Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019693 (HIV)
170,526 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Mechanisms accounting for HIV-associated suppression of lymphocyte proliferation were investigated. In previous work we demonstrated that purified and inactivated HIV-suppressed lymphoid cell proliferation. In this report we used an inactivated preparation of HIV obtained from infected CEM cells grown in serum free media and demonstrated that this HIV-associated suppression acted in the early steps of activation to inhibit the incorporation of radiolabeled phosphorus into phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate and phosphatidic acid. Initially we showed that both purified CD4 and CD8 T lymphocyte subsets were affected and HIV-associated inhibition did not require the CD4 molecule. Impaired lymphocyte blastogenesis (decreased size and granularity and decreased expression of receptors to IL-2 and transferrin) in response to PHA indicated an effect of inactivated HIV on the early steps of activation. This was confirmed by time studies where 1) a 2 min HIV-pretreatment followed by washing before stimulation was sufficient to inhibit PHA induced proliferation of normal lymphocytes, and 2) addition of HIV to PHA prestimulated lymphocytes failed to inhibit proliferation, e.g., there was no effect on preactivated lymphocytes. HIV was mainly inhibitory of lymphocyte proliferation induced by PHA or mAb to the CD3 receptor. In contrast to the effect on the CD3/TiR, responses via the CD2 receptor were not suppressed, e.g., stimulation with the monoclonal antibodies T11(2) + T11(3). Inasmuch as responses by direct A23187 + PMA stimulation of intracellular pathways were also inhibited, it appears that the HIV-induced defect was not (or not only) membrane receptor mediated. The earliest (min) measurable event after stimulation was the initial increase in intracellular Ca2+ which was unaffected by HIV pretreatment. The next measurable event (min to h) of stimulation is a sustained increase in inositol phospholipid turnover. Pretreatment of mononuclear cells with inactivated HIV resulted in a decreased inositol phospholipid turnover as judged from decreased 32P incorporation into phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate. This led to decreased generation of DAG as reflected in the reduced radiolabeling of its metabolite PA. Reduced availability of DAG presumably interferes with pkC activation and leads to decreased expression of receptors for IL-2 and transferrin and impaired proliferation.
...
PMID:HIV inhibits the early steps of lymphocyte activation, including initiation of inositol phospholipid metabolism. 197 48

The production of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) progeny was followed in the U937 promonocytic cell line after stimulation either with retinoic acid or PMA, and in purified human monocytes and macrophages. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays and Southwestern blotting experiments were used to detect the binding of cellular transactivation factor NF-KB to the double repeat-KB enhancer sequence located in the long terminal repeat. PMA treatment, and not retinoic acid treatment of the U937 cells acts in inducing NF-KB expression in the nuclei. In nuclear extracts from monocytes or macrophages, induction of NF-KB occurred only if the cells were previously infected with HIV-1. When U937 cells were infected with HIV-1, no induction of NF-KB factor was detected, whereas high level of progeny virions was produced, suggesting that this factor was not required for viral replication. These results indicate that in monocytic cell lineage, HIV-1 could mimic some differentiation/activation stimuli allowing nuclear NF-KB expression.
...
PMID:Induction of NF-KB during monocyte differentiation by HIV type 1 infection. 198 49

The intracellular events that occur in T lymphoid cells after activation or after infection with HIV-1 are not well defined. In the case of HIV-1 infection, it is unknown whether the tat-I gene, an essential gene for viral replication, affects host cell nuclear factors. Using two-dimensional PAGE, we have identified a novel nuclear protein, designated nuclear protein-28,000 (NP-28), which is induced in Jurkat T cells by stimulation with PMA and/or PHA or ionomycin. This nuclear protein has an apparent molecular mass of 28,000 Da and an isoelectric point of 4.6. Interestingly, Jurkat cells transfected with tat-I express higher levels of NP-28 constitutively, without added stimulation. Incubation of Jurkat cells expressing tat-I with PMA and/or PHA or ionomycin causes superinduction of NP-28. We have therefore identified a novel lymphoid nuclear protein induced by T cell activation that occurs in tat-I expressing cells in the absence of activating agents.
...
PMID:Expression of a novel nuclear protein in activated and in tat-I expressing T cells. 198 91

Potent inhibitors of protein kinases C and A, including 1-(5 isoquinolinyl sulfonyl) 2-methyl piperazine (H7), staurosporine, and 2-aminopurine, depressed phorbol ester-induced HIV-1 virion production and HIV-specific transcripts by greater than 90% in chronically infected promonocytic cells. Suppression was dose-dependent and occurred at concentration that had little effect on cell growth. These effects appeared to be specific to activation of the PKC-diacylglycerol system. They did not alter IUdr-mediated induction of HIV. In addition, PMA enhancement of an HIV-LTR driven reporter gene was not blocked by H7 in the presence or absence of exogenous tat, at concentrations capable of inhibiting upregulation of virus at the cellular level. Insight into the biochemical mechanisms of these processes is critical to understanding interactions of HIV with the immune system, and may eventually uncover new therapeutic strategies.
...
PMID:Phorbol ester-mediated induction of HIV-1 from a chronically infected promonocyte clone: blockade by protein kinase inhibitors and relationship to tat-directed trans-activation. 240 49

The present study has investigated the effect of PMA, an inducer of monocyte differentiation, on HIV expression in a chronically infected promonocyte clone. After acute HIV infection of U937 cells, clones that constitutively expressed varying levels of HIV were isolated by limiting dilution. One clone (U1) produced low levels of HIV but was found to increase its production 20-fold after PMA induction, as detected by reverse transcriptase or A capture. Further characterization of U1 indicated that PMA could induce cellular differentiation and maturation in the clone similar to that in uninfected U937 cells. In addition, functional studies revealed that superoxide anion production from the U1 clone was not different from that of uninfected U937 cells. Electron microscopic studies of U1 indicated that PMA induced endocytotic vesicles containing many HIV particles. These studies provide a model at the clonal level to 1) examine latency or chronicity of HIV infection in monocytes and 2) delineate the signals required for conversion to high level viral expression.
...
PMID:Characterization of a promonocyte clone chronically infected with HIV and inducible by 13-phorbol-12-myristate acetate. 244 97

kappa B elements have been described as lymphoid-specific transcriptional activators. Here we show that kappa B elements are able to stimulate expression from test promoters more than 100-fold in T47D and 3T3 non-lymphoid cells. We also demonstrate that nuclear proteins from T47D cells form two prominent complexes with HIV kappa B sites. Since the complexes formed in nuclear extracts from T47D and PHA/PMA stimulated Jurkat cells comigrate in polyacrylamide gels, we suggest that the respective binding protein in T47D cells is either NF-kappa B or a closely related family member. In addition we provide evidence that NF1 and kappa B elements can act synergistically to further increase transcriptional activity.
...
PMID:kappa B elements strongly activate gene expression in non-lymphoid cells and function synergistically with NF1 elements. 251 Jan 29

The state of T cell activation and proliferation controls HIV-1 replication and gene expression. Previously, we demonstrated that the administration of PHA and PMA to the human T cell line Jurkat activates the HIV-1 enhancer, which is composed of two nuclear factor kappa B (NF kappa B) binding sites. Here, we show that PMA alone is sufficient for this effect. In addition, activation of T cells through the surface proteins TCR/CD3 and CD28 increased gene expression directed by the HIV-1 long terminal repeat (LTR) to the same extent as PMA. Analysis of 5' deletions in the LTR revealed that the NF kappa B binding sites and sequences in the upstream U3 region are required for this response. Whereas cyclosporin A did not inhibit the effect of PMA, it reduced the effects of agonists to TCR/CD3 and CD28 on the LTR. H7, an inhibitor of protein kinase C (PKC), blocked the effects of all stimuli. Thus, PMA activates the NF kappa B sites through a PKC-dependent pathway while ligands to TCR/CD3 and CD28 activate the LTR through a cyclosporin A-sensitive, PKC-dependent pathway of T cell activation. We conclude that mechanisms involved in the expression of IL-2 and the alpha-chain of the IL-2R alpha genes also play a role in the regulation of HIV-1. Physiologic stimuli can activate HIV-1 gene expression; agents that block T cell activation also inhibit activation of the LTR. These observations might serve as a model for the regulation of HIV-1 gene expression in peripheral blood T cells.
...
PMID:Signaling through T lymphocyte surface proteins, TCR/CD3 and CD28, activates the HIV-1 long terminal repeat. 253 62

Monocytes and tissue macrophages play important roles in host defense against virus infections and, in the case of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) and HIV, may also be the reservoir for latent disease. Because these cells can also rapidly respond to most infections by secretion of inflammatory mediators, we were interested in determining if HCMV infection could have a direct activating effect on macrophage cytokine production. To do this, we primarily investigated the influence of HCMV infection on IL-1 beta-mRNA expression in peripheral blood monocytes and the promyelocytic cell line, ML-3 as well as the inflammatory response genes TNF-alpha, MAD-9, MAD-6, and MAD-2 in the promyelocytic ML-3 cell line. Exposure of ML-3 cells to the virus prior to induction of differentiation had little influence on mediator gene expression. However, induction of the macrophage phenotype by pretreatment of ML-3 cells with the phorbol ester, PMA, followed by HCMV challenge, resulted in a greatly extended period of expression of IL-1 beta, TNF-alpha, MAD-9, and CSF-1 but not MAD-6 and MAD-2. Constitutively expressed genes such as lysozyme and actin were not similarly modulated. Both RNA dot-blot and in situ hybridization studies demonstrated that infection of human peripheral blood monocytes with HCMV leads to sustained expression of IL-1 beta mRNA for up to 96 h, which contrasted markedly with mock-infected or LPS-stimulated monocytes. Flow cytometric analysis of the intracellular levels of IL-1 beta protein in ML-3 cells indicated that not only was there more protein produced in infected cells, but that the majority of the cells had responded. Enhanced levels of the intracellular form of IL-1 beta in monocytes was confirmed by Western blot analysis. Cotransfection experiments were performed using IL-1 beta-CAT chimeric plasmids together with plasmids encoding HCMV-immediate-early gene region products. Transactivation of the IL-1 beta gene by region 2 of the immediate-early gene was observed in ML-3 cells that had been induced to differentiate prior to transfection. No stimulation of IL-1 beta promoter activity was observed in ML-3 cells that were undifferentiated prior to transfection. In summary, HCMV infection, although not leading to productive infection, nonetheless may contribute to the pathology of the infection through enhancement of monocyte inflammatory mediator gene expression with subsequent stimulation of protein synthesis.
...
PMID:Cytomegalovirus infection stimulates expression of monocyte-associated mediator genes. 255 12

CD4 (T4) is a 60 kD glycoprotein expressed on a subset of T lymphocytes. CD4 augments T cell responses to suboptimal Ag stimulation. In addition, the CD4 molecule is the receptor for HIV-1. CD4 is phosphorylated on serine residues within the cytoplasmic domain and its cell surface expression is decreased in response to PMA, APC bearing the appropriate Ag or HIV infection. The kinetics of CD4 phosphorylation and modulation are similar, suggesting that the two events may be related. L3T4, the murine CD4 equivalent, is not modulated from the surface of mature, peripheral T cells in response to PMA. The difference in the ability to modulate L3T4 and CD4 in response to PMA may be due to differences between the two molecules or to differences between the cells in which they are expressed. To further define the requirements for CD4 modulation, we used retroviral vectors to transfer the cDNA for CD4 and various mutants of CD4 into two murine T cell hybridomas that express L3T4. One of these hybridomas, By155.16, does not modulate L3T4 in response to PMA and the other, 5D5.63, does modulate L3T4 in response to PMA. When expressed by these hybridomas CD4 is not modulated from the surface of By155.16 and is modulated from the surface of 5D5.63 in response to PMA. In both of these hybridomas, CD4 is phosphorylated on serine residues in response to PMA. A mutant form of CD4, CD4 delta, was constructed in which the majority of the cytoplasmic domain was deleted. When expressed in 5D5.63, CD4 delta was not modulated in response to PMA. Replacing the cytoplasmic domain of CD4 with that of the human IL-2 receptor did not reconstitute the ability of CD4 to be modulated. These results suggest that the inability to modulate L3T4 from the surface of murine peripheral T cells is due to features of the cell and not the molecule. Furthermore, the cytoplasmic domain of CD4 is required for its modulation from the cell surface in response to PMA.
...
PMID:Requirements for modulation of the CD4 molecule in response to phorbol myristate acetate. Role of the cytoplasmic domain. 278 43

Binding activity to the HIV enhancer, a sequence highly homologous to the NF-KB enhancer, is inducible by PMA in human Jurkat T cells. We here show that, similar to what is observed for NF-KB in B cells, mild detergents, such as Deoxycholate, reveal a cryptic binding activity in protein extracts from non activated cells. The complex revealed by detergent treatment correspond to the PMA inducible, highly sequence specific species. This result suggest the existence of an inhibitor in non activated cells, which is released by the detergent, as has been demonstrated in B cells. Mild detergent treatment of PMA activated extracts resulted in superinduction of the specific complex. These results suggest that regulation of HIV enhancer binding protein is similar to regulation of NF-KB in B cells.
...
PMID:Activation of HIV-enhancer binding activity by mild detergents in human T cells. 278 35


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>