Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.7 (DNA polymerase)
17,007 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In ten carriers positive for chronic hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg), and DNA polymerase, the authors investigated the efficacy of the combination therapy consisting of glycyrrhizin withdrawal and human fibroblast interferon (locally produced). Glycyrrhizin was given for four weeks and was stopped without tapering off the dose. Human fibroblast interferon was given continuously. Thirty-six weeks after the end of this treatment, three of the ten patients were HBeAg negative but not anti-HBe positive, and in one of these three DNA polymerase became undetectable. Another patient showed a loss of DNA polymerase with HBeAg. Transaminase levels decreased in nine of the patients. Glycyrrhizin appeared to act as an antiviral agent in four patients and had a corticoid-like effect in three. DNA polymerase decreased remarkably after interferon administration, and serum transaminase levels increased. No side effects were reported in patients receiving glycyrrhizin. In contrast, almost all patients receiving human fibroblast interferon had influenza-like symptoms, which, although initially severe, decreased with subsequent injections of interferon. Thus this combination therapy seems safe and effective.
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PMID:Combination therapy of glycyrrhizin withdrawal and human fibroblast interferon for chronic hepatitis B. 249 83

The effect of interferon (IFN) on hepatitis B virus (HBV) replication was investigated in a stable expression system, using HepG2 cells transfected with recombinant HBV DNA. IFN was found to cause a marked reduction in the levels of both minus and plus strands of HBV DNA from core particles in the cytoplasm. Neither HBV DNA from virus particles nor the HBV surface antigen in the culture medium primarily underwent change in quantity by treatment with IFN, as was also found for HBV mRNAs and the HBV core antigen/HBV e antigen in the cytoplasm. IFN exerted no influence on HBV DNA synthesis by endogenous DNA polymerase in the core particle fraction. From these findings, it would appear that IFN inhibits HBV replication by blocking some step in the pregenome RNA-primed assembly of core particles.
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PMID:Interferon inhibits hepatitis B virus replication in a stable expression system of transfected viral DNA. 249 31

Twenty patients with HBe antigen positive, chronic active hepatitis receiving interferon-beta (HuIFN-beta) for 4 weeks were studied. Within the follow-up period (12.3 +/- 2.0 months; mean +/- SD), nine patients were seroconverted to anti-HBe positive and/or HBe antigen negative. In vitro synthesis of interleukin-1 (IL-1), interleukin-2 (IL-2) and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) were determined from supernatants of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) cultured in the presence of lipopolysaccharide or concanavalin-A. PBMCs from patients before IFN-beta treatment secreted markedly reduced levels of IL-1 (p less than 0.01) and IFN-gamma (p less than 0.01) as compared with healthy controls. However, IFN-gamma synthesis in the patients was significantly increased (p less than 0.05) along with the IFN-beta treatment. IL-2 synthesis was similar in chronic active hepatitis B patients before and during IFN-beta treatment when compared to normal controls, but after the therapy, the elevation of IL-2 synthesis was observed in accordance with the elevation of serum AST in two cases. Nine patients who seroconverted to anti-HBe positive and/or HBe antigen negative showed the significantly lower levels of DNA polymerase before IFN-beta treatment than non-responder group. There were no other differences in sex, age, serum AST, histologic activities and cytokine production in vitro between two groups. These results indicate the presence of immunologic deficiencies in patients with HBe antigen positive chronic active hepatitis and give the rationales for the use of interferon treatment on immunologic basis.
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PMID:[In vitro cytokine production in patients with HBe antigen positive chronic active hepatitis receiving interferon-beta]. 250 83

Thirty-five patients with active chronic hepatitis B (ACH-B) were evaluated. They were in stable replicative phase (HBeAg +; DNA polymerase and ALT stable in two determinations at least one month apart) and had not been infected by delta virus or HIV-1. Thirty-four patients were heterosexual and no patient was a drug abuser except one. The 23 initial cases were followed up for 15 months without therapy. The subsequent 12 cases were treated with maximal doses of 2.5 megaunits/m2 of lymphoblastoid alpha interferon (IFN-L) daily for two weeks and three times a week during 10 more weeks. While in the controls only two cases (8.69%) lost the DNA-polymerase activity and HBeAg, 5 treated patients (41.66%; p less than 0.05) developed seroconversion to nonreplicative phase. No patient from the control series lost the HBsAg; however, this happened in 2 treated patients (16.66%). These results show that IFN-L is effective in heterosexual patients with ACH-B in replicative phase without delta virus or HIV-I co-infection.
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PMID:[Treatment of chronic hepatitis B with lymphoblastoid alpha interferon]. 261 34

Serological markers of hepatitis B virus (HBV) replication were assessed in a randomized, controlled trial of prednisone withdrawal followed by alpha-interferon in the treatment of chronic hepatitis B. HBV DNA levels in more than 700 serial serum samples from 41 patients were determined by a sensitive and quantitative solution hybridization assay. Results were compared with HBV DNA polymerase (DNAp) activity and hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) in 21 untreated controls and 20 treated patients. Among treated patients, the mean pretherapy HBV DNA values were higher in nonresponders than in responders. During prednisone treatment, DNA levels increased an average of 2.1-fold in responders and 1.4-fold in nonresponders. During the 2-week rest interval between prednisone and interferon, DNA values fell an average of 57% in responders. In contrast, the mean DNA values in nonresponders did not change during the same interval. This early distinction between responders and nonresponders was not apparent from DNAp or HBeAg results. During interferon treatment, HBV DNA became undetectable in responders and remained negative during a 1-year follow-up. DNA in nonresponders declined to 14% of baseline during interferon treatment but increased to pretherapy levels after treatment. DNAp values generally paralleled HBV DNA values, but DNAp activity showed more variability and lower sensitivity than did the hybridization assay results. HBeAg values varied independently of HBV DNA and DNAp with a much delayed decline in responders. These results indicate that HBV DNA, when measured quantitatively by a sensitive solution hybridization assay, is an early predictor of the effects of antiviral agents on replication.
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PMID:Quantitation of hepatitis B viral DNA by solution hybridization: comparison with DNA polymerase and hepatitis B e antigen during antiviral therapy. 265 8

Twenty-one adult patients with chronic hepatitis B and active viral replication as indicated by the presence of hepatitis Be antigen (HBeAg), increased DNA polymerase (DNAp) and positive hepatitis B virus DNA (HBV-DNA) for more than 6 months, were entered into a prospective trial of recombinant human interferon therapy. Ten patients had chronic persistent or chronic lobular hepatitis, 8 chronic active hepatitis and 3 postnecrotic cirrhosis. All cases were treated with 5 x 10(6) units of recombinant interferon alfa-2B given subcutaneously every other day for 12 weeks. During treatment, 18 patients (86%) showed a significant reduction of DNAp levels, which reached normal values in 10 patients (48%). Viral replication was controlled over a 10-month follow-up period in 7 out of 21 patients (33%). Of these 7, five patients became HBeAg negative and HBeAb positive. HBsAg disappeared in one patient. The only serious adverse effect was thrombocytopenia in one patient in whom rapid recovery occurred when interferon was withdrawn. Treatment was also terminated in a second patient because of local reactions at the injection sites occurring after 10 weeks of therapy. Our data indicate that relatively small doses of recombinant alfa-2B interferon given during a 12-week period induce a significant reduction in viral replication and might approximately triple the spontaneous seroconversion rate observed in patients with chronic hepatitis B.
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PMID:Prospective trial of recombinant leucocyte interferon in chronic hepatitis B: a 10-month follow-up study. 268 91

Patients with chronic hepatitis B with active viral replication had a significantly greater fall in DNA polymerase and hepatitis-Be antigen when treated with interferon and acyclovir together than when treated with either interferon or acyclovir alone. Apart from fatigue and thrombophlebitis, tolerance of the combination therapy was excellent. The combination therapy appears the most promising for conversion of a state of active viral replication into virus latency.
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PMID:Acyclovir enhances the antiviral effect of interferon in chronic hepatitis B. 286 16

24 Chinese children aged 1.5-5 years and positive for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg), hepatitis B virus DNA polymerase (HBV DNAp), and HBV DNA on at least three occasions in the 6 months before the trial were randomised to receive either vitamin B complex or intramuscular recombinant alpha 2-interferon (r-IFN) ('Roferon') 10 X 10(6) IU/m2 thrice weekly for 12 weeks. In all 12 subjects receiving r-IFN, HBV DNAp and HBV DNA levels fell during the course of r-IFN injections. Within 4 weeks of cessation of r-IFN injection, the HBV DNAp and HBV DNA returned to pre-trial levels except in 2 subjects, in whom loss of HBV DNAp and HBV DNA was sustained for up to 18 months from onset of the trial. 1 child lost HBeAg at 18 months. 2 of the 12 children in the placebo group also had a sustained loss of HBV DNAp and HBV DNA during the 18 months, with 1 child losing HBeAg at 18 months. All 24 subjects remained positive for HBsAg. r-IFN produced very slight side-effects except for pyrexia and the "flu" syndrome, both of which showed rapid tachyphylaxis. In the dose given r-IFN was safe but had no long-term beneficial effects on HBsAg carriage in Chinese children.
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PMID:Placebo-controlled trial of recombinant alpha 2-interferon in Chinese HBsAg-carrier children. 288 81

A series of oligonucleotides, including two polynucleotides of 33 bases long, were synthesized by a solid-phase phosphotriester method. Potassium salt of 3-nitro-1,2,4-triazole in the presence of 18-crown-6 ether was used as nucleophilic catalyst. The partly complementary polynucleotides were elongated by DNA-polymerase I (Klenow fragment) to the full duplex, which was digested with SalGI and was inserted into a plasmid pUR222. Phe synthesized DNA fragment precedes the gene of human gamma-interferon in the chromosome and contains the site for mRNA binding to ribosome.
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PMID:[Synthesis and cloning of a DNA fragment containing a probable site for eukaryotic mRNA binding to ribosome]. 301 54

Sera from 31 HBsAg-positive Chinese patients with inoperable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) were tested for hepatitis B virus DNA (HBV DNA) by means of dot hybridisation and Southern blot technique. HBV DNA probes were prepared from human plasma. Eighteen of the patients were HBeAb-positive, 12 were HBeAg-positive and one case had neither marker. Serial specimens were obtained from 16 cases over 5-42 weeks, while the patients were treated with recombinant leukocyte A interferon (rIFN-A) or adriamycin. Seven patients (2 HBeAg-positive, 5 HBeAb-positive) were positive for HBV DNA. In two patients HBV DNA and HBV DNA polymerase (DNAp) appeared in serum weeks after rIFN-A or adriamycin treatment was started. In two other cases, HBV DNA that was initially present disappeared during rIFN-A treatment. In a fifth patient HBV DNA persisting after adriamycin treatment diminished after change of treatment to rIFN-A. With one possible exception the HBV DNA detectable by Southern blot technique was composed chiefly of sequences 2.2-3.2 kb size indicating the presence of unintegrated DNA forms. DNAp activities were raised in the presence of HBV DNA in 4 patients. These findings show that HBV replication can be activated or suppressed in advanced HCC. Treatment with rIFN-A may have been effective in suppressing HBV DNA synthesis, but the number of cases studied was too small to arrive at a definite conclusion on this point.
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PMID:Serum hepatitis B viral DNA in HBsAg-positive hepatocellular carcinoma treated with interferon or adriamycin. 301 83


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