species were detected in K562 cells, as well as in several other human cell lines of neoplastic origin (A459, G361, HeLa, HL-60, Molt-4, Raji, SW480), by high-stringency northern analysis with a placental hENT1 probe. A cDNA that encoded a protein identical to hENT1 was isolated by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction with primers specific for hENT1. NBMPR inhibited zero-trans influx of 3H-labeled adenosine, uridine and thymidine by 50% (IC50 values) at 0.4-1.0 nM, confirming the presence of an NBMPR-sensitive (es) transport process, which accounted for 80-90% of total transport activity. The remaining component was identified as the equilibrative NBMPR-insensitive (ei) transport process since it: (i) exhibited low (IC50 > 1.0 microM) sensitivity to NBMPR; (ii) was not concentrative; and (iii) was unchanged by elimination of the sodium gradient. The kinetic parameters (determined at 37 degrees C) for the es- and ei-mediated processes differed markedly. Values for transport of uridine by the es- and ei-mediated processes were, respectively: K(m) = 229 +/- 39 and 1077 +/- 220 microM; Vmax, 186 +/- 31 and 40 +/- 5 pmol/microliter cell water/sec. Values for transport of adenosine by the es and ei-mediated processes were, respectively, 61 +/- 9 and 133 +/- 17 microM; Vmax, 70 +/- 5 and 23 +/- 8 pmol/microlitere cell water/sec. The ei-mediated process, although small, was of pharmacologic importance since K562 cells could not be protected by NBMPR (10 microM) from the cytotoxic effects of tubercidin (7-deazaadenosine).
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PMID:Molecular identification of the equilibrative NBMPR-sensitive (es) nucleoside transporter and demonstration of an equilibrative NBMPR-insensitive (ei) transport activity in human erythroleukemia (K562) cells. 936 72

We found that human herpesvirus 8-encoded IL-6 (vIL-6) induced endogenous human IL-6 (huIL-6) secretion from various cell lines (MT-4, THP-1, U937, Raji, and CESS) including patients with multicentric Castleman's disease. Especially, in MT-4 cells, huIL-6 was enhanced with vIL-6 by 30-fold compared with that of control. In addition, reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction confirmed that vIL-6 induced huIL-6 expression in MT-4 cells. Our novel finding of the huIL-6 induction by vIL-6 indicates that vIL-6 may play a significant role in the pathogenesis of HHV-8 associated diseases.
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PMID:Human herpesvirus 8-encoded interleukin-6 homologue (viral IL-6) induces endogenous human IL-6 secretion. 1086 41

The effects of radiation and cytotoxic agents on telomerase activity in lymphoma cells were analyzed by a polymerase chain reaction-based telomeric repeat amplification protocol coupled with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction for the expression of the catalytic subunit of telomerase (hTERT), and by Western blot analysis in three lymphoma cell lines (Jurkat, Raji, CEM-6). Telomeric repeat amplification protocol-enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay demonstrated high basal levels of telomerase activity in all cell lines compared to normal and activated peripheral blood lymphocytes. A significant decrease in telomerase activity was observed in all cell lines after exposure to vincristine for 24 hours. The decrease in telomerase activity paralleled the decrease in cell viability in Jurkat and CEM-6 cells but not in Raji cells. Radiation exposure inhibited the telomerase activity of Jurkat and CEM-6 cells whereas Raji cells were unaffected. Cell cycle analysis demonstrated a significant G(2)/M arrest by cisplatin, VP-16, and vincristine. In contrast to the decline in telomerase activity, the level of hTERT RNA and protein increased. Furthermore, the induction of hTERT was preceded by increased expression of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, p27/Kip1 protein, and p53. These results indicate that telomerase activity is down-regulated by anti-neoplastic agents in lymphoma cells, however expression of hTERT may not be correlated with telomerase activity. We also show that p27/Kip1 may be involved in the G(2)/M growth arrest induced by anti-neoplastic agents.
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PMID:Down-regulation of telomerase activity in malignant lymphomas by radiation and chemotherapeutic agents. 1148 97


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