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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)
Several cell culture factors were found to influence in vitro expression of mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) in the mouse adenocarcinoma cell line Mm5mt/c1. Cells were propagated in a variety of commercially available cell culture media to which dexamethasone (DXM) was added as a stimulator of MMTV production. Culture seeding density, culture medium type, and glucose concentration each influenced MMTV production when expressed on a per cell basis. Maximum cell growth occurred in cultures grown in
RPMI
-1640 medium containing insulin. Those media which provided good cell growth were not necessarily optimal for virus expression. Addition of insulin did not stimulate MMTV synthesis although dexamethasone alone was stimulatory in all media used; however, maximum MMTV expression was obtained when dexamethasone and insulin were used in concert. Equivalent levels of MMTV-specific cell membrane antigen, MMTV-specific protein, and virus particles were produced at incubation temperatures of 32 degrees, 34 degrees or 37 degrees C; however, higher levels of virus-related
RNA-dependent DNA polymerase
(RDDP) activity were recovered from cultures incubated at 32 degrees and 34 degrees C than at 37 degrees C. Decreased levels of RDDP were attributed to enzyme thermolability at 37 degrees C incubation.
...
PMID:Cell culture factors influencing in vitro expression of mouse mammary tumor virus. 6 18
We have previously demonstrated that acidic medium inhibits the replication of HIV-1. The present study was designed to examine the effects of other growth conditions and infection of fibroblasts by coculture with HIV infected lymphoid cells. Several lymphoblastoid cell lines normally grown in
RPMI
-1640 were grown in Eagle's MEM. These cells supported virus replication to higher titres than did
RPMI
-1640. Peak viral titres were achieved within 24-48 h after newly infected or chronically infected cells were placed in fresh medium. When virus was stored in liquid medium either frozen or at higher temperatures, virus titres were retained for several months while frozen but decreased upon storage at 4 degrees C or higher. If cells were passaged after trypsinization in Ca(++)-depleted medium, then a decreased susceptibility of cells for HIV-1 by 2 log10 at 24 h post infection was observed. Infectivity of cell-free and cell-associated HIV-1 was measured using syncytium formation,
reverse transcriptase
activity and p24 antigen. No fusion between HIV-1 infected CD4+ lymphoblasts and CD4- fibroblasts was observed but HIV-1 infected lymphoid cells, even in the absence of syncytium formation, exerted a strong toxic effect on fibroblasts. This study extends previous findings that medium acidity was inhibitory to virus replication and survival. Thus, conditions for study of HIV must be well controlled in buffered medium so that misleading results are not obtained regarding virus multiplication and possibly regarding transmission to and pathogenesis in CD4- cells.
...
PMID:The influence of cell culture and storage conditions on HIV-1 infectivity and fusogenic activity. 128 37
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.
...
PMID:Persistent productive HIV-1 infection of a CD4- human fetal thymocyte line. 137 48
The Authors report the isolation in Italy of Feline Immunodeficiency Virus (FIV) from a cat inoculated with whole blood from a naturally FIV infected cat. The virus was isolated in feline circulating leucocytes cultured in
RPMI
medium and stimulated with concanavalin-A and recombinant human interleukin-2. The infected cultures showed a characteristic cytopathic effect (ballooning degeneration, giant cell formation, cell death) and a specific fuorescence using FIV-positive cat serum and monoclonal antibodies against FIV. Furthermore, the culture supernatants contained magnesium-dependent
reverse transcriptase
activity.
...
PMID:Isolation in Italy of feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV). 164 60
Human T-lymphoblastoid cells H9, CEM and CEM-clone 5 were selected for growth in
RPMI
1640 supplemented with transferrin 5 micrograms/ml, insulin 5 micrograms/ml and sodium selenite 5 ng/ml. After 40 days of adaptation to serum-free medium, these cells displayed growth, morphology, and expression of CD4 similar to serum-supplemented cultures. Infection of these cells with two strains of HIV-1 (LAV and NDK) and a strain of HIV-2 (ROD) was as efficient in serum-free as in serum-supplemented medium as demonstrated by
reverse transcriptase
activity in the culture supernatants of infected cells. Furthermore, HIV-induced cytopathogenicity was observed in serum-free cultures, demonstrating that both HIV infection and cytopathic effect did not require the presence of serum components. Electron microscopy showed that mature viral particles were produced from infected cells cultured in serum-free medium. Finally, the ability of monoclonal antibody OKT4 A to inhibit infection by HIV-1 LAV but not by HIV-1 NDK was the same with and without serum in the culture medium, demonstrating that both CD4-dependent and CD4-independent infections can occur in the total absence of serum. Human T-lymphoblastoid cells adapted for growth in serum-free medium provide therefore a complementary tool for the study of HIV infection and cytopathogenicity under defined conditions.
...
PMID:Human T-lymphoblastoid cells selected for growth in serum-free medium provide new tools for study of HIV replication and cytopathogenicity. 172 73
The peripheral blood lymphocytes from 48 heparinized blood specimens from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) antibody-positive individuals were divided into two aliquots. One aliquot was reconstituted in one of the following five media. Medium 1 consisted of tryptose broth with 0.5% gelatin; medium 2 consisted of
RPMI
1640 containing 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS); medium 3 consisted of
RPMI
1640 containing 20% FBS, Polybrene, interleukin 2, and anti-alpha interferon; medium 4 consisted of medium 2 plus 10% dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO); and medium 5 consisted of medium 3 plus 10% DMSO. Lymphocytes were stored in these five media at -60 degrees C. The other aliquot of cells was stored at -190 degrees C in
RPMI
1640 containing 50% FBS and 10% DMSO. After 1 week, both aliquots were cocultivated with phytohemagglutinin-stimulated uninfected peripheral blood lymphocytes, and presence of HIV was detected by the
reverse transcriptase
test. Storage in medium 1, 2, or 3 did not result in satisfactory isolation rates, but storage at -60 degrees C in medium 4 or 5 gave equal or better isolation rates than did storage at -190 degrees C. Inactivation of HIV by freezing of the cells without DMSO correlated with high antibody titers to core and polymerase proteins as measured by Western (immuno-) blotting.
...
PMID:Isolation of human immunodeficiency virus from peripheral blood lymphocytes stored in various transport media and frozen at -60 degrees C. 291 40
A retrovirus designated
RPMI
8226V, isolated in 1973 from the human myeloma cell line
RPMI
8226 has been characterized by competition radioimmunoassay (RIA) for the major viral structural protein and by nucleic acid hybridization analysis using cDNA of the virus. The virus is highly related to the squirrel monkey type D retrovirus, SMRV. In the homologous RIA using rabbit anti-
RPMI
8226V and 125I-labelled p37 of
RPMI
8226V,
RPMI
8226V and SMRV exhibited competition of 81% and 73% respectively. Similarly, in the homologous system for SMRV p36, these viruses competed 98 and 100%. Reagents made from the type D retrovirus. Mason Pfizer Monkey Virus (MPMV), known to be related but distinct from SMRV, were used in assays designed to detect interspecies determinants of type D retroviruses. In assays using goat anti-MPMVp26 vs SMRV 125I-p36,
RPMI
8226V, SMRV and MPMV competed to the same extent (93%). Hybridization analysis of
RPMI
8226V cDNA showed significant homology to cellular RNA and DNA of mink, bat, and human cell infected with
RPMI
8226V and to DNA or SMRV infected cells but not to uninfected cells or cells infected with other viruses. These results taken together clearly indicate that
RPMI
8226V and SMRV are very closely related to each other. The finding of a type D retrovirus in this human myeloma cell line that had been used in EBV studies (the usual source of EBV being the marmoset cell line B95-8) prompted a survey of
RPMI
8226V in some human and marmoset cell lines. The assays included the RIA for p36, nucleic acid hybridization using cDNA of
RPMI
8226V,
reverse transcriptase
analysis and electron microscopy (EM). The results clearly show that in addition to
RPMI
8226, human Burkitt lymphoma cells BJAB/B-95-8/K which were supertransformed by EBV from B-95-8/K marmoset cells as well as marmoset cell lines [(B-95-8/K and B-95-8/N) obtained from Stockholm and Uppsala, Sweden] were positive for the
RPMI
8226V. Similar lines obtained elsewhere were negative. The results obtained clearly indicate that
RPMI
8226V is a serious laboratory contamination in some widely used human cell lines. The possible impact of this viral contamination for some virological and cell biological studies is discussed.
...
PMID:Identification of the RPMI 8226 retrovirus and its dissemination as a significant contaminant of some widely used human and marmoset cell lines. 628 81
Non-radioisotopic
reverse transcriptase
assay (Non-RTA) was successfully applied for detection and identification of the retroviruses isolated from peripheral mononuclear cells from eight HIV-1-seropositive hemophiliac patients. Of 40 samples, 36 (90%) were consistent in detection between Non-RI and RI RTA. Four samples which showed RT activities slightly above the cutoff level of RI RTA were not detected by Non-RI RTA. Non-specific RT-inhibitors in the culture supernatant decreased the sensitivity of Non-RI RTA more significantly than that of RI RTA. It was demonstrated that higher concentrations (> 20%) of fetal calf serum in
RPMI
-1640 culture medium inhibited the hybridization of poly rA template with immobilized primer, resulting in reducing the sensitivity of Non-RI RTA. Then we identified the isolated retroviruses using specific RT-inhibiting (RTI) antibodies against HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 RTI antibody specifically inhibited RTs of isolated retroviruses and HIV-1 strain, LAV-1, but not HIV-2 and Rous-associated virus 2 (RVA-2) RT. Conversely, HIV-2 RTI antibody specifically inhibited HIV-2 RT, but not HIV-1 and RAV-2 RT. These findings agreed with previously reported results showing the type-specificity of HIV-1 and -2 RTI antibodies, and suggest the possibility that isolated retroviruses could be identified by these antibodies.
...
PMID:[Non-radioisotopic reverse transcriptase assay using biotin-11-deoxyuridine-triphosphate and a primer-immobilized microtiter plate: application for detection and identification of isolated retroviruses from HIV-1-seropositive hemophiliac patients]. 768 Jul 5
Colominic acid is a homopolymer of N-acetylneuraminic acid (NANA), which has an alpha-2,8 ketosidic linkage between its polymer units. In this study, colominic acids were sulfated under different conditions and their antiviral activities against human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) were examined. Sulfated colominic acids, containing 6-12% sulfur, blocked the expression of HIV-1 antigen in MT-4 cells or C8166 cells following exposure to MOLT-4/HTLV-IIIB or HIV-1[GUN-1]. The compounds inhibited syncytium formation upon co-cultivation of MOLT-4 cells (clone 8) with MOLT-4/HTLV-IIIB cells and abolished the production of HIV-1 p24 antigen in culture medium of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs). HIV-1
reverse transcriptase
(RT) activity was not directly affected by the drugs. The compounds did not prolong activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) at 10 and 1.0 microgram/ml, suggesting that they may not have appreciable side effects in vivo. These agents were still able to block the expression of HIV-1 antigen even when the cells were infected with HIV-1 in
RPMI
-1640 medium containing high percentages of fetal calf serum (FCS). These properties may be therapeutically advantageous if these compounds were considered for possible clinical use.
...
PMID:Sulfated colominic acid: an antiviral agent that inhibits the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 in vitro. 879 13
The mechanism of in vitro inactivation of cell-free human immunodeficiency virus (CFHIV) with ascorbic acid (M) or Congo red (CR) was investigated with specific regard to the impact of an excess of magnesium ions on the viral inactivation. Quadruplicate reaction mixtures containing CFHIV were mixed with a virus-inactivating dose of 500 micrograms/ml ascorbic acid in
RPMI
medium devoid of fetal bovine serum and incubated for 3 h at 4 degrees C in two parallel sets of experiments. AA-free CFHIV and virion-free AA were included in each experiment as the positive and negative controls, respectively. After adding 10(6) MT2 cells to capture the surviving virons, the mixtures were incubated for 1 h at 37 degrees C. The cells from the first set were washed three times with Hanks balanced salt solution (HBSS) only, and those from the second set were washed with HBSS fortified with MgCl2 (1.0 mg/ml). Similarly, inactivation of CFHIV by increasing amounts of CR ranging between 12.5-100 micrograms/ml was also tested for the effect of MgCl2, except that (i) the assay was performed in subdued light, (ii) CFHIV-CR mixtures were incubated at 37 degrees C for 1 h in the dark and (iii) H9 cells were used instead of the MT-2 cells to capture the surviving virions in the test mixtures. The cells were cultured in
RPMI
with 20% FBS for 5 days at 37 degrees C. The absence of p24 antigen in the culture supernatant of MT2 or H9 cells indicated HIV inactivation by AA or CR, respectively. Remarkably, the cultured cells that were washed with HBSS + MgCl2 consistently expressed p24 antigen at levels comparable with those from the untreated virus control. Therefore, the apparent in vitro inactivation of CFHIV by either AA or CR was reversible as validated by washing of the cells with HBSS + MgCl2 following capture of the virions from CFHIV-AA or CFHIV-CR inactivation mixtures. These observations underscore the need for including extra magnesium ions as a control in validating various protocols used for assessing the in vitro virucidal activity of
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors, membrane binding dyes, or other candidate chemical agents.
...
PMID:Magnesium-mediated reversal of the apparent virucidal effect of ascorbic acid or congo red reacted in vitro with the human immunodeficiency virus. 888 57
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