Gene/Protein
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Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bestatin, the dipeptide N-((2S, 3R)-3-amino-2-hydroxy-4-phenyl butanyl) L-leucine is a leucine aminopeptidase and aminopeptidase-B inhibitor. It exerts a direct stimulating effect on lymphocytes (and monocytes) via its fixation on cell surface
leucine
-aminopeptidase, and an indirect effect on monocytes (and lymphocytes) via aminopeptidase B inhibition of tuftsin catabolism. Thus it is an immuno-modifier as shown by the Japanese and also our groups: a) immuno-modifier, especially stimulator, in normal young mice; b) immunorestorator and spontaneous tumor preventive agent in aged mice; c) immunorestorator in the elderly and in cancer patients and
HIV
infected subjects. It stimulates granulocytopoiesis and thrombocytopoiesis in vitro, and can restore them in vivo in myelo-hypoplastic man. The anti-aminopeptidase action of Bestatin also protects enkephalins against their catabolism, which encouraged us, with good preliminary results, to study its analgesic action and search for a preventive effect on "desaddicted" toxicomaniac relapses.
...
PMID:Bestatin, an aminopeptidase inhibitor with a multi-pharmacological function. 191 69
The susceptibility of
HIV
-1-infected CD4+ T cell lines to natural killer (NK) cell-mediated lysis was examined. Non-adherent peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of healthy adults lysed HUT cells chronically infected with the IIIB or WMJ1 strains of
HIV
-1 to a significantly greater extent than uninfected HUT cells. In contrast, Sup-T1 cells chronically infected with these two strains of
HIV
-1 were not lysed to a greater extent than uninfected Sup-T1 cells. Clone A1.25-infected Sup-T1 (A1.25/Sup-T1), derived from IIIB-infected Sup-T1 cells (IIIB/Sup-T1), were susceptible to non-adherent PBMC-mediated lysis, as were A1.25-infected HUT cells (A1.25/HUT). When non-adherent PBMC were depleted of CD16 (
Leu
-11b)+ NK cells by treatment with anti-
Leu
-11b plus C, lysis of
HIV
-1-infected HUT or Sup-T1 cells was reduced to low levels, indicating that the lysis was mediated by NK cells. Expression of
HIV
antigens on these target cells did not correlate with their susceptibility to NK cell-mediated lysis. Depletion of interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) producing HLA-DR+ cells from non-adherent PBMC had no effect on the magnitude of NK cell-mediated lysis of IIIB or WMJ1-infected HUT cells. In contrast, lysis of A1.25/Sup-T1 or A1.25/HUT cells required the presence of HLA-DR+ cells. IFN-alpha production appeared to be required for NK cell-mediated lysis of A1.25/Sup-T1 or A1.25/HUT cells, while lysis of HUT cells infected with the WMJ1 or IIIB strains of
HIV
-1 was IFN-alpha independent. These results indicate considerable variability in the susceptibility of different
HIV
-1 infected T cell lines to NK cell-mediated lysis and suggest the existence of alternative mechanisms of activation of NK cells for lysis of
HIV
-1-infected T cell lines.
...
PMID:Natural killer cell-mediated lysis of T cell lines chronically infected with HIV-1. 196 36
The Vif protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) regulates viral infectivity. Virions produced in cell culture after transfection by a Vif-negative molecular clone show a dramatic decrease in infectivity for susceptible CD4+ cell lines, although the Vif protein does not appear to be a constituent of the viral particle. The exact mechanism by which Vif affects
HIV
-1 infectivity is so far unknown. We report the existence of structural homologies between Vif and a family of cysteine proteases and present evidence which suggests that one of the targets of Vif is the Env protein and more precisely the cytoplasmic domain of gp41. Vif was found to modify both the processing and conformation of the Env protein. Ethyl(25, 35)- 3[(5)-3-methyl-1-(3-methylbutylcarbamoyl)]oxirane-2-carboxylate, a specific inhibitor of cysteine proteases, inhibits the effect of Vif, as does the mutation of Cys-114 to
Leu
in Vif. Furthermore, Cys-114 of Vif produced in Escherichia coli, interacts directly with trans-epoxysuccinyl-L-leucylamido-(4-guanidino)butane. These observations suggest that a cysteine protease activity is associated with Vif and that this activity plays a role in Env maturation.
...
PMID:A specific inhibitor of cysteine proteases impairs a Vif-dependent modification of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Env protein. 199 46
Kinetic analysis of the hydrolysis of the peptide H-Val-Ser-Gln-Asn-Tyr*Pro-Ile-Val-Gln-NH2 and its analogs obtained by varying the length and introducing substitutions at the P4 site was carried out with both
HIV
-1 and
HIV
-2 proteinases. Deletion of the terminal Val and Gln had only moderate effect on the substrate hydrolysis, while the deletion of the P4. Ser as well as P'3 Val greatly reduced the substrate hydrolysis. This is predicted to be due to the loss of interactions between main chains of the enzyme and the substrate. Substitution of the P4 Ser by amino acids having high frequency of occurrence in beta turns resulted in good substrates, while large amino acids were unfavorable in this position. The two proteinases acted similarly, except for substrates having Thr, Val and
Leu
substitutions, which were better accommodated in the
HIV
-2 substrate binding pocket.
...
PMID:Studies on the role of the S4 substrate binding site of HIV proteinases. 200 47
The relatively fast artificial substrate
Leu
-Ser-rho-nitro-Phe-Nle-Ala-
Leu
-OMe generates a solvent isotope effect of 1.51 +/- 0.02 only on the maximal velocity of peptide hydrolysis catalyzed by porcine pepsin (EC 3.4.23.1). The absence of an isotope effect on V/K places the isotopically-sensitive step after peptide bond cleavage and the release of the first product. Reprotonation of the active site aspartic carboxyls is proposed as the most likely interpretation of this observation. Structural and kinetic similarities between pepsin and other aspartic proteinases, including the therapeutically important targets
HIV
protease and renin, suggest a similar slow reprotonation step after catalysis. This mechanistic feature has important implications regarding inhibitor design; if most of the enzymes are present in a product-release form during steady-state turnover, then perhaps inhibitors should be designed as product analogs instead of substrate analogs.
...
PMID:Slow step after bond-breaking by porcine pepsin identified using solvent deuterium isotope effects. 201 46
Mutations were introduced into the P2 and P1 positions of the junctions, (a) linking reverse transcriptase (RT) and integrase (IN) (-Leu*Phe-) and (b) between the p51 and RNase H domain (-Phe*Tyr-) within p66 of RT in the
HIV
-1 pol polyprotein. Processing by HIV proteinase (PR) in cis was monitored upon expression of these constructs in E. coli. Whereas the presence of
Leu
or Phe in P1 permitted rapid cleavage at either junction, substitution of a beta-branched (Ile) hydrophobic residue essentially abolished hydrolysis. By contrast, placement of a beta-branched (Val) residue in the P2 position flanking such -Hydrophobic*Hydrophobic- junctions resulted in effective cleavage of the scissile peptide bond. Gly in P2, however, abrogated cleavage. The significance of these findings in terms of PR specificity, polyprotein processing and the generation of homodimeric (p51/p51) RT for crystallisation purposes is discussed.
...
PMID:Mutating P2 and P1 residues at cleavage junctions in the HIV-1 pol polyprotein. Effects on hydrolysis by HIV-1 proteinase. 204 56
The effects of various lectins on the infectivity of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 was investigated. Among the 25 lectins investigated, 2 types of concanavalin A (Con A) and 3 types of phytohemagglutinin were found to inhibit
HIV infection
. Succinylated Con A (S-Con A) efficiently blocked HIV-induced formation of syncytia in a coculture of MOLT-4 cells and blocked cell-free infection by HIV of MT-4 cells. The HIV-binding study revealed that S-Con A only partially inhibited viral binding to cells, although the control
Leu
-3a monoclonal antibody strongly inhibited it. When S-Con A was added to cultures after the initiation of viral adsorption, the number of HIV antigen-positive cells that developed depended on the time interval before addition of the compound. S-Con A inhibited
HIV infection
even after viral binding to cells at 0 degrees C and further incubation at 37 degrees C for 1 day. These data suggest that S-Con A inhibited mainly the fusion process rather than viral binding to cells in exerting its anti-HIV activity.
...
PMID:Effects of succinylated concanavalin A on infectivity and syncytial formation of human immunodeficiency virus. 208 56
The specificity of
HIV
-1 (human immunodeficiency virus-1) protease has been evaluated relative to its ability to cleave the three-domain Pseudomonas exotoxin (PE66) and related proteins in which the first domain has been deleted or replaced by a segment of CD4. Native PE66 is not hydrolyzed by the HIV-1 protease. However, removal of its first domain produces a molecule which is an excellent substrate for the enzyme. The major site of cleavage in this truncated exotoxin, called LysPE40, occurs in a segment that connects its two major domains, the translocation domain (II), and the ADP-ribosyltransferase (III). This interdomain region contains the sequence ...Asn-Tyr-Pro-Thr... which is similar to that surrounding the scissile Tyr-Pro bond in the gag precursor polyprotein, a natural substrate of the HIV-1 protease. Nevertheless, it is not this sequence that is recognized and cleaved by the enzyme, but one 6 residues away, ...Ala-
Leu
-
Leu
-Glu... in which the
Leu
-
Leu
peptide bond is hydrolyzed. A second, slower cleavage takes place at the
Leu
-Ala bond 3 residues in from the NH2 terminus of LysPE40. When domain I of PE66 is replaced by a segment comprising the first two domains of CD4, the resulting chimeric protein is hydrolyzed at the same
Leu
-
Leu
bond by HIV-1 protease. Enzyme activities toward synthetic peptides modeled after the sequences defined above in LysPE40 are in complete accord, relative to specificity, kinetics, and pH optimum, with results obtained in the hydrolysis of the parent protein. These findings demonstrate that ideas concerning the specificity of the HIV-1 protease that are based solely upon its processing of natural viral polyproteins can be expanded by evaluation of other multidomain proteins as substrates. Moreover, it would appear that it is not a particular conformation, but sequence and accessibility that play the dominant role in defining sites in a protein substrate that are susceptible to hydrolysis by the enzyme.
...
PMID:Interdomain hydrolysis of a truncated Pseudomonas exotoxin by the human immunodeficiency virus-1 protease. 210 21
Recently we described an HLA B27-restricted peptide derived from
HIV
gag p24 protein. In this study we have isolated an HLA B27-restricted peptide from the nucleoprotein (NP) of influenza A virus. The shortest fragment recognized by cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) is eight amino acids long, residues 384-391. Comparison of the sequence of these two HLA B27 restricted peptides reveals homologies which can be aligned from one peptide to the other. Of the eight residues, two are identical: tryptophan and isoleucine. Both peptides have a positively charged residue at the N terminus, lysine at position 265 of gag and arginine at position 384 of NP. Using modified peptides we have shown that lysine or arginine is crucial for the interaction with HLA B27. The wild-type gag peptide blocked CTL recognition of NP peptide by influenza-specific CTL, but removal of the lysine prevented inhibition of NP peptide recognition. The importance of these charged residues was confirmed by the observation that truncated NP and gag peptides where the lysine or arginine was removed were not recognized by specific CTL. Further studies showed that the tryptophan residue influenced the association of the gag peptide with HLA B27, because the affinity of the gag peptide for B27 was strongly increased after replacing this residue with a
leucine
or a tyrosine. However, these peptides were not recognized by gag-specific CTL, suggesting that the tryptophan may interact with both HLA B27 and T cell receptor. These observations should help in the identification of HLA B27-restricted peptides from other viruses or organisms.
...
PMID:Structural homologies between two HLA B27-restricted peptides suggest residues important for interaction with HLA B27. 212 95
The aspartyl protease of human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) has been expressed in Escherichia coli at high levels, resulting in the formation of inclusion bodies which contain denatured insoluble aggregates of the protease. After solubilization of these inclusion bodies in guanidinium chloride, the protease was purified to apparent homogeneity by a single-step reverse-phase HPLC procedure. The purified, but inactive, protein was denatured in 8 M urea and refolded to produce the active protease. Enzyme activity was demonstrated against the substrate H-Val-Ser-Gln-Asn-Tyr-Pro-Ile-Val-OH, modeled after the cleavage region between residues 128 and 135 in the
HIV
gag polyprotein. With this substrate, a Vmax of 1.3 +/- 0.2 mumol/(min.mg) and KM of 2.0 +/- 0.3 mM were determined at pH 5.5. Pepstatin (Iva-Val-Val-Sta-Ala-Sta-OH) and substrate analogues with the Tyr-Pro residues substituted by Sta, by Phe psi [CH2N]Pro, and by
Leu
psi [CH(OH)CH2]Val inhibited the protease with KI values of 360 nM, 3690 nM, 3520 nM, and less than 10 nM, respectively. All were competitive inhibitors, and the tightest binding compound provided an active site titrant for the quantitative determination of enzymatically active HIV-1 protease.
...
PMID:Substrate analogue inhibition and active site titration of purified recombinant HIV-1 protease. 218 16
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