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Query: UMLS:C0019163 (
hepatitis B
)
38,309
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Diaspirin crosslinked hemoglobin (DCLHb), a hemoglobin based oxygen carrying solution prepared from outdated human blood, is subjected to a heat treatment step to inactivate viruses in our manufacturing process. To validate the efficacy of this inactivation, we have simulated the heat treatment procedure at a reduced scale using hemoglobin solution spiked with representative viruses. Human Immuno-deficiency Virus (HIV), Cytomegalovirus (CMV), and Duck
Hepatitis B
Virus (DHBV) were used in this validation. Inoculation with concentrated virus was performed just prior to the heat treatment to determine the effect of that specific process step. Samples were taken before, during, and after heat treatment and assayed for virus titer in an attempt to assess the rate as well as the extent of virus inactivation. CMV was analyzed in a plaque assay using MRC-5 indicator cells. The titer was reduced from 3.3 x 10(6) plaque forming units (PFU) per mL to less than 5 x 10(1) PFU/mL (detection limit) within 30 minutes. DHBV was analyzed by inoculation of serially diluted samples into Pekin ducklings, followed at intervals by screening sera for DHBV DNA by dot blot hybridization. The titer was reduced from 5.0 x 10(6) duck infectious units (DIU) per mL to less than 5 x 10(0) DIU/mL (detection limit) within 1 hour. HIV titers were determined through an ELISA assay for
p24 antigen
present in peripheral blood lymphocyte cocultivation supernatants. The titer was reduced from 2.0 x 10(4) infectious units (IU) per mL to less than 2 x 10(0) IU/mL (detection limit) within 1 hour. These data indicate that high titers of these blood borne viruses are rapidly inactivated by this heat treatment process.
...
PMID:Validation of virus inactivation by heat treatment in the manufacture of diaspirin crosslinked hemoglobin. 132 42
Seven immortalized B cell clones, five of which secreted specific human monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) against
hepatitis B
, tetanus toxoid, and Rhesus D antigens, were evaluated for their susceptibility to infection by human immunodeficiency virus types 1 and 2 (HIV-1 and HIV-2). Infection was confirmed in three human MAb-producing lines by detection of infectious virus and
p24 antigen
in culture supernates, by immunofluorescence, and by detection of viral DNA in cells by polymerase chain reaction. The infectable lines were as susceptible to HIV-1 infection as several T cell lines and remained persistently infected for several months, but in contrast to T cell controls, viral cytopathic effects were not observed. Levels of unintegrated viral DNA in the HB1 B cell line were significantly lower than in the HUT78 T cell line. Cell lines that were susceptible to HIV expressed HLA DR, CD20, and CD21, whereas the uninfectable cell lines did not express any of the markers tested. CD4 was undetectable or present on a small percentage of cells in two of the infectable cell lines. However, infection with HIV-1 was blocked more efficiently in B cells than in T cells by soluble CD4, anti-CD4 MAb, and dextran sulphate. The effect of HIV infection on human MAb secretion was variable, being reduced on a per-cell basis in one line, increased in another, and unchanged in a third.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Susceptibility of human monoclonal antibody-producing B cell lines to infection by human immunodeficiency virus. 133 86
HBsAg is known to bind to human serum albumin polymerized by glutaraldehyde, human serum albumin has been found in preparations of HBsAg by several investigators. However, it is not yet known whether natural human serum albumin binds to
hepatitis B
virus under physiological conditions. We studied the binding between natural or recombinant HBsAg and monomeric human serum albumin by immunological, biochemical and biophysical methods. The binding capacity of 20-nm HBs spheres was variable but ranged up to six molecules HSA/sphere. A reversible binding site for human serum albumin was exclusively localized in the preS2 domain, whereas the S domain was inactive in vitro. Human serum albumin copurified with HBsAg of human origin during gel chromatography or sucrose-gradient centrifugation. This human serum albumin was monomeric in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The preS2-bound part of the human serum albumin could be removed from HBsAg by high-salt, such as CsCl centrifugation, but another part could only be removed by treatment with a disulfide cleaving reagent. Most of this covalently bound human serum albumin was retained at the HBsAg particle after complete cleavage of medium-sized HBs protein with trypsin. This indicates a second way in which albumin binds irreversible to cysteine(s) of the small HBs protein (SHBs,
P24
and GP27).
...
PMID:Interaction between hepatitis B surface proteins and monomeric human serum albumin. 216 67
Five HIV
p24 antigen
(p24Ag)-positive patients received alpha interferon during trials of therapy for
hepatitis B
. Four of these showed marked falls in p24Ag during treatment. One of the two patients who became p24Ag-negative [corrected] developed anti-p24 antibodies (anti-p24). Five out of nine p24Ag-negative HIV-antibody-positive patients showed a rise in anti-p24 titres during interferon therapy, whereas only two out of six untreated controls showed a similar rise. This study provides evidence that alpha interferon has anti-HIV activity in vivo.
...
PMID:Suppression of HIV p24 antigen and induction of HIV anti-p24 antibody by alpha interferon in patients with chronic hepatitis B. 314 70
The large (pre-S1), middle (pre-S2) and major (
P24
) polypeptides of HBsAg have been defined in detail, but their role in
hepatitis B
virus infection is not known. Therefore, we studied the expression of pre-S1, pre-S2 and
P24
in the liver of 15 patients with acute or chronic hepatitis B virus infection using monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies in a double staining immunofluorescence method. The pre-S and major HBsAg polypeptides were co-expressed in the hepatocyte cytoplasm of all patients except for one case of chronic active hepatitis and cirrhosis. HBcAg was present in hepatocyte nuclei of nine patients suggestive of active
hepatitis B
virus replication. These studies support the hypothesis that the pre-S polypeptides represent essential components of the envelope of
hepatitis B
virus.
...
PMID:Demonstration of pre-S polypeptides of hepatitis B virus in infected livers. 353 42
Hepatitis delta virus (HDV)-associated particles were purified from the serum of an experimentally infected chimpanzee by size chromatography and by density centrifugation. Hepatitis delta antigen (HDAg) was detected after mild detergent treatment at a column elution volume corresponding to 36-nm particles and banded at a density of 1.25 g/ml. The serum had an estimated titer of 10(9) to 10(10) HDV-associated particles and had only a 10-fold excess of
hepatitis B
surface antigen (HBsAg) not associated with HDAg. Therefore, HDV appears to be much more efficiently packed and secreted than is its helper virus,
hepatitis B
virus (HBV), which is usually accompanied by a 1,000-fold excess of HBsAg. The protein compositions of the HDAg-containing particles were analyzed by immunoblotting with HDAg-, HBsAg-, and
hepatitis B
core antigen-specific antisera and monoclonal antibodies to HBV surface gene products. The HBsAg envelope of HDAg contained approximately 95%
P24
/GP27s, 5% GP33/36s, and 1% P39/GP42s proteins. This protein composition was more similar to that of the 22-nm particles of HBsAg than to that of complete HBV. The significant amount of GP33/36s suggests that the HBsAg component of the HDV-associated particle carries the albumin receptor. Two proteins of 27 and 29 kilodaltons which specifically bound antibody to HDAg but not HBV-specific antibodies were detected in the interior of the 36-nm particle. Since these proteins were structural components of HDAg and were most likely coded for by HDV, they were designated P27d and P29d.
...
PMID:Hepatitis delta virus: protein composition of delta antigen and its hepatitis B virus-derived envelope. 370 32
P24
, P30, and P39, the three major surface antigens of the envelope of
hepatitis B
virus, are co-carboxy-terminal proteins with different amino-terminal extensions. We prompted expression of these proteins in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells by placing the appropriate coding sequence(s) under the control of the simian virus 40 early promoter.
P24
and P30 formed 22-nm particles which were efficiently secreted. In contrast, P39 accumulated in a perinuclear structure, presumably the Golgi complex, and was not secreted. Coexpressing P39 and
P24
resulted in the localization of both in the perinuclear region and restricted the secretion of
P24
. We found that P39 must be expressed at a relatively low level to allow efficient secretion of
P24
in typical spherical particles. We hypothesize that P39, by inhibiting the formation of spherical particles, helps to induce formation of filamentous particles and mature
Hepatitis B
virus.
...
PMID:Regulation of secretion of the hepatitis B virus major surface antigen by the preS-1 protein. 380 98
HBsAg from plasma of chronic hepatitis B carriers was purified by affinity chromatography using a mouse monoclonal antibody specific for HBsAg. Elution with buffer at two different pH values separated HBsAg into two fractions: one contained high amounts of immune complexes associated with HBsAg; the other contained larger quantities of the HBsAg polypeptides
P24
and GP27 and only small amounts of immunoglobulin. When compared for effects on stimulating the proliferative response of freshly isolated lymphocytes and an HBsAg-specific T cell clone, the HBsAg fraction containing a high proportion of immunoglobulin was much more potent than HBsAg with low amounts of immunoglobulins or pure HBsAg, which was isolated from the culture supernatant of the human hepatoma cell line (PLC/PRF/5). The plasma-derived HBsAg with low amounts of complexed immunoglobulins became more immunogenic in the presence of an anti-HBsAg monoclonal IgG. The present results, combined with earlier findings, suggest that HBsAg associated with immune complexes is a more potent stimulator of T cells than purer HBsAg preparations due to an increase in the efficiency of monocytes to capture the antigen through binding to immune complexes for subsequent processing and presentation of the antigen. These observations could be of relevance for the preparation of effective
hepatitis B
vaccines from recombinant DNA and peptide synthesis technologies.
...
PMID:HBsAg-serum protein complexes stimulate immune T lymphocytes more efficiently than do pure HBsAg. 623 96
The sequence of
hepatitis B
virus DNA contains an open reading frame which codes for a not-yet-identified protein of at least 389 amino acids. Only the products starting at the third (GP33/GP36) or the fourth (
P24
/GP27) initiation signal have been characterized as components of the viral surface antigen. We found a larger protein, P39, and its glycosylated form, GP42, in
hepatitis B
virus particles and viral surface antigen filaments. Immunological cross-reactions showed that P39/GP42 is partially homologous to
P24
/GP27 and GP33/GP36. The unique portion of its sequence bound monoclonal antibodies which had been induced by immunization with
hepatitis B
virus particles. Proteolytic cleavage patterns and subtype-specific size differences suggested that the sequence of P39 starts with the first initiation signal of the open reading frame. Its amino-terminal part (pre-s coded) is exposed at the viral surface and, probably, is highly immunogenic. A model is presented of how the open reading frame for the viral envelope leads to defined amounts of three different proteins.
...
PMID:Large surface proteins of hepatitis B virus containing the pre-s sequence. 649 55
The 20-nm particles of
hepatitis B
surface antigen (HBsAg) contain two minor glycoproteins, GP33 and GP36, which are probably encoded at their 55 N-terminal amino acids by the pre-s region of the viral DNA. Their 226 C-terminal amino acids are identical to the major protein
P24
. The 20-nm particles contained more GP33 and GP36 when the blood had a high HBsAg concentration. They were also found in relatively high amounts in HBsAg filaments and virions. Treatment with glycosidase and trypsin showed that the mannose rich glycan and the N-terminal portion of GP33 and GP36 were exposed at the surface of the HBsAg particles. The 20-nm particles containing much GP33 and GP36 did not induce higher anti-HBs titers in guinea pigs than those particles almost devoid of them.
...
PMID:Characterization of pre-s gene products in hepatitis B surface antigen. 665 88
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