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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (HIV)
170,526 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection is frequently associated with concurrent infection by opportunistic pathogens, against which production of nitric oxide by host macrophages provides a first line of defence. We have investigated whether regulatory HIV-1 proteins, such as Tat, can modulate the activity of the inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNos) gene when expressed in stable transfectant lines of RAW264.7 cells. A bioassay for Tat, based on transactivation of an HIV-1 LTR-CAT reporter gene, allowed selection of Tat-expressing cells. Parental and Tat-expressing macrophages accumulated identical levels of nitrite following lipopolysaccharide (LPS) stimulation. Interferon gamma (IFN-gamma) stimulation however, resulted in reduced levels of nitrite accumulation as a direct consequence of Tat expression. Conditioned media from Tat-expressing cells reduced the level of nitrite accumulation in parental cells following IFN-gamma stimulation but not stimulation with LPS. These results implicate HIV-1 Tat as a modulator of the IFN-gamma-specific signal transduction pathways leading to iNos expression.
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PMID:The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 regulatory protein Tat inhibits interferon-induced iNos activity in a murine macrophage cell line. 876 Apr 10

Epidemiological and experimental studies suggest that dietary milk products may exert an inhibitory effect on the development of several types of tumors. Some recent experiments in rodents indicate that the antitumor activity of the dairy product is in the protein fraction and more specifically in the whey protein component of milk. It has been demonstrated that whey protein diets result in increased glutathione (GSH) concentration in a number of tissues, and that some of the beneficial effects of whey protein intake are abrogated by inhibition of GSH synthesis. Whey protein is particularly rich in substrates for GSH synthesis. It has been suggested that whey protein may be exerting its effect on carcinogenesis and VIH infection by enhancing GSH concentration. Lactoferrin, one of the proteins contained in whey has aise been studied in this way. It has been suggested that lactoferrin binding may play an important role in maintaining, optimal mononuclear phagocyte function, thus protecting adjacent tissue against phagocyte derived radicals. Moreover it has been demonstrated by one of us that the level of plasma lactoferrin were decreased in HIV-1 infected patients in relation to the progression of the disease. The aim of the present study is to evaluate in rat the reactive oxygen species, scavenger activities (ROSSA) of red blood cells (RBCs) with a multifermented whey (SK 344), by repeated doses during 16 days. This study has permitted to demonstrate in vivo that the SK 344 has an excellent ROSSA corresponding to a limitation of the lipoperoxidation of RBCs membranes by singlet oxygen and nitric oxide. We can conclude that whey protein, lactoferrin and multifermented whey are good candidates as dietary inhibitors of the oxidative stress and should be considered as potential medicinal foods in various pathologies as HIV infection and cancer.
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PMID:[Evaluation of the antiradical protector effect of multifermented milk serum with reiterated dosage in rats]. 876 41

Activated glial cells (microglia and astrocytes) are a hallmark of a variety of neurodegenerative diseases. Recent in vitro studies have suggested that mediators derived from reactive glial cells (eg, cytokines, reactive oxygen intermediates, nitric oxide, glutamate or quinolinic acids, and neurotoxins) contribute to neuronal injury. Several of these mediators have been implicated in the neuropathogenesis of HIV-1. Although the precise role of glial cell-mediated neurotoxicity in viral infections of the central nervous system has not been established, it is hoped that research in this field will yield new therapies for these infections as well as for immune-mediated neurodegenerative diseases.
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PMID:Glia: the not so innocent bystanders. 879 14

Although the neurotoxicity induced by the HIV envelope protein, gp120, has been demonstrated to require the presence of glial cells (microglia/astrocytes), the mechanisms for the gp120-induced neurotoxicity are not well understood. Moreover, the neurotoxic potencies of gp120s obtained from various HIV isolates are different. Since nitric oxide (NO) and proinflammatory cytokines (TNF-alpha, IL-1, IL-6) produced by glial cells have been involved in the neuropathogenesis of various diseases, this study examined the effects of gp120 obtained from two strains, HIV-1IIIB and HIV-1SF2, of the HIV-1 virus on the production of NO, TNF-alpha, IL-1 alpha, IL-1 beta, and IL-6 in murine primary mixed glial cell cultures. The glial cells exposed to HIV-1IIIB gp120 released NO, TNF-alpha, and IL-6 in a dose-dependent manner, whereas IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta were undetectable. The cells exposed to HIV-1SF2 gp120 increased the release of IL-6 only. The gp120-induced effects were significantly enhanced by priming glial cells with IFN-gamma. To investigate the cellular sources and mechanisms of the gp120-induced IL-6 production, in situ hybridization with mRNA for IL-6 was performed in HIV-1IIIB gp120- or HIV-1SF2 gp120-stimulated microgliaenriched or astrocyte-enriched cultures. HIV-1IIIB gp120 or HIV-1SF2 gp120 induced the expression of IL-6 mRNA in both microglia-enriched and astrocyte-enriched cultures, indicating that both microglia and astrocytes produce IL-6, and that the transcriptional regulation is involved in the gp120-induced IL-6 production. Taken together, these results demonstrate that the production of NO, TNF-alpha, IL-1, or IL-6 from glial cells is differentially regulated by HIV-1IIIB gp120 and HIV-1SF2 gp120. These results may provide insights into the roles of NO and proinflammatory cytokines in the neurotoxicity of gp120s and the neuropathology of different strains of HIV-1 viruses.
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PMID:The effects of the HIV-1 envelope protein gp120 on the production of nitric oxide and proinflammatory cytokines in mixed glial cell cultures. 880 9

Malnutrition can have adverse, even devastating effects on the antigen-specific arms of the immune system and on generalized host defensive mechanisms. Protein/energy malnutrition and/or deficiencies of single nutrients that assist in nucleic acid metabolism generally lead to atrophy of lymphoid tissues and dysfunctions of cell-mediated immunity. Deficiencies of single nutrients can impair production of key proteins. Trace element deficiencies are often multifactorial. Essential fatty acid deficiencies can reduce or perturb the synthesis of cytokine-induced eicosanoids. Arginine deficiency can diminish the production of nitric oxide, and deficiencies of antioxidant nutrients can allow increases in the damaging effects of free oxygen radicals. Humoral immunity continues to be maintained, although new primary responses to T-cell-dependent antigens are generally subnormal in both magnitude and quality. Immunological dysfunctions associated with malnutrition have been termed Nutritionally Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes (NAIDS). Infants and small children are at great risk because they possess only immature, inexperienced immune systems and very small protein reserves. The combination of NAIDS and common childhood infections is the leading cause of human mortality. NAIDS can generally be corrected by appropriate nutritional rehabilitation, but from a viewpoint highly important to this Workshop, AIDS and NAIDS are intensely synergistic. AIDS-induced malnutrition can lead to the secondary development of NAIDS, with its much broader array of additional immunological dysfunctions. The complex and far reaching insults to the immune system caused by NAIDS, and the synergistic combination of NAIDS and AIDS, thereby hasten the demise of many victims of AIDS. Aggressive nutritional support for children with HIV infections could delay, or lessen, the development of NAIDS and avoidance of NAIDS would improve both quality and length of life.
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PMID:Nutrition in pediatric HIV infection: setting the research agenda. Nutrition and immune function: overview. 886 22

Indirect mechanisms are implicated in the pathogenesis of the dementia associated with human immunodeficiency virus-type 1 (HIV-1) infection. Proinflammatory molecules such as tumor necrosis factor alpha and eicosanoids are elevated in the central nervous system of patients with HIV-1-related dementia. Nitric oxide (NO) is a potential mediator of neuronal injury, because cytokines may activate the immunologic (type II) isoform of NO synthase (iNOS). The levels of iNOS in severe HIV-1-associated dementia coincided with increased expression of the HIV-1 coat protein gp41. Furthermore, gp41 induced iNOS in primary cultures of mixed rat neuronal and glial cells and killed neurons through a NO-dependent mechanism. Thus, gp41-induced NO formation may contribute to the severe cognitive dysfunction associated with HIV-1 infection.
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PMID:Immunologic NO synthase: elevation in severe AIDS dementia and induction by HIV-1 gp41. 894 6

Nitric oxide is produced in large amounts during host defense and immunological reactions and it is likely to have a role in non-specific immunity: nitric oxide exerts microbiostatic and microbicidal activity against a variety of pathogens, including protozoa, fungi, bacteria and some viruses. HIV-1 stimulates nitric oxide production by human macrophages and its production is increased in patients with HIV-1 infection. It is postulated that nitric oxide may play a part in modulating the immune response during HIV-1 infection. Nitric oxide produced by the HIV-1 infected monocytes/macrophages of lymph nodes, may adversely affect the survival of activated immune cells, including B and T lymphocytes and dendritic cells within their vicinity. It is suggested here that production of large amounts of nitric oxide by macrophages may lead to the inactivation of lymphocytes and thus to the induction of a persistent immunosuppression.
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PMID:Immunological aspects of nitric oxide in HIV-1 infection. 895 5

Infectious diseases and malnutrition represent major burdens afflicting millions of people in developing countries. Both conditions affect individuals in industrialized nations, particularly the aged, the HIV-infected, and people with chronic diseases. While malnutrition is known to induce a state of immunodeficiency, the mechanisms responsible for compromised antimicrobial resistance in malnourished hosts remain obscure. In the present study, mice fed a 2% protein diet and developing protein calorie malnutrition, in contrast to well-nourished controls receiving a 20% protein diet, rapidly succumbed to infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Malnourished mice exhibited a tissue-specific diminution in the expression of interferon gamma, tumor necrosis factor alpha, and the inducible form of nitric oxide synthase in the lungs, but not the liver. The expression of these molecules critical to the production of mycobactericidal nitrogen oxides was depressed in malnourished animals in the lungs specifically at early times (< 14 days) after infection. At later times, levels of expression became comparable to those in well-nourished controls, although the bacillary burden in the malnourished animals continued to rise. Nevertheless, urinary and serum nitrate contents, an index of total nitric oxide (NO) production in vivo, were not detectably diminished in malnourished, mycobacteria-infected mice. In contrast to the selective and early reduction of lymphokines and the inducible form of nitric oxide synthase in the lung, a marked diminution of the granulomatous reaction was observed in malnourished mice throughout the entire course of infection in all tissues examined (lungs, liver, and spleen). Remarkably, the progressively fatal course of tuberculosis observed in the malnourished mice could be reversed by restoring a full protein (20%) diet. The results indicate that protein calorie malnutrition selectively compromises several components of the cellular immune response that are important for containing and restricting tuberculous infection, and suggest that malnutrition-induced susceptibility to some infectious diseases can be reversed or ameliorated by nutritional intervention.
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PMID:Effects of protein calorie malnutrition on tuberculosis in mice. 896 45

Potential neurotoxins such as nitric oxide have been implicated in the pathogenesis of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) dementia complex. The LP-BM5 murine leukemia-infected mice, which develop immunological and cognitive deficits reminiscent of human HIV-1 infection, were employed to investigate the changes in brain constitutive nitric oxide synthase (cNOS) and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression. Cerebellar and striatal cNOS enzymatic activity increased approximately 70% as early as 2 weeks after infection, declining to control levels by 12-16 weeks. In contrast, cNOS protein expression in the striatum and cerebellum was decreased 30% at 4 weeks, declining to 50% of control levels by 16 weeks post-infection. Staining intensity for cNOS, but not neuron number was reduced in the cerebral cortex, striatum, ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus and amygdala. Although iNOS protein expression was elevated in splenic monocytes, neither iNOS activity, mRNA nor protein was detected in the brains of mice 12 weeks after infection. These results indicate that neurons decrease cNOS protein expression to compensate for chronic cNOS activation, probably resulting from glutamatergic stimulation. The cNOS activation is contemporaneous with microglial activation in LP-BM5-infected mice, and precedes the development of cognitive deficits. Moreover, the lack of iNOS induction in either infected macrophages or glial elements suggests that iNOS is not necessary for the development of these cognitive deficits.
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PMID:Regional changes in constitutive, but not inducible NOS expression in the brains of mice infected with the LP-BM5 leukemia virus. 910 46

A majority of human immunodeficiency virus type I (HIV-1)-infected-individuals manifest a plethora of central nervous system (CNS) diseases unrelated to opportunistic infections, including acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)-dementia complex (ADC), encephalitis, and various other disorders of the CNS. A series of devastating clinical conditions in the CNS of certain HIV-1-infected-individuals may be caused by infection of cells in the brain parenchyma. ADC is characterized by cognitive dysfunction, motor difficulties, coordination abnormalities and other neurological signs and symptoms, which develop in many HIV-1-infected-individuals. The precise molecular mechanisms leading to AIDS dementia remain incompletely explained. Various mechanisms including cytokine dysregulation, toxic effects of viral proteins and release of certain toxic substances from macrophages, especially nitric oxide, have been implicated as pathogenic mediators in the development of ADC. We have examined post mortem CNS tissues collected from 22 patients, previously diagnosed with AIDS, to explore if nitric oxide is responsible for the observed pathology in ADC. As controls, we utilized tissues collected from the brains of patients who expired without AIDS or other CNS pathologies. In addition, we also utilized post-mortem brain tissues from eight patients who were diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS) and were found to express inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) in our previous studies, as positive controls. Highly sensitive in situ reverse transcriptase-initiated polymerase chain reaction (RT-IS-PCR) studies demonstrated that iNOS mRNA was present in the CNS tissues from all the positive MS controls, but were absent in all 22 specimens from AIDS patients, as well as in the brain tissues from normal controls. We have also analyzed the tissues for the presence of the NO reaction product, nitrotyrosine, to evaluate the presence of a protein nitrosalation adduct. Nitrotyrosine was not demonstrable in any of the AIDS brains. These findings indicate that iNOS may not play a significant role in the neuropathogenesis of most cases of ADC.
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PMID:Absence of the inducible form of nitric oxide synthase in the brains of patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 911 Nov 78


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