Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019163 (hepatitis B)
38,309 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

It is well known that several inflammatory cytokines can modulate hepatocellular gene expression in a complex physiological process known as the hepatic acute-phase response. Since hepatitis B virus (HBV) characteristically induces a vigorous lymphomononuclear inflammatory response in the liver during acute and chronic hepatitis, it is possible that hepatocellular HBV gene expression may also be modulated by one or more of the cytokines produced by these cells. Using bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) as a surrogate inducer of inflammatory cytokines in vivo, we have tested this hypothesis in a transgenic mouse model system. In experiments with two independent transgenic mouse lineages that express the HBV envelope region under the control of either HBV or cellular promoters, we observed a 50 to 80% reduction in the hepatic steady-state content of a 2.1-kb HBV mRNA following administration of a single intraperitoneal dose of LPS. The regulatory influence of several inflammatory cytokines known to be induced by LPS was also examined in this system. The negative regulatory effect of LPS was consistently reproduced by the administration of a single nontoxic dose of tumor necrosis factor alpha, and it was occasionally observed following the administration of high doses of alpha interferon and interleukin-6, while no effect was detectable in response to high-dose interleukin-1 alpha or to gamma interferon. These observations suggest that tumor necrosis factor alpha and perhaps other cytokines may activate a heretofore unsuspected intracellular pathway that negatively regulates HBV gene expression. The intracellular mechanism(s) responsible for this effect and its pathophysiologic relevance remain to be elucidated.
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PMID:Tumor necrosis factor alpha negatively regulates hepatitis B virus gene expression in transgenic mice. 158 37

The mRNAs of transiently expressed cytokine genes contain AUUUA-rich sequences in the 3' untranslated regions. In order to examine whether the AU-specific endoribonuclease V (EC 3.1.27.8) described previously by us transinactivates those mRNA species, we introduced a 51-nucleotide ATTTA sequence from tumor necrosis factor into the 3' untranslated region of beta-globin gene. Transcripts of that construct, synthesized in vitro, were prone to endoribonuclease V digestion at those AU-rich sequences. Stimulation of human macrophages with lipopolysaccharide resulted in a shift of the association state of the enzyme from the nuclear matrix-associated to the free form. This shift was strongly prevented by the hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) and more weakly by hepatitis B nucleocapsid antigen and hepatitis B antigen of the X region. HBsAg and, to a lesser extent, hepatitis B nucleocapsid antigen and hepatitis B antigen of the X region inhibited the release of alpha interferon, tumor necrosis factor alpha, and granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor, while it had no effect on interleukin-1 production from stimulated macrophages. Using the human hepatoma cell line PLC/PRF/5, we provide further experimental evidence that endoribonuclease V acts in trans as a posttranscriptional inactivator for nuclear matrix-associated cytokine transcripts. These results suggest that those cytokine transcripts which contain reiterated (overlapping) AUUUA sequences are degraded by nuclear matrix-associated endoribonuclease V. This degradation was comparably high in cells incubated with HBsAg or cells which produced this antigen.
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PMID:Immunosuppressive function of hepatitis B antigens in vitro: role of endoribonuclease V as one potential trans inactivator for cytokines in macrophages and human hepatoma cells. 215 63

Approximately 5% of the world population is infected by the hepatitis B virus (HBV) that causes a necroinflammatory liver disease of variable duration and severity. Chronically infected patients with active liver disease carry a high risk of developing cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. The immune response to HBV-encoded antigens is responsible both for viral clearance and for disease pathogenesis during this infection. While the humoral antibody response to viral envelope antigens contributes to the clearance of circulating virus particles, the cellular immune response to the envelope, nucleocapsid, and polymerase antigens eliminates infected cells. The class I- and class II-restricted T cell responses to the virus are vigorous, polyclonal, and multispecific in acutely infected patients who successfully clear the virus, and the responses are relatively weak and more narrowly focused in chronically infected patients who do not. The pathogenetic and antiviral potential of the cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response to HBV has been demonstrated by the induction of a severe necroinflammatory liver disease following the adoptive transfer of HBsAg-specific CTL into HBV transgenic mice, and by the noncytolytic suppression of viral gene expression and replication in the same animals by a posttranscriptional mechanism mediated by interferon gamma, tumor necrosis factor alpha, and interleukin 2. The dominant cause of viral persistence during HBV infection is the development of a weak antiviral immune response to the viral antigens. While neonatal tolerance probably plays an important role in viral persistence in patients infected at birth, the basis for poor responsiveness in adult-onset infection is not well understood and requires further analysis. Viral evasion by epitope inactivation and T cell receptor antagonism may contribute to the worsening of viral persistence in the setting of an ineffective immune response, as can the incomplete downregulation of viral gene expression and the infection of immunologically privileged tissues. Chronic liver cell injury and the attendant inflammatory and regenerative responses create the mutagenic and mitogenic stimuli for the development of DNA damage that can cause hepatocellular carcinoma. Elucidation of the immunological and virological basis for HBV persistence may yield immunotherapeutic and antiviral strategies to terminate chronic HBV infection and reduce the risk of its life-threatening sequellae.
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PMID:Hepatitis B virus immunopathogenesis. 761 25

In patients with chronic renal failure alterations in monokine production are a common feature. Their clinical relevance has not yet been proven. We show here a correlation between an overproduction of interleukin-(IL)-6 and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha) upon stimulation with LPS by mononuclear cells in vitro and the clinical grade of immunodeficiency found in these patients. Higher levels of IL-6 and TNF alpha were correlated with an immunocompromized state, that is, non-responsiveness to hepatitis B vaccination, whereas patients with a better immune competence showed the same levels of these cytokines as healthy controls. Only the patients with a good immune function showed a high secretion of IL-10. The feedback mechanism of IL-10 for reducing monokine synthesis seems to be intact in these patients. Thus the secretion of IL-10 might be regarded as a compensatory mechanism which controls monokine induction by chronic renal failure and hemodialysis treatment. Immunocompromized patients who are unresponsive to hepatitis B vaccination seem to be unable to enhance IL-10 synthesis for control of monokine overproduction. This results in higher levels of IL-6 and TNF alpha that might be involved in the pathogenesis of reduced immune defense.
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PMID:Production of interleukin-6, tumor necrosis factor alpha and interleukin-10 in vitro correlates with the clinical immune defect in chronic hemodialysis patients. 772 41

We have recently reported that administration of recombinant tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) to hepatitis B virus (HBV) transgenic mice reduces the hepatic steady-state content of HBV-specific mRNA by up to 80% in the absence of liver cell injury. In the current study, we analyzed the regulatory effects of several other inflammatory cytokines in the same transgenic model system. Hepatic HBV mRNA content was reduced by up to 90% following administration of a single noncytopathic dose (100,000 U) of interleukin 2 (IL-2). Comparable effects were produced by administration of alpha and beta interferons (IFN-alpha and IFN-beta), but only after multiple injections of at least 500,000 U per mouse. Importantly, the regulatory effect of IL-2 was completely blocked by the prior administration of antibodies to tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha), which did not block the effect of IFN-alpha or IFN-beta. In contrast to these observations, recombinant IFN-gamma, IL-1, IL-3, IL-6, TNF-beta, transforming growth factor beta, and granulocyte-monocyte colony-stimulating factor were inactive in this system. These results suggest that selected inflammatory cytokines can down-regulate HBV gene expression in vivo by at least two pathways, one that is dependent on TNF-alpha and another that is not. These results imply that antigen-nonspecific products of the intrahepatic HBV-specific inflammatory response may contribute to viral clearance or persistence during HBV infection.
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PMID:Interleukin-2 and alpha/beta interferon down-regulate hepatitis B virus gene expression in vivo by tumor necrosis factor-dependent and -independent pathways. 810 92

During hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, distinct host-virus interactions may establish the patterns of viral clearance and persistence and the extent of virus-associated pathology. It is generally thought that HBV-specific class I-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) play a critical role in this process by destroying infected hepatocytes. This cytopathic mechanism, however, could be lethal if most of the hepatocytes are infected. In the current study, we demonstrate that class I-restricted HBV-specific CTLs profoundly suppress hepatocellular HBV gene expression in HBV transgenic mice by a noncytolytic process, the strength of which greatly exceeds the cytopathic effect of the CTLs in magnitude and duration. We also show that the regulatory effect of the CTLs is initially mediated by interferon gamma and tumor necrosis factor alpha, is delayed in onset, and becomes independent of these cytokines shortly after it begins. The data indicate that the anti-viral CTL response activates a complex regulatory cascade that inhibits hepatocellular HBV gene expression without killing the cell. The extent to which this mechanism contributes to viral clearance or viral persistence during HBV infection remains to be determined.
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PMID:Cytotoxic T lymphocytes inhibit hepatitis B virus gene expression by a noncytolytic mechanism in transgenic mice. 817 Sep 85

We have recently demonstrated that tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and interleukin-2 (IL-2) downregulate the hepatic steady-state content of hepatitis B virus (HBV) mRNA in vivo in HBV-transgenic mice and that the IL-2 effect is mediated by TNF-alpha. In the current study, we demonstrate that IL-2-induced downregulation of hepatic HBV 2.1-kb mRNA is not due to changes in the transcription rate or the intranuclear maturation or export of this transcript but that it is selectively and profoundly depleted from the cytoplasm of the liver cells in vivo following IL-2 administration. Collectively, these results suggest that IL-2 alters the steady-state content of hepatic HBV mRNA by a posttranscriptional mechanism in vivo, that this effect is mediated by TNF-alpha, and that it probably reflects increased cytoplasmic degradation of the viral transcript.
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PMID:Interleukin-2 downregulates hepatitis B virus gene expression in transgenic mice by a posttranscriptional mechanism. 823 Apr 65

The interleukin-8 promoter is transcriptionally activated by interleukin-1, tumor necrosis factor alpha, phorbol myristate acetate, or hepatitis B virus X protein through a sequence located between positions -91 and -71. This region contains an NF-kappa B-like and a C/EBP-like binding site. We show here that several members of the NF-kappa B family, including p65, p50, p52, and c-Rel, can bind to this region, confirming an authentic NF-kappa B binding site in the interleukin-8 promoter. Further, C/EBP binds only weakly to the interleukin-8 promoter site. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays with proteins overexpressed in COS cells and with nuclear extracts from tumor necrosis factor alpha-stimulated HeLa cells demonstrated a strong cooperative binding of C/EBP to its site when NF-kappa B is bound to its adjacent binding site. Transfection studies lead to a model that suggests a highly complex regulation of interleukin-8 gene expression at multiple levels: independent binding of C/EBP and NF-kappa B to their respective sites, cooperative binding of C/EBP and NF-kappa B to DNA, and positive synergistic activation through the C/EBP binding site and inhibition through the NF-kappa B binding site by combinations of C/EBP and NF-kappa B. Thus, the ultimate regulation of interleukin-8 gene expression depends on the ratio of cellular C/EBP and NF-kappa B.
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PMID:Distinct mechanisms for regulation of the interleukin-8 gene involve synergism and cooperativity between C/EBP and NF-kappa B. 841 6

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is thought to be controlled by virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). We have recently shown that HBV-specific CTL can abolish HBV replication noncytopathically in the liver of transgenic mice by secreting tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and interferon gamma (IFN-gamma) after antigen recognition. We now demonstrate that hepatocellular HBV replication is also abolished noncytopathically during lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) infection, and we show that this process is mediated by TNF-alpha and IFN-alpha/beta produced by LCMV-infected hepatic macrophages. These results confirm the ability of these inflammatory cytokines to abolish HBV replication; they elucidate the mechanism likely to be responsible for clearance of HBV in chronically infected patients who become superinfected by other hepatotropic viruses; they suggest that pharmacological activation of intrahepatic macrophages may have therapeutic value in chronic HBV infection; and they raise the possibility that conceptually similar events may be operative in other viral infections as well.
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PMID:Viral cross talk: intracellular inactivation of the hepatitis B virus during an unrelated viral infection of the liver. 864 48

Interleukin-12 (IL-12) is a heterodimeric cytokine produced by antigen-presenting cells that has the ability to induce gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) secretion by T and natural killer cells and to generate normal Th1 responses. These properties suggest that IL-12 may play an important role in the immune response to many viruses, including hepatitis B virus (HBV). Recently, we have shown that HBV-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes inhibit HBV replication in the livers of transgenic mice by a noncytolytic process that is mediated in part by IFN-gamma. In the current study, we demonstrated that the same antiviral response can be initiated by recombinant murine IL-12 and we showed that the antiviral effect of IL-12 extends to extrahepatic sites such as the kidney. Southern blot analyses revealed the complete disappearance of HBV replicative intermediates from liver and kidney tissues at IL-12 doses that induce little or no inflammation in these tissues. In addition, immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated the disappearance of cytoplasmic hepatitis B core antigen from both tissues after IL-12 treatment, suggesting that IL-12 either prevents the assembly or triggers the degradation of the nucleocapsid particles within which HBV replication occurs. Importantly, we demonstrated that although IFN-gamma, tumor necrosis factor alpha, and IFN-alpha/beta mRNA are induced in the liver and kidney after IL-12 administration, the antiviral effect of IL-12 is mediated principally by its ability to induce IFN-gamma production in this model. These results suggest that IL-12, through its ability to induce IFN-gamma, probably plays an important role in the antiviral immune response to HBV during natural infection. Further, since relatively nontoxic doses of recombinant IL-12 profoundly inhibit HBV replication in the liver and extrahepatic sites in this model, IL-12 may have therapeutic value as an antiviral agent for the treatment of chronic HBV infection.
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PMID:Interleukin-12 inhibits hepatitis B virus replication in transgenic mice. 906 Jun 87


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