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Query: UMLS:C0001175 (
AIDS
)
120,706
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sonicates of several Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) strains isolated from
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
(
AIDS
) patients were characterized in order to study the prominent antigens of these strains. Sonicates of 6-week-old cultures were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and Western blotting. A major 12 kDa
glycoprotein
antigen was observed in all the sonicates along with other proteins ranging up to 100 kDa. Western blotting, using the 12 kDa M. leprae 'specific' murine monoclonal antibody (MAb) MLO6, indicated the presence of a determinant in the 12 kDa antigen (in all the MAC isolates studied) which was immunologically cross-reactive with the 12 kDa antigen of M. leprae. The transparent variant of MAC 101 also demonstrated MLO6 reactivity while the opaque variant did not. Polyclonal antiserum raised against MAC 101 sonicate reacted with all the MAC isolates in immunodiffusion. These observations point to the cross-reactivity between these strains and suggest that they possess a M. leprae 'specific' determinant on a cross-reacting component which could be involved in virulence.
...
PMID:Comparative antigenic analysis of Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) isolates from AIDS patients. 129 16
Herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) seroprevalence in 68 patients with
AIDS
was 77% by Western blot (immunoblot) and 44% by
glycoprotein
G-2 immunoassay. Each of 16 patients with culture-proven HSV-2 infection was positive by Western blot versus 8 by
glycoprotein
G-2 immunoassay. No differences in age, race, duration of
AIDS
, acyclovir usage, or HSV-1 seroprevalence were found to explain differences in sensitivity.
...
PMID:Comparison of the Western immunoblot assay and a glycoprotein G enzyme immunoassay for detection of serum antibodies to herpes simplex virus type 2 in patients with AIDS. 131 70
Interest in the human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) mainly derives from its associations with congenital malformations, mental retardation, and severe or fatal infections in immunosuppressed individuals such as transplant patients, tumor and
AIDS
patients. It is evidenced that there has been a need for a rapid and sensitive methods to detect an ongoing acute infection. The recent studies showed that high titers of antibody to the
glycoprotein
52kd are present in sera of patients undergoing acute HCMV infection. However, purification of individual
glycoprotein
from HCMV-infected cells is a daunting prospect. HCMV
glycoprotein
52 kd expressed via recombinant DNA techniques are a promising approach to solve this problem. In order to evaluate the diagnostic value of the recombinant
glycoprotein
52 kd antigenic code region for HCMV infection, we have used the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and recombinant DNA techniques to construct successfully the high-level expression plasmid pHCMV containing the HCMV GP-52 kd antigenic code region, with the predicted protein at levels up to 20% in total bacterial protein. The expressed protein was purified from SDS-PAGE, used as an antigen in Western-blot, and reacted with 12 cases of the positive sera, 4 cases of the negative sera, following by reaction with HRP-labelled horse IgG antibody against human. The results indicated that the approach we are using to detect antibody to HCMV acute infection are as sensitive as general serological methods such as ELISA, with the advantages of easy preparation of antigen with high quantity, and clinical practicability.
...
PMID:[Preliminary use of recombinant glycoprotein 52kd as an antigen in the diagnosis of human cytomegalovirus infection]. 132 25
Serological diagnosis of equine infectious anemia is of necessity group-reactive, i.e. based on viral core protein p26, because viral envelope components as well as the host's immune response to them undergo rapid antigenic change. Since 1970 the agar gel-immunodiffusion test ("Coggins-test") has been the diagnostic method of choice. Recently, ELISA tests have been introduced for faster and theoretically more sensitive serodiagnosis, while Western blots have been used to clarify doubtful results obtained in Coggins-tests. A commercial competitive ELISA was found to give practically equivalent results to the Coggins-test. The sensitivity of this market product is intentionally kept marginal in order to avoid false-positive "reactor horses". Another commercial ELISA, non-competitive, gave inconsistent results, creating great turmoil among horse owners when falsely positive. Caution is also indicated when interpreting Western blots. Sera of strongly positive horses gave as many as eleven bands, of medium positives fewer bands, and of the weakest reactors solely the p26 band. Single p26 banding was, however, also encountered in 5% healthy horses, in two of them consistently over time, which are accordingly considered non-specific. In order to be interpreted as positive, a Western blot for this equine lentivirus must band with its core protein plus at least one
glycoprotein
, similar to the recommended criterion for a positive reading of serum samples from
AIDS
patients.
...
PMID:Equine lentivirus, comparative studies on four serological tests for the diagnosis of equine infectious anaemia. 133 47
The binding and binding inhibition of the SIVagmTYO-7 external
glycoprotein
gp130 in micellar form to the CD4 molecule on human Molt-4 clone 8 cells was investigated. The best binding of gp130 to Molt-4 clone 8 cells occurred at pH 5.5 to 6.5 at 37 degrees C after 4 h or at room temperature after 10 h. The dissociation constant of this reaction was 0.2-0.4 nM, with both soluble CD4 or CD4 on Molt-4 clone 8 cells. This value is close to 0.15 nM determined for the antihuman CD4 monoclonal antibody 30F16H5. After partial deglycosylation of gp130, a 90 kD product arose which still bound to CD4. Fully deglycosylated gp130 of 60 kD was still immunoprecipitable, but had lost the CD4 binding activity. Lens culinaris agglutinin was able to inhibit the gp130-CD4 interaction very efficiently, while the agglutinin of Phaseolus vulgaris was half as efficient and Canavalia ensiformis was inefficient. CD4 binding of gp130 micelles was also inhibited with several anti CD4 monoclonal antibodies directed against the OKT4a epitope as well as with soluble recombinant CD4.
AIDS
Res Hum Retroviruses 1992 Jun
PMID:CD4-binding of gp130 micelles isolated from SIVagmTYO-7. 135 67
Functional studies assessed the cytolytic activity of the amino terminal peptide (FP-I; 23 residues 519-541) of the
glycoprotein
41,000 (gp41) of the
Human Immunodeficiency Virus
Type-1 (HIV-1). Synthetically prepared FP-I efficiently hemolyzed human red blood cells at 37 degrees C, with 40% lysis at 32 microM. Kinetic studies indicated that FP-I induced maximal hemolysis in 30 min, probably through tight binding of the peptide with the red cell membrane. The Phe-Leu-Gly-Phe-Leu-Gly (residues 526-531) motif in FP-I apparently plays a critical role in lysis of red cells, since no hemolytic activity was observed for an amino-acid-substituted FP-I in which the unique Phe-Leu-Gly-Phe-Leu-Gly was converted to Ala-Leu-Gly-Ala-Leu-Gly. As neither smaller constituent peptides (e.g., residues 519-524 and residues 526-536) nor a N-terminal flanking peptide (e.g., residues 512-523) induced red cell hemolysis, the entire 23-residue (519-541) sequence of FP-I may be required for hemolytic activity. FP-I was also cytolytic with CD4(+)-bearing Hut-78 cells, with 40% lysis at approx. 150 microM. These results are consistent with an earlier hypothesis that the N-terminal peptide of gp41 may partially contribute to the in vivo cytopathic actions of HIV-1 infection (Gallaher, W.R. (1987) Cell 50, 327-328).
...
PMID:The amino-terminal peptide of HIV-1 glycoprotein 41 lyses human erythrocytes and CD4+ lymphocytes. 135 63
Structural studies assessed interactions between the amino-terminal peptide (FP-I; 23 residues 519-541) of the
glycoprotein
41,000 (gp41) of
Human Immunodeficiency Virus
Type-1 (HIV-1) and human erythrocyte membranes and simulated membrane environments. Peptide binding was examined at sub-hemolytic (approx. less than 5 microM) and hemolytic (greater than or equal to 5 microM) doses (Mobley et al. (1992) Biochem. Biophys. Acta 1139, 251-256), using circular dichroism (CD) and Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) measurements with FP-I, and electron spin resonance (ESR) studies employing FP-I spin-labeled at either the amino-terminal alanine (FP-II; residue 519) or methionine (FP-III; position 537). In the sub-lytic regime, FP-I binds to both erythrocyte lipids and dispersions of SDS with high alpha-helicity. Further, ESR spectra of FP-II labeled erythrocyte ghosts indicated peptide binding to both lipid and protein. In ghost lipids, FP-II was monomeric and exhibited low polarity and rapid, anisotropic motion about its long molecular axis (i.e., alpha-helical axis), with restricted motion away from this axis. The spin-label at the amino-terminal residue (Ala-519) is insensitive to the aqueous broadening agent chromium oxalate and buried within the hydrophobic core of the membrane; the angle that the alpha-helix (residues 519-536) makes to the normal of the bilayer plane is either 0 degree or 40 degrees. Contrarily, ESR spectra of ghost lipids labeled with sub-lytic doses of FP-III indicated high mobility and polarity for the reporter group (Met-537) at the aqueous-membrane interface, as well as extreme sensitivity to chromium oxalate. At lytic FP-I doses, CD and FTIR showed both alpha-helix and beta-structure for peptide in ghost lipids or detergent, while ESR spectra of high-loaded FP-II in ghost membranes indicated peptide aggregates. Membrane aggregates of FP-I may be involved in hemolysis, and models are suggested for N-terminal gp41 peptide participation in HIV-induced fusion and cytolysis.
...
PMID:The amino-terminal peptide of HIV-1 glycoprotein 41 interacts with human erythrocyte membranes: peptide conformation, orientation and aggregation. 135 64
Immunization of mice and rats with purified external
glycoprotein
gp120 from two divergent human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) isolates resulted in the development of seven hybridomas secreting monoclonal antibodies able to recognize regions of gp120 which are common among divergent strains of HIV-1. These monoclonal antibodies cross-reacted with env glycoproteins from one African (Rutz), one Haitian (RF), and three North American viral isolates, namely IIIB, MN, and 451 by either immunoblot or radioimmunoprecipitation assays. All recognized denatured gp120 in immunoblots with the exception of one which required a conformationally intact
glycoprotein
for reactivity. The gp120 epitopes identified by these antibodies were mapped by screening of an env gene library in the lambda gt11 expression system. Three out of four epitopes were found to reside in the amino-terminal half of gp120 (Cys9 to Cys35, Thr44 to Glu72 and Val108 to Met130), the other was located in the middle region (Thr221 to Ser255). By virtue of their extent of cross-reactivity these reagents might provide a unique resource for the detection of new viral isolates related to HIV-1.
AIDS
Res Hum Retroviruses 1992 Jun
PMID:Delineation of immunoreactive, conserved regions in the external glycoprotein of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1. 138 Feb 59
The env polyprotein sequences of several simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) isolates were analyzed using computer algorithms designed to predict immunologically reactive protein segments. Peptides corresponding to predicted epitopes were synthesized and employed in peptide enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) screening of serum panels from experimentally infected macaques, as well as naturally infected, asymptomatic mangabeys and African green monkeys. Several of the peptides are recognized by a high percentage of antisera from each panel of monkeys indicating that they represent group-specific antigenic determinants of SIV. Several type-specific determinants also were identified. These peptides may be a useful tool for studying the kinetics of SIV
glycoprotein
-specific immune responses produced by infected and vaccine-protected monkeys at the epitope level.
AIDS
Res Hum Retroviruses 1992 Jun
PMID:Identification of broadly reactive continuous antigenic determinants of simian immunodeficiency virus glycoproteins. 138 Feb 62
Cells infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) induce antiviral activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from healthy donors. This activity is neutralized by anti-interferon-alpha antibody and partially destroyed at pH 2. Previous studies with enriched cell populations and monoclonal antibodies suggest that B lymphocytes are the main IFN-producing cells, and that both CD4 and HLA class II antigens are essential for IFN induction. Since the initial event of HIV infection of CD4+ cells is the interaction of the virus coat
glycoprotein
gp120 with CD4 molecule, we investigated whether gp120 is responsible for IFN induction. Using PBMC and recombinant gp120 obtained from a baculovirus expression system, dose-dependent induction of antiviral activity was observed with titers approaching 10(3) IU/ml. This induction was blocked in the presence of antibody to gp120. The antiviral activity was characterized as IFN-alpha by neutralization with IFN alpha-specific antibody. Preincubation of PBMC with anti-CD4 or the presence of soluble CD4 during incubation inhibited IFN induction, indicating that interaction of gp120 with cell-associated CD4 is responsible for this induction. Neither lymphoproliferation nor interleukin-2 (IL-2) production was observed during IFN induction. However, class G immunoglobulin secretion was enhanced by gp120, indicating that B cells are direct or indirect targets of gp120 stimulation in this experimental system. Since gp120 is shed from HIV-infected cells and occurs in the serum of
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
(
AIDS
) patients, our data suggest that this
glycoprotein
is responsible for the induction of endogenous IFN and the polyclonal activation of B cells both of which are observed in
AIDS
patients.
AIDS
Res Hum Retroviruses 1992 May
PMID:Recombinant glycoprotein 120 of human immunodeficiency virus is a potent interferon inducer. 138 Dec 3
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