Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Highly active antiretroviral therapy, which includes a combination of protease inhibitors, is highly successful in controlling human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and reducing the morbidity and mortality of autoimmune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). However, the benefits of HIV protease inhibitors are compromised by numerous undesirable side effects. These include peripheral fat wasting and excessive central fat deposition (lipodystrophy), overt hyperlipidemia, and insulin resistance. The mechanism associated with protease inhibitor-induced metabolic abnormalities is multifactorial. One major effect of the protease inhibitor is its suppression of the breakdown of the nuclear form of sterol regulatory element binding proteins (nSREBP) in the liver and adipose tissues. Hepatic accumulation of nSREBP results in increased fatty acid and cholesterol biosynthesis, whereas nSREBP accumulation in adipose tissue causes lipodystrophy, reduces leptin expression, and promotes insulin resistance. The HIV protease inhibitors also suppress
proteasome
-mediated breakdown of nascent apolipoprotein (apo) B, thus resulting in the overproduction and secretion of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins. Finally, protease inhibitor also suppresses the inhibition of the glucose transporter GLUT-4 activity in adipose and muscle. This latter effect also contributes directly to insulin resistance and diabetes. These adverse effects need to be alleviated for long-term use of protease inhibitor therapy in treatment of
HIV infection
.
...
PMID:Effects of HIV protease inhibitor therapy on lipid metabolism. 1254 52
Most of the peptides presented by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules require processing by proteasomes. Tripeptidyl peptidase II (TPPII), an aminopeptidase with endoproteolytic activity, may also have a role in antigen processing. Here, we analyzed the processing and presentation of the immunodominant human immunodeficiency virus epitope
HIV
-Nef(73-82) in human dendritic cells. We found that inhibition of
proteasome
activity did not impair Nef(73-82) epitope presentation. In contrast, specific inhibition of TPPII led to a reduction of Nef(73-82) epitope presentation. We propose that TPPII can act in combination with or independent of the
proteasome
system and can generate epitopes that evade generation by the
proteasome
-system.
...
PMID:An essential role for tripeptidyl peptidase in the generation of an MHC class I epitope. 1266 Jul 27
Proteasome inhibitors reduce the budding of human immunodeficiency virus types 1 (HIV-1) and 2, simian immunodeficiency virus, and Rous sarcoma virus. To investigate this effect further, we examined the budding of other retroviruses from proteasome inhibitor-treated cells. The viruses tested differed in their Gag organization, late (L) domain usage, or assembly site from those previously examined. We found that
proteasome
inhibition decreased the budding of murine leukemia virus (plasma membrane assembly, PPPY L domain) and Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (cytoplasmic assembly, PPPY L domain), similar to the reduction observed for
HIV
-1. Thus,
proteasome
inhibitors can affect the budding of a virus that assembles within the cytoplasm. However, the budding of mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV; cytoplasmic assembly, unknown L domain) was unaffected by
proteasome
inhibitors, similar to the
proteasome
-independent budding previously observed for equine infectious anemia virus (plasma membrane assembly, YPDL L domain). Examination of MMTV particles detected Gag-ubiquitin conjugates, demonstrating that an interaction with the ubiquitination system occurs during assembly, as previously found for other retroviruses. For all of the cell lines tested, the inhibitor treatment effectively inactivated proteasomes, as measured by the accumulation of polyubiquitinated proteins. The ubiquitination system was also inhibited, as evidenced by the loss of monoubiquitinated histones from treated cells. These results and those from other viruses show that
proteasome
inhibitors reduce the budding of viruses that utilize either a PPPY- or PTAP-based L domain and that this effect does not depend on the assembly site or the presence of monoubiquitinated Gag in the virion.
...
PMID:Retroviruses have differing requirements for proteasome function in the budding process. 1261 Jan 13
We have partially reconstituted 20S
proteasome
/RNA complexes using oligonucleotides corresponding to ARE (adenosine- and uridine-rich element) (AUUUA)4 and
HIV
-TAR (human immunodeficiency virus-Tat transactivation response element), a stem-loop structure in the 5' UTR (untranslated region) of
HIV
-mRNAs. We demonstrate that these RNAs which associate with proteasomes are degraded by proteasomal endonuclease activity. The formation of these 20S
proteasome
/RNA substrate complexes is rather specific since 20S proteasomes do not interfere with truncated TAR that is not cleaved by proteasomal endonuclease. In addition, affinity of proteasomes for (AUUUA)4 is much stronger as it is for
HIV
-TAR. These results provide further arguments for our hypothesis that proteasomes could be involved in the destabilisation of cytokines mRNAs containing AUUUA sequences as well as viral mRNAs.
...
PMID:Substrate affinity and substrate specificity of proteasomes with RNase activity. 1268 29
This study identifies calpain as being instrumental for brush border (BB) microvillus assembly during differentiation and effacement during bacterial pathogenesis. Calpain activity is decreased by 25-80% in Caco 2 lines stably overexpressing calpastatin, the physiological inhibitor of calpain, and the effect is proportional to the calpastatin/calpain ratio. These lines exhibit a 2.5-fold reduction in the rate of microvillus extension. Apical microvillus assembly is reduced by up to 50%, as measured by quantitative fluorometric microscopy (QFM) of ezrin, indicating that calpain recruits ezrin to BB microvilli. Calpain inhibitors ZLLYCHN2, MDL 28170, and PD 150606 block BB assembly and ezrin recruitment to the BB. The
HIV
protease inhibitor ritonavir, which inhibits calpain at clinically relevant concentrations, also blocks BB assembly, whereas cathepsin and
proteasome
inhibitors do not. Microvillus effacement is inhibited after exposure of calpastatin-overexpressing cells to enteropathogenic Escherichia coli. These results suggest that calpain regulates BB assembly as well as pathological effacement, and indicate that it is an important regulator involved in
HIV
protease inhibitor toxicity and host-microbial pathogen interactions.
...
PMID:Calpain regulates enterocyte brush border actin assembly and pathogenic Escherichia coli-mediated effacement. 1276 39
A series of new 7-substituted-4-chloro-3-alkoxy isocoumarin derivatives were synthesized and evaluated as inhibitors of representative classes of proteases: serine protease (alpha-chymotrypsin, trypsin), cysteine protease (Caspase-3), and aspartyl protease (
HIV
-protease), 20S
proteasome
and also as inhibitors of amyloid peptide gamma-secretase-mediated production. Protease inhibition selectivity is directly related to the structure of the substituent at the 7-position of the isocoumarin nucleus. 7-Nitro-isocoumarin derivatives (4c, 4d, 4f) are potent alpha-chymotrypsin inhibitors but slightly active or inactive on
HIV
-protease, as well as on cysteine protease. In contrast, only derivatives bearing a free amino (5d, 5f) or a substituted amino group (6f) at the 7-position of the isocoumarin nucleus, were found weakly active or inactive on alpha-chymotrypsin, trypsin, Caspase-3 and
HIV
-protease, but prevent gamma-secretase-mediated production of Abeta 40/42 amyloid peptides, which is known to be involved in Alzheimer's disease. Moreover, the most active compounds on beta-amyloid peptide production [JLK6 (5d), JLK2 (5f) and JLK7 (6f)] show only weak or moderate inhibitory activity on the 20S
proteasome
. The obtained results suggest that the described new isocoumarin analogues could be of interest, since compounds like JLK6 (5d), JLK2 (5f) and JLK7 (6f) can be considered as possible hits for the development of new agents directed towards Alzheimer's disease.
...
PMID:Synthesis of new 3-alkoxy-7-amino-4-chloro-isocoumarin derivatives as new beta-amyloid peptide production inhibitors and their activities on various classes of protease. 1281 77
HIV
-1 is a fundamentally difficult target for vaccines because of its high mutation rate and its repertoire of immune evasion strategies. To address these difficulties, a multivalent genetic vaccine or "live genetic vaccine" was recently developed against
HIV
-1 using the expression library immunization (ELI) approach. In this
HIV
-1 vaccine, all open reading frames of HTLV-IIIb are expressed as protein fragments to retain all viral T cell epitopes, but destroy protein toxicity, inactivate immune escape functions, and reveal subdominant epitopes. In addition, each antigen fragment is fused to the ubiquitin protein to increase antigen expression and target these antigens to the
proteasome
to enhance cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses. This multivalent vaccine also has the advantage of being incapable of generating infectious
HIV
-1 virus because of the segregation of the
HIV
genome into 32 separate plasmids. In this work, we demonstrate the ability of this genetic vaccine to provoke robust HLA-A*0201-restricted T cell responses in MHC class I humanized mice against gag, pol, env, and nef after a single round of immunization. In addition, this HTLV-IIIb-derived vaccine demonstrated cross-clade, envelope-specific, HLA-restricted CD8 responses against clades A, D, and E. HLA-restricted CD8 responses were generated against all 32 open reading frames encoded by the multi-plasmid genetic vaccine demonstrating that a broad repertoire of human relevant CD8 responses are provoked by this vaccine. This work supports this approach to generate multivalent T cell responses to control the highly mutable and immuno-evasive
HIV
-1 virus.
...
PMID:Generation of multivalent genome-wide T cell responses in HLA-A*0201 transgenic mice by an HIV-1 expression library immunization (ELI) vaccine. 1284 72
HIV
lipodystrophy is a heterogeneous syndrome, which has yet to be objectively defined, comprising peripheral lipoatrophy, central fat accumulation and lipomata, along with hyperlipidaemia, insulin resistance and lactic acidaemia. Both nucleoside analogues and protease inhibitors are involved, but there are also host factors that probably place some patients at greater risk. The pathogenesis is increasingly understood, with evidence of interference of several regulatory proteins such as sterol regulatory enhancer binding protein-1, the
proteasome
, mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma and GLUT-4. Along with the issues of cosmesis and stigmatization, a principal clinical concern that arises with lipodystrophy is a possible increased risk of accelerated atherosclerosis. A variety of therapeutic interventions, designed to limit these risks, are under evaluation, but none is conclusively shown to be of value.
...
PMID:HIV lipodystrophy: risk factors, pathogenesis, diagnosis and management. 1287 May 40
HIV
protease inhibitors are antiretroviral drugs that block the enzyme required for production of infectious viral particles. Although these agents have been designed to selectively bind to the catalytic site of
HIV
protease, evidence indicates that other cellular and microbial enzymes and pathways are also affected. It has been reported that patients treated with highly active anti-retroviral therapy (HAART) containing a protease inhibitor may be at reduced risk of Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) and some types of non-Hodgkin lymphomas; some disease regressions have also been described. Here we review recent data showing that several widely used protease inhibitors, including indinavir, saquinavir, ritonavir, and nelfinavir, can affect important cellular and tissue processes such as angiogenesis, tumour growth and invasion, inflammation, antigen processing and presentation, cell survival, and tissue remodelling. Most of these non-
HIV
-related effects of protease inhibitors are due to inhibition of cell invasion and matrix metalloprotease activity, or modulation of the cell
proteasome
and NFkappaB. These elements are required for development of most tumours. Thus, by direct and indirect activities, protease inhibitors can simultaneously block several pathways involved in tumour growth, invasion, and metastasis. These findings indicate that protease inhibitors can be exploited for the therapy of KS and other tumours that occur in both
HIV
-infected and non-infected individuals. A multicentre phase II clinical trial with indinavir in non-
HIV
-associated KS is about to start in Italy.
...
PMID:Use of HIV protease inhibitors to block Kaposi's sarcoma and tumour growth. 1296 74
The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) relies on Vif (viral infectivity factor) to overcome the potent antiviral function of APOBEC3G (apolipoprotein B mRNA-editing enzyme, catalytic polypeptide-like 3G, also known as CEM15). Using an APOBEC3G-specific antiserum, we now show that Vif prevents virion incorporation of endogenous APOBEC3G by effectively depleting the intracellular levels of this enzyme in
HIV
-1-infected T cells. Vif achieves this depletion by both impairing the translation of APOBEC3G mRNA and accelerating the posttranslational degradation of the APOBEC3G protein by the 26S
proteasome
. Vif physically interacts with APOBEC3G, and expression of Vif alone in the absence of other
HIV
-1 proteins is sufficient to cause depletion of APOBEC3G. These findings highlight how the bimodal translational and posttranslational inhibitory effects of Vif on APOBEC3G combine to markedly suppress the expression of this potent antiviral enzyme in virally infected cells, thereby effectively curtailing the incorporation of APOBEC3G into newly formed
HIV
-1 virions.
...
PMID:HIV-1 Vif blocks the antiviral activity of APOBEC3G by impairing both its translation and intracellular stability. 1452 6
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>