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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)
Pyran copolymer (maleic anhydride-divinyl ether) has consistently reproducible molecular weight-related biologic effects associated with toxic, immunologic antitumor, and antiviral effects. Fortunately, the antitumor action occurs with the least toxic lower molecular weight fraction. Immunoadjuvant effects with this fraction would be critical to its development. Studies of polymers should include evaluation of effects on splenomegaly, splenic
esterase
changes, lipolysis,
reverse transcriptase
, nucleases, calcium flux, cyclic nucleotides, and complement and clotting elements.
...
PMID:Future direction of synthetic polyanions (pyran copolymer). 36 28
We studied the effect of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection on the surface-marker expression of the human promonocytic cell line U937. U937 cells persistently produced HIV as detected by
reverse transcriptase
activity in culture supernatant. Expression of HLA class II antigens on U937/HIV cells was decreased 2- to 10-fold, depending on the Mab used. Class II expression of U937/HIV cells increased approximately two-fold by treatment with r-interferon-gamma. Whereas noninfected U937 cells expressed moderate amounts of lymphocyte function-associated antigen-1 (LFA-1) (CD11a) and minimal amounts of the C3bi receptor (CD11b) and p150/95 (CD11c), U937/HIV cells expressed moderate amounts of C3bi receptor and p150/95 and showed elevated expression of LFA-1 alpha (CD11a) and -beta (CD18) chains. Expression of these adhesion molecules resulted in strongly enhanced phorbolester-induced aggregation of U937/HIV cells compared with the noninfected U937 cells. In addition, almost all U937/HIV cells, but not noninfected U937 cells, intensely stained for cytoplasmic nonspecific
esterase
activity. The effects of HIV infection on U937 cells strikingly resemble the effects of differentiation-inducing agents, such as PMA and DMSO, on the U937 phenotype. Our finding suggests that HIV infection, apart from down regulating class II expression, induces differentiation of U937 cells.
...
PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus infection down-regulates HLA class II expression and induces differentiation in promonocytic U937 cells. 310 23
Primary cultures from a brain biopsy specimen of a human T-cell lymphotropic virus type III/lymphadenopathy-associated virus (HTLV-III/LAV) seropositive patient with progressive dementia contained small numbers of monocytoid cells and showed
reverse transcriptase
activity that persisted for as long as 100 days. Electron microscopy of these cells revealed the presence of HTLV-III/LAV virions. Subcultured cells removed from primary cultures by trypsinization were nonspecific
esterase
negative and did not express virus or show evidence of HTLV-III/LAV proviral sequences, while those remaining in the original flasks were nonspecific
esterase
positive and continued to produce virus. Virus from primary cultures was transmitted to peripheral blood-derived monocyte-macrophages and T cells. Virus production in T-cell cultures was transient while the monocyte-macrophages, like the primary cultures, produced virus for at least 120 days. Infection of several brain-derived cells with this and another HTLV-III/LAV isolate failed to demonstrate virus replication. These results indicate that the HTLV-III/LAV-infected cells recovered from the brain of this patient are cells of the mononuclear phagocyte series.
...
PMID:Virus isolation from and identification of HTLV-III/LAV-producing cells in brain tissue from a patient with AIDS. 349 May 87
Inactivation of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in lyophilised small pool cryoprecipitate, factor VIII concentrate, prothrombin complex and C1-
esterase
inhibitor concentrate by prolonged heat treatment (72 h, 60 degrees C) was studied. Plasma products, inoculated prior to lyophilisation, had infectious titres ranging from 10(7) to 10(10.5). Residual infectivity (TCID50) was assessed by multiple titrations on H9 cells in a macro system and subsequent detection of virus replication by determining
reverse transcriptase
activity. Kinetics of inactivation showed a biphasic pattern: during the first 8 h a variable TCID50 reduction up to 10(4.3) was observed, followed by an additional loss of 10(1)-10(2.7) during the next 64 h. Heat treatment for 72 h resulted in a mean TCID50 reduction of 10(5). It is concluded that prolonged heat treatment may lead to the adequate prevention of HIV transmission by lyophilised plasma products.
...
PMID:Thermal inactivation of human immunodeficiency virus in lyophilised blood products evaluated by ID50 titrations. 364 79
The phenotypic characteristics of a cloned giant cell line, SU/RH-HD-1, established from the spleen of a patient with Hodgkin's disease were studied. The cells grew slowly, adhered to the culture vessel surface, and had an elongated, irregular shape. After trypsinization, they became spherical and measured 30-100 micron in diameter. Although most cells were mononuclear, binucleated and multinucleated cells could be identified in expanded cultures. The cells phagocytized latex and ink particles and were nonspecific
esterase
-positive, but they did not secrete lysozyme. They were Epstein-Barr nuclear antigen-negative, and their culture fluid supernatants were devoid of
reverse transcriptase
activity. Electron microscopy revealed cells with a pronounced smooth endoplasmic reticulum, free ribosomes, some filaments, and mitochondria. Many 0.5- to 1.0-micron invaginations (pits) were seen along the cell membrane. Nucleoli were enlarged and prominent in the very heterochromatic nuclei. The SU/RH-HD-1 cells had 10- to 100-micron-long pseudopodia that were sometimes forked or branching, as well as multiple stress fibers. Electron microscopic appearance was suggestive of that of macrophages. This interpretation of the results was substantiated by monoclonal antibody studies, which revealed that the cells express antigenic determinants distinctive for cells of the monocyte-macrophage lineage and by functional studies demonstrating that the cells are capable of specific antigen presentation to immune T-cells. The SU/RH-HD-1 cells were aneuploid and could be cloned, first in liquid culture by limiting dilution and later in semisolid medium. It was likely that the SU/RH-HD-1 cells were derived from the neoplastic giant cell population in Hodgkin's disease and that they originated from cells of the mononuclear phagocyte-reticulum cell lineage.
...
PMID:Establishment and characterization of a cloned giant cell line from a patient with Hodgkin's disease. 633 36
Short-term stimulation of peripheral blood monocytes (PBMo) and cells of the monocytic cell line MONO-MAC-6 with lipopoly-saccharide (LPS) induces high tumor necrosis factor (TNF)alpha mRNA levels. In contrast to the results obtained with primary cells, this effect could not be inhibited by preincubating the cell line with recombinant human interleukin-4 (rh IL-4). This deficiency in response to the cytokine was not caused by a general unresponsiveness of MONO-MAC-6 cells to IL-4. Thus, the expression of the monocyte-associated differentiation markers CD14 and monocyte-specific
esterase
(MSE), upregulated by long-term stimulation with LPS, could be decreased by IL-4. Long-term LPS treatment apparently induced IL-4 responsiveness of the cell line. While IL-4R alpha mRNA was upregulated about 3-fold, this positive effect was not apparent at the cell surface protein level. In contrast to the constitutive alpha chain expression, the IL-4R gamma chain expression could not be detected with a specific mAb nor by Northern blot analysis. However,
reverse transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) demonstrated the presence of low-level IL-4R gamma chain mRNA in the cell line. We suggest that the low reactivity of the cells to IL-4 might be correlated with the low expression of the gamma chain.
...
PMID:IL-4R alpha and gamma chain expression in LPS- and IL-4-stimulated MONO-MAC-6 cells. 753 69
Placental macrophages (Hofbauer cells) were isolated and cultured in vitro to investigate their susceptibility to human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection. Of adherent cells, 80% expressed CD14, and > 99% were nonspecific
esterase
-positive. CD4 antigen was expressed at very low levels. CD4 mRNA could be detected in the cells by reverse transcription followed by polymerase chain reaction. The macrophages were infected productively after inoculation with low-passage blood isolates of cell-free HIV-1. Peak virus titers were detected 3-7 days after infection by HIV-1 antigen ELISA and
reverse transcriptase
assay. Replication of HIV-1 in placental macrophages was less than in blood monocytes. HIV-1 RNA was detected in placental macrophages by in situ hybridization 16 days after infection. Multinucleated giant cells were identified in some cultures, indicative of an HIV-induced cytopathic effect. Thus, placental macrophages can be infected productively with clinical isolates of HIV-1, and such cells may act as a reservoir of virus for transmission to the fetus in utero.
...
PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection of human placental macrophages in vitro. 768 88
Carboxylic esterases are widely distributed in hematopoietic cells. Monocytes express the
esterase
isoenzyme (termed 'monocyte-specific
esterase
', MSE) that can be inhibited by NaF in the alpha-naphthyl acetate cytochemical staining. We examined the expression of MSE in normal cells and primary and cultured leukemia-lymphoma cells. The MSE protein was demonstrated by isoelectric focusing (IEF); MSE mRNA expression was investigated by Northern blotting and
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). The following samples were positive for MSE protein and Northern mRNA expression: 20/24 monocytic, 4/32 myeloid, and 1/20 erythroid-megakaryocytic leukemia cell lines, but none of the 112 lymphoid leukemia or lymphoma cell lines; of the normal purified cell populations only the monocytes were positive whereas, T, B cells, and granulocytes were negative; of primary acute (myelo) monocytic leukemia cells (CD14-positive, FAB M4/M5 morphology) 14/20 were Northern mRNA and 11/14 IEF protein positive. RT-PCR revealed MSE expression in 29/49 Northern-negative lymphoid leukemia-lymphoma cell lines. The RT-PCR signals in monocytic cell lines were on average 50-fold stronger than the mostly weak trace expression in lymphoid specimens. On treatment with various biomodulators, only all-trans retinoic acid significantly upregulated MSE message and protein levels but could not induce new MSE expression in several leukemia cell lines; lipopolysaccharide and interferon-gamma increased MSE expression in normal monocytes. Analysis of DNA methylation with sensitive restriction enzymes showed no apparent regulation of gene expression by differential methylation; the MSE gene is evolutionarily conserved among mammalian species; the half-life of the human MSE transcripts was about 5-6 h. The extent of MSE expression varied greatly among different monocytic leukemia samples. However, the MSE overexpression in a significant number of specimens was not associated with gene amplification, gross structural rearrangements or point mutations within the cDNA region. Taken together, the results suggest that MSE expression is not absolutely specific for, but strongly associated with cells of the monocytic lineage; MSE is either not expressed at all or expressed at much lower levels in cells from other lineages. The biological significance, if any, of rare MSE messages in lymphoid cells detectable only by the hypersensitive RT-PCR remains unclear. Further studies on the regulation of this gene and on the physiological function of the enzyme will no doubt be informative with respect to its striking overexpression in some malignant cells and to a possible role in the pathobiology of monocytic leukemias.
...
PMID:Characterization of the monocyte-specific esterase (MSE) gene. 809 31
Activation products of the early complement components C1, C4 and C3 can be found colocalized with diffuse and fibrillar beta-amyloid (beta/A4) deposits in Alzheimer's disease (AD) brains. Immunohistochemically, C1-
esterase
inhibitor (C1-Inh) and the C1 subcomponents C1s and C1r can not, or only occasionally, be detected in plaques or in astrocytes. The present finding that C1q, C1s and C1-Inh mRNA are present in both AD and control brains suggests that the variable immunohistochemical staining results for C1r, C1s and C1-Inh are due to a rapid consumption, and that the inability to detect C1s, C1r or C1-Inh is probably due to the dissociation of C1s-C1-Inh and C1r-C1-Inh complexes from the activator-bound C1q into the fluid phase. Employing monoclonal antibodies specific for different forms of C1-Inh, no complexed C1-Inh could be found, whereas inactivated C1-Inh seems to be present in astrocytes surrounding beta/A4 plaques in AD brains. These findings, together with our finding (using
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction) that C1-Inh is locally produced in the brain, suggest that in the brain complement activation at the C1 level is regulated by C1-Inh. Immunohistochemically, no evidence for the presence of the late complement components C5, C7 and C9, or of the membrane attack complex (MAC), was found in beta/A4 plaques. In contrast to the mRNA encoding the early components, that of the late complement components appears to be hardly detectable (C7) or absent (C9). Thus, without blood-brain-barrier impairment, the late complement components are probably present at too low a concentration to allow the formation of the MAC, which is generally believed to be responsible for at least some of the neurodegenerative effects observed in AD. Therefore, the present findings support the idea that in AD, complement does not function as an inflammatory mediator through MAC formation, but through the action of early component activation products.
...
PMID:Early complement components in Alzheimer's disease brains. 877 46
We present a 15-year-old woman with acute myelomonocytic leukemia without marrow eosinophilia, M4 in the FAB classification. She was admitted to our hospital with nausea and headaches. Upon admission, the leukocyte count was 284,000/microliters with 95% leukemic cells. The bone marrow aspirate was hypercellular with 74.8% blasts and 0.2% eosinophils. Leukemic cells were positive for myeloperoxidase and
esterase
staining. Initially, the karyotype of the bone marrow cells on admission was considered to be normal. However, the PEBP2 beta/MYH11 fusion transcript was detected in the bone marrow mononuclear cells by using the
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Reevaluation of karyotypes showed a t(16;16) (p13;q22) in the bone marrow cells. After achieving complete remission, she was treated with low-dose etoposide. Chromosome analysis showed a normal karyotype and no amplified chimeric transcripts were observed. This case indicates that the molecular analysis of PEBP2 beta and MYH11 genes is a useful tool to detect inv (16) and t(16;16) which were often difficult to find, and that leukemic cells from some cases of M4 without marrow eosinophilia have these chromosome abnormalities.
...
PMID:[Detection of PEBP2 beta/MYH11 fusion mRNA in acute myelomonocytic leukemia without marrow eosinophilia]. 877 82
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