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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
There have been three published cases of acquired immunodeficiency in which no evidence for infection with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) types 1 and 2 was found. We have identified five other individuals, from the New York City area (four who have known risk factors for
HIV infection
), with profound CD4 depletion and clinical syndromes consistent with definitions of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) or AIDS-related complex. None had evidence of HIV-1, 2 infection, as judged by multiple serologies over several years, standard viral co-cultures for HIV p24 Gag antigen, and proviral
DNA
amplification by polymerase chain reaction.
...
PMID:Acquired immunodeficiency without evidence of infection with human immunodeficiency virus types 1 and 2. 135 52
A cohort of 139 hemophiliacs was typed for HLA D region genes by means of restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) detected by HLA DQ and DR gene probes. Disease progression was studied in the 65
HIV
antibody-positive patients, who were infected by contaminated clotting factor before 1985. Strong associations were found between disease progression in
HIV
-infected patients and allelic
DNA
fragments revealed by a DQ alpha cDNA probe. A 5.5 kb fragment was reduced in frequency and a 4.6 kb fragment increased in frequency (p less than 0.005) in the faster progressing group, as measured both by development of CDC Category IV clinical symptoms and CD4 number less than 200 x 10(6)/l. These results correlate with DR types deduced from the RFLP patterns revealed by DR beta and DQ alpha gene probes. A decrease in DR4 and an increase in both DR5 and the DR3 subtype found in the A1 B8 DR3 haplotype were associated with disease progression (p less than 0.05).
...
PMID:Progression of HIV-related disease is associated with HLA DQ and DR alleles defined by restriction fragment length polymorphisms. 135 76
Some types of reused dental equipment, especially handpieces and their attachments for drilling and cleaning teeth, might be responsible for cross-contamination if patient material were to lodge temporarily in difficult-to-disinfect internal mechanisms. This possibility is worrisome with respect to transmission of hepatitis B and human immunodeficiency viruses (HBV,
HIV
). Previous cross-contamination studies have relied on laboratory experiments with bacteria or dye tracers. To assess possible risk more thoroughly, we tested 30 new prophylaxis angles and 12 new high-speed handpieces to see whether they would take up and expel contaminants in laboratory and clinical trials. In treatments of three patients, including two infected with
HIV
, human-specific
DNA
(beta-globin, HLA DQ alpha) and
HIV
proviral
DNA
were detected inside or coming back from the devices. Similarly, when handpieces were operated in contact with blood pooled from HBV-infected patients, HBV
DNA
was detected in samples taken from inside the equipment and from their attached air/water hoses. When we used bacteriophage phi X174 as a model virus in laboratory tests, many infective viral particles were recovered from internal mechanisms of handpieces, their connecting air/water hoses, and from water spray expelled when the equipment was reused. We recommend that reused high-speed, air-driven handpieces and prophylaxis angles should be cleaned and heat-treated between patients. Further studies are needed to determine ways of eliminating the risks associated with exhaust hoses and air/water input lines.
...
PMID:Cross-contamination potential with dental equipment. 809 83
The association between AIDS and a spectrum of malignancies relates to chronic, profound defects in both cellular and humoral mechanisms of immune surveillance. Ironically, as AIDS patients live longer in response to increasingly effective antiretroviral therapies, the incidence of AIDS-related malignancies will continue to rise. The emergence of non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL) as a major sequela of
HIV infection
bears a striking relationship to depletion of CD4 lymphocytes, particularly below 50/mm3. The ability to interfere early in the course of active
HIV infection
with additional mechanisms that may promulgate transformed cell hyperproliferation and clonal expansion--growth factors,
HIV
itself or other viruses (Epstein-Barr, in particular), aberrant oncogene or tumor suppressor genes expression, factors that induce genetic instability or
DNA
damage or alter host or viral genome repair--might decrease the occurrence or prolong the time to development of AIDS-related malignancies. The development of antiretroviral strategies that confer long-term suppression of
HIV
activity and relative preservation of immune function are essential to the ultimate prevention of malignancies that arise as a consequence of
HIV
-induced immunosuppression.
...
PMID:The pathogenesis of AIDS lymphomas: a foundation for addressing the challenges of therapy and prevention. 136 82
The low copy number of human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1)
DNA
infected cells precludes routine detection by in situ hybridization. The inability to detect cells latently infected by
HIV
-1 makes difficult the study of factors that induce viral transcription, an essential factor in the development of the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). A sensitive and rapid technique to detect
HIV
-1
DNA
could be used as a diagnostic test for AIDS and to differentiate latent versus active viral infection. We describe a 3-h technique whereby
HIV
-1
DNA
is amplified by hot start polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and detected directly in infected cells. The specificity of the assay was demonstrated by double labeling the positive cells with CD4. Using a CR10
HIV
-1-infected cell line, the 90% of cells that were
HIV
-1
DNA
positive could be distinguished from the 10% that were actively expressing
HIV
-1 RNA. The PCR in situ technique should allow for the direct localization of
DNA
sequences in cells that would otherwise be undetectable by conventional in situ analysis.
...
PMID:Rapid in situ detection of PCR-amplified HIV-1 DNA. 136 73
A synthetic RNA oligonucleotide (15-mer) corresponding to the 3' end of the lysine tRNA primer was hybridized to single-stranded
DNA
containing the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) primer-binding site and extended with a DNA polymerase. The resulting structures were used to study primer removal by the RNase H activity of
HIV
-1 reverse transcriptase. The initial cleavage event removes the RNA primer as a 14-mer and leaves a single ribonucleotide A residue bound to the 5' end of the
DNA
strand. This result explains the observation by several groups that
HIV
-1 circle junctions contain 4 bp that are not present in the integrated provirus instead of the predicted 3 bp. Subsequent cleavage events occur at other sites internal to the RNA molecule, and the ribonucleotide A residue on the end of the
DNA
strand is ultimately removed. Therefore, the biologically relevant cleavage that produces the 14-mer reflects the kinetics of the reaction as well as a specificity for nucleic acid sequence. When the RNA oligonucleotide alone was hybridized to the primer-binding site and tested as a substrate for
HIV
-1 RNase H, the cleavage pattern near the 3' end of the RNA was altered.
...
PMID:Incomplete removal of the RNA primer for minus-strand DNA synthesis by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 reverse transcriptase. 137 87
Differences in susceptibility to infection of most mononuclear phagocytes with
HIV
-1 are not known. We investigated the relative susceptibility of autologous freshly isolated blood monocytes (MN), MN cultured in vitro to allow differentiation (CM), and alveolar macrophages (AM) from healthy subjects to productive infection with
HIV
-1. Cells were infected with the macrophage tropic strain
HIV
-1JR-FL and p24 gag antigen levels measured in supernatants by ELISA. Freshly isolated MN had negligible levels of p24 in supernatants. In contrast AM had peak p24 levels of 4145 +/- 1456 pg/ml, mean +/- SE, and CM 9216 +/- 3118. As a measure of entry and extent of reverse transcription, levels of viral
DNA
in infected mononuclear phagocytes were analyzed by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The data using primers that amplify all transcripts including incompletely formed reverse transcripts indicated that differences in entry of the virus may contribute to differences in virus production observed with MN, AM, and CM. Other primer pairs that detect intermediate and full-length double-stranded
DNA
showed that the ability to complete reverse transcription was similar among these mononuclear phagocytes. Since the lung is a major site of opportunistic infection and noninfectious complications in
HIV
-1-infected individuals, this increase in productive infection with
HIV
-1 in AM compared with MN could contribute to the immunopathogenesis of the lung disorders seen in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.
...
PMID:Increased susceptibility of differentiated mononuclear phagocytes to productive infection with human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1). 137 Feb 93
Although virus infections have been classically studied with "cell-free" virion preparations, many animal viruses are able to spread both in vitro and in vivo by inducing cell-cell fusion. An efficient system to monitor the cell-to-cell spread of
HIV
-1 has been developed employing chronically infected H9 donor cells. Under appropriate conditions of cocultivation with uninfected cells, the synthesis of unintegrated viral
DNA
, monitored by Southern blot hybridization, occurred between 2 and 4 hr following infection; viral proteins were detected 8 to 12 hr following cocultivation and progeny virions were released into the medium by 16 hr. The use of metabolic inhibitors or specific envelope/receptor antibodies revealed that the cell-to-cell spread of
HIV
required: (1) gp120-CD4 interaction and (2) reverse transcription. Light and electron microscopy, fluorescent dye redistribution, and soluble CD4 competition experiments all demonstrated that the
HIV
-induced cell-cell fusion began within 10 to 30 min of cocultivation. Surprisingly, the electron microscopic analyses also suggested that budding or mature virus particles did not participate in this process. Thus the virus-induced cell-cell fusion observed is very likely the result of gp120/gp41 proteins, on the surface of infected cells, interacting with CD4 molecules on uninfected cells. These findings are of immediate importance in understanding the mechanism(s) of
HIV
-1 transmission in vivo and for the design of effective vaccines and antiviral agents.
...
PMID:Cell-to-cell spread of HIV-1 occurs within minutes and may not involve the participation of virus particles. 137 Jul 39
This study used
DNA
primer extension and sequencing gel analyses to evaluate the molecular action of 2',3'-didehydro-2',3'-dideoxythymidine triphosphate (D4TTP), in comparison with 3'-azido-2',3'-dideoxythymidine triphosphate (AZTTP), on
DNA
strand elongation by human immunodeficiency virus reverse transcriptases (HIV-RT) and human
DNA
polymerases alpha (pol alpha) and epsilon (pol epsilon) purified from T-lymphoblastoid CEM cells. D4TTP was preferentially incorporated into the T sites of the elongating
DNA
strand by
HIV
-RT and terminated
DNA
synthesis at the incorporation sites. The
DNA
chain termination activity of D4TTP was equipotent to that of AZTTP. In contrast, D4TTP was a poor substrate for pol alpha and pol epsilon. The analogue was incorporated into
DNA
by the human enzymes about 10,000- to 20,000-fold less efficiently than by
HIV
-RT, whereas the incorporation of AZTTP by pol alpha and pol epsilon was not detectable by the
DNA
primer extension assay. Pol epsilon, an enzyme with 3'----5'-exonuclease activity, was unable to remove the incorporated 2',3'-didehydro-2',3'-dideoxythymidine monophosphate (D4TMP) from the 3'-end of the
DNA
strand, whereas 3'-azido-2',3'-dideoxythymidine monophosphate was excised from
DNA
by pol epsilon at about 20% of the rate for normal deoxynucleotide excision. The preferential incorporation of D4TTP by
HIV
-RT appears to be a molecular basis for the selective anti-
HIV
activity of D4T, whereas the inability of pol epsilon to remove D4TMP from
DNA
may be related to the cytotoxicity of this compound.
...
PMID:Selective action of 2',3'-didehydro-2',3'-dideoxythymidine triphosphate on human immunodeficiency virus reverse transcriptase and human DNA polymerases. 137 Aug 34
The genomic hypervariation of human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) could result from misincorporations by the viral reverse transcriptase. We developed an assay for reverse transcriptase fidelity during RNA-dependent as well as
DNA
-dependent
DNA
polymerization in vitro. A lacZ alpha RNA fragment transcribed by T3 RNA polymerase was used to mimic first-strand reverse transcription. The corresponding
DNA
template was used to examine errors by reverse transcriptase during second-strand
DNA
synthesis. With both templates, the mutations introduced by reverse transcriptase were identified by their mutant phenotypes in an M13 lacZ alpha-complementation assay. We found that the reverse transcriptase from human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1 RT) was less accurate than the reverse transcriptase from Moloney murine leukemia virus (MLV RT) or the Klenow fragment of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I (Pol I) on either RNA or
DNA
templates. The frequency of misincorporation by
HIV
-1 RT was 1 in 6900 nucleotides polymerized on the RNA template and 1 in 5900 on the
DNA
template. The error rates of MLV RT and Pol I on the RNA template were less than 1 in 28,000 and 37,000, respectively. The most frequent mutations produced by
HIV
-1 RT copying the RNA template were C----T transitions and G----T transversions resulting from misincorporation of dAMP.
...
PMID:Fidelity of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase copying RNA in vitro. 137 Sep 10
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