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

Since the hepatitis B virus is noncytopathic, it is generally believed that the individual specific immune response determines the course of infection. The lack of data about hepatitis B virus-specific T-cell reactions in acute infection led us to investigate the specific cellular immune response of infected individuals in terms of proliferation, and gamma-interferon and lymphotoxin production. Our results demonstrate that peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMNC) from patients with acute and chronic hepatitis B respond weakly to HBsAg. In contrast, patients with acute hepatitis show a vigorous response to the nucleocapsid antigen (HBcAg) in terms of proliferation and lymphokine production, while only few chronic virus carriers gave a proliferative response. Either of the antigens could activate lymphocytes to produce gamma-interferon and lymphotoxin, cytokines which may modulate antiviral immune response.
...
PMID:Hepatitis B virus antigen-specific T-cell activation in patients with acute and chronic hepatitis B. 180 24

We studied the immunoregulatory mechanisms of responsiveness and non-responsiveness to hepatitis B (HB) vaccine by analysing the influence of HB surface antigen (HBsAg) on lymphokine- or mitogen-stimulated peripheral lymphocytes from healthy volunteers. Stimulation with pokeweed mitogen (PWM) led to a reduced production of polyclonal IgG from responder cells compared to non-responder lymphocytes. PWM did not enhance the HBs-specific IgG production from responder lymphocytes when the cells were obtained at Day 10 after the last vaccination. A slight reduction of the proliferative response was observed when lymphocytes of non-responders were stimulated with phytohaemagglutinin (PHA) or concanavalin A (Con A). Production of HBs-specific antibodies was enhanced by incubating responder lymphocytes with interleukin-4 (IL-4). The HBs antigen itself did not modulate the expression of the CD23 B-cell differentiation antigen in unseparated lymphocytes. However, CD23 expression induced by low doses of IL-4 was markedly enhanced in an antigen-specific way. Our data indicate that HBs antigen enhances the lymphokine-induced CD23 expression, whereas the mitogen-induced CD23 expression is not affected. Lymphocytes obtained from non-responders exerted a reduced expression of CD25 surface antigen compared to responder lymphocytes. Exogeneous addition of IL-2 in the absence or presence of HBsAg induced a marked enhancement of the IL-2 receptor expression in responder lymphocytes. Furthermore, no significant modulation of CD25 expression was observed in non-responder lymphocytes.
...
PMID:Effects of mitogens and lymphokines on the regulation of the immune response to HBs antigen in vitro. 214 40

The protective immune response to human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) induced by vaccination will likely include cellular immune responses. We measured lymphoproliferative responses in persons vaccinated with a baculovirus-derived recombinant gp160 candidate AIDS vaccine. Twelve volunteers received either 40 micrograms of rgp160, 80 micrograms of rgp160, hepatitis B vaccine, or alum adjuvant alone on days 0, 30, and 180. Peripheral blood lymphocytes were collected on days 0, 28, 60, 120, 210, and 270 and were cryopreserved. Lymphocyte proliferation to mitogens and rgp160 with and without interleukin-2 stimulation were determined, and lymphokine production and antibody synthesis were measured. All vaccinees responded normally to stimulation with phytohemagglutinin and concanavalin A. One of 3 vaccinees who received 40 micrograms of rgp160, 2 of 2 vaccinees who received 80 micrograms of rgp160, and no controls developed rgp160-specific lymphoproliferative responses. No differences in the production of lymphokines (interleukin-2 and interferon-gamma) after stimulation with mitogens or rgp160 were found when rgp160 vaccinees and controls were compared. We conclude that rgp160 candidate vaccine induces antigen-specific lymphoproliferative responses in humans and does not interfere with immunocompetence as measured by in vitro responses to mitogen stimulation.
...
PMID:Lymphoproliferative responses to mitogens and HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein among volunteers vaccinated with recombinant gp160. 218 3

We investigated the inhibitory effects of purified recombinant hepatitis B virus (HBV) surface antigen (rHBsAg) and core antigen (rHBcAg) on lymphokine-activated killer cell (LAK) activity. Either peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) or CD16+ CD3- LAK precursors, both of which were pre-incubated with interleukin-2 (IL-2) and rHBsAg or rHBcAg for 72 h, showed a significant decrease in LAK cytotoxicity against Daudi cells, in comparison to the results recorded in the presence of IL-2 alone, or IL-2 and E. coli extracts. This inhibitory effect was dose-dependent and was observed to be time-dependent from 24 to 72-h-cultures with these HBV antigens. This influence was not mediated with either adherent cells or other accessory cells. The proliferative reaction of either PBMCs or the LAK precursors after being cultured with IL-2 and rHBsAg or rHBcAg for 72 h was significantly diminished compared with the levels of reaction of those cells after a 72-h culture with IL-2 alone or with IL-2 and E. coli extracts. The levels of IL-2-driven IL-2 receptor (p55) expression of either PBMCs or the LAK precursors in the presence of rHBsAg or rHBcAg were higher than the levels seen in the absence of these HBV antigens. These results suggest that HBsAg and HBcAg may inhibit the induction of LAK activity by interfering with the proliferative reaction of the LAK precursors to IL-2 without inhibiting the IL-2 receptor expression of the cells. Cytofluorographic analysis of PBMCs, cultured with rIL-2, showed lower percentages of CD3+ and CD16+ cells in the presence of these HBV antigens than those in the absence of antigens.
...
PMID:Inhibitory effects of hepatitis B virus antigen on induction of lymphokine-activated killer cell activity. 225 31

By using a preparation of inactivated rabies virus, the blood mononuclear cells from five rabies vaccine recipients were stimulated in vitro in the presence of interleukin 2. T cell lines that displayed significant proliferative responses to whole rabies virus and to preparations of rabies glycoprotein and nucleocapsid were obtained from all the individuals. Other antigens, such as diphtheria and tetanus toxoids, influenza A virus, hepatitis B surface antigen, and serum albumin, failed to induce the proliferation of the T cell lines. One of these rabies-specific T cell lines was found to proliferate in response to rabies antigens only when the antigen-presenting cells expressed homologous HLA-DR antigens. The use of mouse monoclonal antibodies specific for human T cell surface markers revealed that most of the cells of these rabies-reactive lines were of the helper/inducer class of T lymphocytes. Stimulation of the T cell lines with the rabies antigens induced the production of interferon-gamma, a lymphokine with potent antiviral activity. Several T cell clones were isolated from two of these cell lines, and most of them appeared to be specific for the antigenic components of the viral nucleocapsid. Two T cell clones specific for the rabies glycoprotein were also isolated from one of these lymphocyte interleukin 2-dependent lines. Further in vitro studies with rabies-specific T cells could help us to understand in more depth the role of regulatory T cells in the human immune response to rabies virus.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of human T cell lines and clones reactive to rabies virus: antigen specificity and production of interferon-gamma. 241 20

The behaviour of the immune system during liver damage caused by chronic hepatitis delta virus (HDV) infection was evaluated by assessing, in 16 patients with HBsAg+ chronic liver disease and HDV superinfection (15 HBeAg-, 1 HBeAg+), phytohaemagglutinin (PHA)-induced interleukin-2 synthesis and interleukin-2 receptor expression, PHA and staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB)-induced gamma-interferon synthesis and, in some cases, the presence of hepatitis B virus DNA (HBV-DNA) within peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). The results were compared to those obtained in 13 patients without HBV replication (i.e., serum HBV-DNA and liver HBcAg-negative), in 15 with HBV replication (i.e., serum HBV-DNA and/or liver HBcAg-positive) with chronic liver disease without HDV superinfection, and in 15 HBsAg-negative healthy control subjects. The lymphokine pattern in HDV infection was comparable to that of healthy subjects and of HBV non-replicating patients without HDV superinfection. Interleukin-2 receptor expression and gamma-interferon synthesis were however significantly decreased in HDV-negative patients with active HBV replication. HBV-DNA was detected in PBMC from 8 of 23 patients, without any correlation with the lymphokine pattern. Our results suggest that in HDV-related chronic liver disease, immune system alterations are unlikely. HDV superinfection does not affect the occurrence of HBV-DNA sequences within the leukocytes. HBV-DNA in PBMC does not interfere with the interleukin-2 system nor with the gamma-interferon response in HBV- and HDV-related chronic liver disease.
...
PMID:Interleukin-2, interleukin-2 receptor and gamma-interferon synthesis by peripheral blood mononuclear cells in chronic hepatitis delta virus infection. 249 17

To test the hypothesis that reduced lymphocyte transformation in response to PHA in chronic hepatitis B virus infection might be due to deficient lymphokine production, lymphocyte transformation was measured in the presence or absence of exogenous interleukin 1, interleukin 2 or both, or, as a source of mixed lymphokines, supernatants from mixed lymphocyte reactions. The response to PHA was significantly impaired in patients compared to controls, but was not corrected by interleukin 1, interleukin 2 or supernatant from mixed lymphocyte reactions over a wide range of concentrations. Variation of the proportion of monocytes in culture or the addition of indomethacin had no effect on lymphocyte transformation. Thus, reduced lymphocyte proliferation in response to PHA in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus infection cannot be attributed to deficient lymphokine production or to active suppression by monocytes or prostaglandins and a direct role for the hepatitis B virus or a viral product is under investigation.
...
PMID:Failure of exogenous interleukin 1 and interleukin 2 to correct decreased lymphocyte transformation in chronic hepatitis B virus carriers. 295 84

Cell mediated immunity (CMI) to hepatitis B viral antigens was studied in BALB/mice after immunization with purified hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), or core antigen (HBcAg), with adjuvants. The two in vitro assays for cell-mediated immunity (CMI), utilizing lymph node cells, were release of interferon after exposure to antigen, and blast transformation of lymphocytes, and the in vivo assay was ear swelling at 24 h after local injection of antigen. Immunization with HBsAg or HBcAg with adjuvants induced antigen-specific cutaneous reactivity; if no adjuvants were given, immunization with HBcAg, but not HBsAg, induced cutaneous reactivity. CMI could be adoptively transferred by lymph node cells, but for only a limited period after immunization with HbsAg or HBcAg. The ability of lymph node cells from mice immunized with HBV antigens to transfer adoptively CMI correlated well with their production of interferon after challenge with antigen in vitro, but less well with blastogenesis after challenge with antigen in vitro, or with cutaneous reactivity to antigen in the donor mouse. Reliable antigen-specific lymphokine release assays, rather than blast transformation of lymphocytes or cutaneous reactivity after antigen challenge, are required to assess CMI to HBV antigens in the mouse and, by inference, in man.
...
PMID:Cell-mediated immunity to hepatitis B virus antigens in mice: correlation of in vivo and in vitro assays. 309

A novel lymphokine, which we have designated as cholestatic factor (CF), was produced from peripheral blood lymphocytes of patients with drug-induced allergic intrahepatic cholestasis by stimulation with a causative drug in the presence of the liver soluble fraction containing liver-specific lipoprotein (LSP). Marked reductions in bile flow and bile acid excretion were induced in rats by injecting CF through a mesenteric vein. In order to confirm the presence of CF in the liver tissue of patients, we attempted to detect this lymphokine by using the enzyme-labelled antibody method. As a result, CF was found in the liver tissue of eleven out of thirty-eight patients with acute intrahepatic cholestasis including one with hepatitis A type, one with hepatitis B type, two with hepatitis non-A non-B type, five with drug-induced allergic hepatitis, one with alcoholic hepatitis and one with lupoid hepatitis. In contrast, CF was undetectable in the liver tissue of patients without intrahepatic cholestasis. These results may additionally support our assumption that CF plays an important role in the induction of intrahepatic cholestasis in various liver diseases.
...
PMID:Detection of the cholestatic factor in the liver tissue of patients with acute intrahepatic cholestasis. 311 34

Abnormalities of lymphocyte proliferation in chronic hepatitis B virus infection are well documented, although the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. To determine whether these defects may be secondary to disordered lymphokine production, we have simultaneously assayed interleukin-1 and interleukin-2 production in 31 chronic carriers of the hepatitis B virus. Supernatants from mononuclear cells cultured both in the presence and absence of lipopolysaccharide contained significantly increased quantities of interleukin-1 activity in patients compared with normal controls (p less than 0.01). Lysates of monocytes from patients also contained more interleukin-1 than those of controls (p less than 0.05) in the presence of lipopolysaccharide or silica, or both. These results indicate that interleukin-1 production is markedly elevated in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus infection, whereas in contrast, interleukin-2 production was found to be reduced in these patients (p less than 0.01). As one of the biological properties of interleukin-1 is to stimulate fibroblasts to produce collagen, the relationship between fibrosis in the liver biopsy specimen and interleukin production was examined. There was a highly significant correlation (p less than 0.001) between interleukin-1 production and the severity of fibrosis, suggesting that this lymphokine may be closely related to the development of cirrhosis in such patients.
...
PMID:Interleukin-1 and interleukin-2 activity in chronic hepatitis B virus infection. 325 34


1 2 Next >>