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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We reported (Yarasheski KE, Zachwieja JJ, Gischler J, Crowley J, Horgan MM, and Powderly WG. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 275: E577-E583, 1998) that AIDS muscle wasting was associated with an inappropriately low rate of muscle protein synthesis and an elevated glutamine rate of appearance (Ra Gln). We hypothesized that high plasma
HIV
RNA caused dysregulation of muscle amino acid metabolism. We determined whether a reduction in
HIV
RNA (> or =1 log) increased muscle protein synthesis rate and reduced R(a) Gln and muscle
proteasome
activity in 10 men and 1 woman (22-57 yr, 60-108 kg, 17-33 kg muscle) with advanced
HIV
(CD4 = 0-311 cells/microl;
HIV
RNA = 10-375 x 10(3) copies/ml). We utilized stable isotope tracer methodologies ([13C]Leu and [15N]Gln) to measure the fractional rate of mixed muscle protein synthesis and plasma Ra Gln in these subjects before and 4 mo after initiating their first or a salvage antiretroviral therapy regimen. After treatment, median CD4 increased (98 vs. 139 cells/microl, P = 0.009) and median
HIV
RNA was reduced (155,828 vs. 100 copies/ml, P = 0.003). Mixed muscle protein synthesis rate increased (0.062 +/- 0.005 vs. 0.078 +/- 0.006%/h, P = 0.01), Ra Gln decreased (387 +/- 33 vs. 323 +/- 15 micromol.kg fat-free mass(-1).h(-1), P = 0.04), and muscle
proteasome
chymotrypsin-like catalytic activity was reduced 14% (P = 0.03). Muscle mass was only modestly increased (1 kg, P = not significant). We estimated that, for each 10,000 copies/ml reduction in
HIV
RNA, approximately 3 g of additional muscle protein are synthesized per day. These findings suggest that reducing
HIV
RNA increases muscle protein synthesis and reduces muscle proteolysis, but muscle protein synthesis relative to whole body protein synthesis rate is not restored to normal, so muscle mass is not substantially increased.
...
PMID:Reducing plasma HIV RNA improves muscle amino acid metabolism. 1536 96
While the Vif protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is essential for viral replication in non-permissive cells, it is rapidly degraded intracellularly. We have previously suggested that the rapid turn-over of Vif is biologically meaningful to prevent detrimental effects of this protein at high expression levels. We now studied the mechanism of Vif degradation by examining the blocking effect of protease inhibitors in pulse/chase experiments and by monitoring the extent of Vif ubiquitination. The rapid turn-over of Vif could be blocked by
proteasome
inhibitors, and Vif was highly ubiquitinated. Cytoskeletal Vif was found to be more stable than soluble cytosolic Vif. These degradation characteristics of Vif were cell type-independent and observed in both non-permissive and permissive cells. Characterization of a series of vif deletion mutants showed that amino acids predicted to be important for formation of beta-strand structures (amino acid nos. 63-70 and 86-89) were critical for maintaining a normal expression level of Vif and for viral infectivity. Finally, we performed comparative stability analysis of the four
HIV
-1 accessory proteins. Vif was unique in its short half-life and in the magnitude of the degradation. Taken together, we conclude that the
proteasome
degradation of
HIV
-1 Vif is a virologically important process and crucial for the function of Vif.
...
PMID:Expression of HIV-1 accessory protein Vif is controlled uniquely to be low and optimal by proteasome degradation. 1537
Several gene-based vaccine approaches are being tested to drive multivalent cellular immune responses to control
HIV
-1 viral variants. To compare the utility of these approaches, HLA-A*0201 transgenic mice were genetically immunized with plasmids encoding wild-type (wt) gag-pol, codon-optimized (CO) gag-pol, and an expression library immunization (ELI) vaccine genetically re-engineered to express non-CO fragments of gag and pol fused to ubiquitin for
proteasome
targeting. Equimolar delivery of each vaccine into HLA-A*0201 transgenic mice generated CD8 T cell responses, with the ELI vaccine producing up to 10-fold higher responses than the wt or CO gag-pol plasmids against cognate and mutant epitopes. All three vaccines generated multivalent CD8 responses against varying numbers of epitopes after priming. However, when the animals were immunized again, the wt and CO gag-pol vaccines boosted only the responses against a subset of epitopes and attenuated the responses against all other Ags including epitopes from clade and drug-resistant viral variants. In contrast, the ELI vaccine boosted CD8 responses against all of the gag-pol Ags and against mutant epitopes from clade and drug-resistant variants. These data suggest that
HIV
-1 vaccines expressing structurally intact gag and pol proteins drive immunofocused CD8 responses that reduce the repertoire of T cell responses. In contrast, the genetically re-engineered ELI vaccine appears to better maintain the multivalent CD8 responses that may be required to control
HIV
-1 viral variants.
...
PMID:Repertoire and immunofocusing of CD8 T cell responses generated by HIV-1 gag-pol and expression library immunization vaccines. 1538 68
The transcriptional coactivator lens epithelium-derived growth factor (LEDGF)/p75 acts as a chromatin tethering factor for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) integrase protein, determining its nuclear localization and its tight association with nuclear DNA. Here we identify a second function for the LEDGF/p75-integrase interaction. We observed that stable introduction of
HIV
-1 integrase (IN) transcription units into cells made stringently LEDGF/p75-deficient by RNAi resulted in much lower steady state levels of IN protein than introduction into LEDGF/p75 wild type cells. The same LEDGF/p75-dependent disparity was observed for feline immunodeficiency virus IN. However, IN mRNA levels were equivalent in the presence and absence of LEDGF/p75. A post-translational mechanism was confirmed when the half-life of
HIV
-1 IN protein was found to be much shorter in LEDGF/p75-deficient cells. Proteasome inhibition fully countered this extreme instability, increasing IN protein levels to those seen in LEDGF/p75 wild type cells and implicating proteasomal destruction as the main cause of IN instability. Consistent with these data, increased ubiquitinated
HIV
-1 IN was found in the LEDGF/p75 knock-down cells. Moreover, restoration of LEDGF/p75 to knocked down clones rescued
HIV
-1 IN stability. Subcellular fractionation showed that
HIV
-1 IN is exclusively cytoplasmic in LEDGF/p75-deficient cells, but mainly nuclear in LEDGF/p75 wild type cells, and that cytoplasmic
HIV
-1 IN has a shorter half-life than nuclear
HIV
-1 IN. However, using LEDGF proteins defective for nuclear localization and IN interaction, we further determined that protection of
HIV
-1 IN from the
proteasome
requires neither chromatin tethering nor nuclear residence. Protection requires only interaction with LEDGF/p75, and it is independent of the subcellular localization of the IN-LEDGF complex.
...
PMID:Lens epithelium-derived growth factor/p75 prevents proteasomal degradation of HIV-1 integrase. 1547 59
To study how
HIV
-1 viral infectivity factor (Vif) mediates
proteasome
-dependent depletion of host factor APOBEC3G, functional and nonfunctional Vif-APOBEC3G interactions were correlated with subcellular localization. APOBEC3G localized throughout the cytoplasm and co-localized with gamma-tubulin, 20 S
proteasome
subunit, and ubiquitin at punctate cytoplasmic bodies that can be used to monitor the Vif-APOBEC3G interaction in the cell. Through immunostaining and live imaging, we showed that a substantial fraction of Vif localized to the nucleus, and this localization was impaired by deletion of amino acids 12-23. When co-expressed, Vif exhibited more pronounced localization to the cytoplasm and reduced the total cellular levels of APOBEC3G but rarely co-localized with APOBEC3G at cytoplasmic bodies. On the contrary, Vif(C114S), which is inactive but continues to interact with APOBEC3G, stably associated with APOBEC3G in the cytoplasm, resulting in complete co-localization at cytoplasmic bodies and a dose-dependent exclusion of Vif(C114S) from the nucleus. Following
proteasome
inhibition, cytoplasmic APOBEC3G levels increased, and both proteins co-accumulated nonspecifically into a vimentin-encaged aggresome. Furthermore in the presence or absence of APOBEC3G, Vif localization was significantly altered by
proteasome
inhibition, suggesting that aberrant localization may also contribute to the loss of Vif function. Finally mutations at Vif Ile(9) disrupted the ability of Vif or Vif(C114S) to coimmunoprecipitate and to co-localize with APOBEC3G, suggesting that the N terminus of Vif mediates interactions with APOBEC3G. Taken together, these results demonstrate that cytoplasmic Vif-APOBEC3G interactions are required but are not sufficient for Vif to modulate APOBEC3G and can be monitored by co-localization in vivo.
...
PMID:Analysis of HIV-1 viral infectivity factor-mediated proteasome-dependent depletion of APOBEC3G: correlating function and subcellular localization. 1553 45
The conformational preferences of a 22-amino acid peptide (LIDRLIERAEDpSGNEpSEGEISA) that mimics the phosphorylated
HIV
-1-encoded virus protein U (Vpu) antigen have been investigated by NMR spectroscopy. Degradation of
HIV
receptor CD4 by the
proteasome
, mediated by the
HIV
-1 protein Vpu, is crucial for the release of fully infectious virions. Phosphorylation of Vpu at sites Ser52 and Ser56 on the DSGXXS motif is required for the interaction of Vpu with the ubiquitin ligase SCF(beta)(-TrCP) which triggers CD4 degradation by the
proteasome
. This motif is conserved in several signaling proteins known to be degraded by the
proteasome
. The interaction of the P-Vpu(41-62) peptide with its monoclonal antibody has been studied by transferred nuclear Overhauser effect NMR spectroscopy (TRNOESY) and saturation transfer difference NMR (STD NMR) spectroscopy. The peptide was found to adopt a bend conformation upon binding to the antibody; the peptide residues (Asp51-pSer56) forming this bend are recognized by the antibody as demonstrated by STD NMR experiments. The three-dimensional structure of P-Vpu(41-62) in the bound conformation was determined by TRNOESY spectra; the peptide adopts a compact structure in the presence of mAb with formation of several bends around Leu45 and Ile46 and around Ile60 and Ser61, with a tight bend created by the DpS(52)GNEpS(56) motif. STD NMR studies provide evidence for the existence of a conformational epitope containing tandem repeats of phosphoserine motifs. The peptide's epitope is predominantly located in the large bend and in the N-terminal segment, implicating bidentale association. These findings are in excellent agreement with a recently published NMR structure required for the interaction of Vpu with the SCF(beta)(-TrCP) protein.
...
PMID:Epitope mapping of the phosphorylation motif of the HIV-1 protein Vpu bound to the selective monoclonal antibody using TRNOESY and STD NMR spectroscopy. 1554 26
AIDS has become the greatest pandemic in the human history counting approximately 40 millions people worldwide. To purge
HIV
-1 infection, new therapeutic approaches need to be searched in alternative and/or in addition to the current pharmacological ones. Recently, several independent laboratories have unveiled a non-immune intracellular anti-
HIV
-1 defense strategy based on the cytidine deaminase APOBEC3G, which restricts
HIV
-1 production by directly mutating the proviral DNA in infected cells. To counteract this defense pathway,
HIV
-1 has developed an evasion strategy by acquiring the accessory protein Vif, which blocks the action of APOBEC3G by inducing its
proteasome
-mediated degradation.
...
PMID:Blocking HIV-1 Vif restores a natural mechanism of intracellular antiviral defense. 1557 76
Human immune cells possess a built-in mechanism that could potentially block the replication of retroviruses such as
HIV
-1. This protective mechanism centers on apolipoprotein B mRNA-editing enzyme, catalytic polypeptide-like 3G (APOBEC3G), a DNA-editing enzyme produced by host cells infected by certain retroviruses that is then incorporated into virions. Due to its cytidine deaminase activity, APOBEC3G is able to mutate the minus-strand DNA formed during reverse transcription. These events ultimately halt completion of the
HIV
life cycle. Unfortunately,
HIV
-1 encodes a protein termed virion infectivity factor (Vif) that specifically suppresses the activity of APOBEC3G. Vif achieves this effect by depleting the intracellular stores of APOBEC3G, thus making this antiviral enzyme unavailable for incorporation into budding virions. APOBEC3G depletion involves the recruitment of a specific E3 ligase complex by Vif leading to the polyubiquitylation and
proteasome
-mediated degradation of this enzyme. The potent activity of APOBEC3G has led to considerable interest in the identification of small molecules that interrupt the Vif-induced degradative process.
...
PMID:Protecting APOBEC3G: a potential new target for HIV drug discovery. 1575 36
Since the discovery of
HIV
approximately 20 years ago, more than 60 million individuals have been infected, and AIDS still remains one of the most devastating diseases humankind has ever faced. Unfortunately, there is little hope that an effective vaccine will be developed in the near future. Current antiretroviral treatment is based on drugs that either target the viral enzymes (protease and reverse transcriptase) or the attachment and entry of the virus. Although the introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy in the mid-1990s has led to a profound reduction in
HIV
-related morbidity and mortality, the complete eradication of the virus from infected individuals has never been achieved. In addition, these antiviral drugs can induce serious adverse effects, particularly when administered in combination over prolonged treatment periods. A further drawback to these treatments is that with the high mutation rate of
HIV
, drug-resistant mutants are evolving, particularly when antiretroviral treatment only suppresses virus replication to marginal levels in latently infected cells making up the virus reservoirs in vivo. Cellular genes have much lower mutation rates, and drug-mediated modulation of specific cellular pathways represents an attractive antiviral strategy. Recent findings showing that
proteasome
inhibitors interfere with budding, maturation and infectivity of
HIV
have triggered intensive investigation of the hitherto unappreciated function of the ubiquitin-
proteasome
system in
HIV
replication. It was also observed that, like several other retroviruses,
HIV
-1 virions contain a small amount of mono-ubiquitinylated Gag proteins. Currently, two E3-type ubiquitin ligases, in addition to one E3-like protein, have been identified as regulators of
HIV
budding. These ligases might represent interesting targets for therapeutic intervention.
...
PMID:The ubiquitin-proteasome system in HIV replication: potential targets for antiretroviral therapy. 1575 58
Prolonged treatments with inhibitors of human immunodeficiency(
HIV
)-encoded protease (ARPI) have been reported to induce early atherosclerotic events. Our in vitro study indicates that alpha-tocopherol may prevent drug-induced premature atherosclerosis since it interferes with CD36 scavenger receptor over-expression induced by ritonavir in monocytes. The mechanism of CD36 upregulation by ritonavir involves inhibition of the ubiquitin-
proteasome
system and alpha-tocopherol is able to normalize
proteasome
activity. These findings suggest that ARPI combined with early alpha-tocopherol supplementation may decrease the drug-induced atherosclerotic risk.
...
PMID:HIV protease inhibitors-induced atherosclerosis: prevention by alpha-tocopherol. 1581 62
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