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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The retroviral genome consists of two identical RNA molecules associated at their 5' ends by a stable structure called the dimer linkage structure. The dimer linkage structure, while maintaining the dimer state of the retroviral genome, might also be involved in packaging and reverse transcription, as well as recombination during proviral DNA synthesis. To study the dimer structure of the retroviral genome and the mechanism of dimerization, we analyzed features of the dimeric genome of
reticuloendotheliosis
virus (REV) type A and identified elements required for its dimerization. Here we report that the REV dimeric genome extracted from virions and infected cells, as well as that synthesized in vitro, is more resistant to heat denaturation than avian sarcoma and leukemia virus, murine leukemia virus, or human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 dimeric RNA. The minimal domain required to form a stable REV RNA dimer in vitro was found to map between positions 268 and 452 (KpnI and SalI sites), thus corresponding to the E encapsidation sequence (J. E. Embretson and H. M. Temin, J. Virol. 61:2675-2683, 1987). In addition, both the 5' and 3' halves of E are necessary in cis for RNA dimerization and the extent of RNA dimerization is influenced by viral sequences flanking E. Rapid and efficient dimerization of REV RNA containing gag sequences in addition to the E sequences and annealing of replication primer tRNA(Pro) to the primer-binding site necessitate the nucleocapsid protein.
...
PMID:Analytical study of avian reticuloendotheliosis virus dimeric RNA generated in vivo and in vitro. 133 19
The effect of chloroquine, a drug known to affect intracellular exocytic pathways, was studied in two retroviral systems: human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV-1) and avian
reticuloendotheliosis
virus (REV-A). With chloroquine treatment of virus-infected cells, significant size reduction of the cell- and virus-associated surface glycoproteins, gp90 of REV-A and gp120 of HIV-1, was observed. In the case of HIV-1, extracellular virions derived from treated cells contained very little gp120. Infectivity and reverse transcriptase assays of HIV-1 demonstrated that by chloroquine treatment the majority of the virions released was noninfectious and the total virus yield was also reduced. The data suggest that chloroquine inhibition of infectious virus production is most likely due to interference with terminal glycosylation in the trans-Golgi network.
...
PMID:Inhibition of human immunodeficiency virus infectivity by chloroquine. 169 28
The avian
reticuloendotheliosis
virus T contains within its genome the oncogene rel. The expression of this gene is responsible for the induction of lymphoid tumors in birds. Recently, the rel gene was shown to be related to the p50 DNA binding subunit of the transcription factor complex NF-kappa B. Binding sites for the NF-kappa B complex are found in the enhancer regions of a number of genes, including the immunoglobulin kappa gene and the human
immunodeficiency
virus long terminal repeat. In this communication we identify an activity from avian
reticuloendotheliosis
virus T-transformed avian lymphoid cells that binds in an electrophoretic-mobility-shift assay to an NF-kappa B binding site from the kappa enhancer. This activity contains proteins immunologically related to rel, as detected by polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies directed against v-rel. In a DNA affinity precipitation assay using the NF-kappa B site from the human
immunodeficiency
virus long terminal repeat, v-rel and several other proteins were identified. These data suggest that oncogenic transformation by v-rel is the result of an altered pattern of gene expression.
...
PMID:Interaction of the v-rel protein with an NF-kappa B DNA binding site. 184 11
We herein report five new cases of severe combined immunodeficiency with hypereosinophilia, the so-called familial
reticuloendotheliosis
first described by Omenn. It is characterized by erythroderma, polyadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, severe and repeated infections, protracted diarrhoea with failure to thrive. There is marked eosinophilia as well as a profound
immunodeficiency
. The immunologic abnormalities consist of an increase in T cell number, a B cell lymphopenia and a complete lack of humoral and cellular immune responses to antigens. A deficiency of lymphocytes 5'-nucleotidase has been inconstantly found. Histologic findings are characteristic, consisting of severe T and B lymphocyte depletion in lymphoid organs with infiltration by histiocytes and, to a lesser extent, eosinophils. The outcome was uniformly fatal within the first year of life. Treatment by a combination of parenteral nutrition, steroids and epipodophyllotoxin was effective in obtaining the complete remission of clinical manifestations due to the histiocytic and eosinophilic infiltration in two patients. However, the treatment failed to correct the immunologic defect. These results indicate that the histiocytic infiltration is possibly not responsible for the immunologic detect observed in this condition.
...
PMID:[Severe combined immune deficiency with hypereosinophilia. Immunologic study of 5 cases]. 298 12
Lymphocytes from three infants with
reticuloendotheliosis
and eosinophilia ( Omenn 's syndrome) and
immunodeficiency
were assayed for 5'-nucleotidase activity. B and T lymphocytes from all three patients were totally deficient in ecto-5'-nucleotidase activity, but had normal levels of cytoplasmic 5'-nucleotidase. In contrast, cultured lymphocytes expressed normal ectoplasmic and cytoplasmic activities, suggesting that the lymphocyte-restricted enzyme deficiency was not likely a primary genetic defect. The deficiency of lymphocyte ecto-5'-nucleotidase was not associated with any abnormality of deoxynucleoside metabolism. The absence of lymphocyte ecto-5'-nucleotidase may be a characteristic feature of this syndrome and may help to distinguish this disease from others with similar manifestations.
...
PMID:Absence of lymphocyte ecto-5'-nucleotidase in infants with reticuloendotheliosis and eosinophilia (Omenn's syndrome). 632 96
This article reviews some of the published applications of flow cytometry for in vitro and in vivo detection and enumeration of virus-infected cells. Sample preparation, fixation, and permeabilization techniques for a number of virus-cell systems are evaluated. The use of flow cytometry for multiparameter analysis of virus-cell interactions for simian virus 40, herpes simplex viruses, human cytomegalovirus, and human
immunodeficiency
virus and its use for determining the effect of antiviral compounds on these virus-infected cells are reviewed. This is followed by a brief description of the use of flow cytometry for the analysis of several virus-infected cell systems, including blue tongue virus, hepatitis C virus, avian
reticuloendotheliosis
virus, African swine fever virus, woodchuck hepatitis virus, bovine viral diarrhea virus, feline leukemia virus, Epstein-Barr virus, Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus, and Friend murine leukemia virus. Finally, the use of flow cytometry for the rapid diagnosis of human cytomegalovirus and human
immunodeficiency
virus in peripheral blood cells of acutely infected patients and the use of this technology to monitor patients on antiviral therapy are reviewed. Future prospects for the rapid diagnosis of in vivo viral and bacterial infections by flow cytometry are discussed.
...
PMID:Uses of flow cytometry in virology. 753 May 94
The transcription factor v-Rel is a transforming protein of the
reticuloendotheliosis
virus. We found that v-Rel activates the promoter of the proto-oncogene c-jun. Two elements in the c-jun promoter were required for the activation by v-Rel. One was a kB-site (v-Rel binding site), and the other was a c-jun promoter region between -52 and +148 (c-jun promoter (-52/+148)). Two promoters with the kB-site(s), those of human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) and SV40, were not activated by v-Rel, but their kB-sites were activated when introduced upstream of the c-jun promoter (-52/+148). Thus, the c-jun promoter (-52/+148) had information for the selective activation of the c-jun promoter by v-Rel. v-Rel bound to the c-jun kB-site with the higher affinity than c-Rel, thereby activating the c-jun promoter more efficiently than c-Rel. Moreover, the activity of v-Rel mutants upon the c-jun promoter correlates with their transforming activity. Thus, the c-jun promoter activation by v-Rel may play a role in the transformation caused by v-Rel.
...
PMID:Selective activation of the proto-oncogene c-jun promoter by the transforming protein v-Rel. 866 46
Normal immunocytes including T and B cells are equilibrated by a reciprocal attacking mechanism called a network. Continuous disequilibrium of this network results in general
immunodeficiency
with oligo- and polyclonal hyperimmunity, for example, T-cell activation due to spontaneous
reticuloendotheliosis
, paraneoplastic autoimmune syndromes, and human immunodeficiency virus infection. In these disorders, reciprocal self-reactivity, including autologous graft-versus-host reaction, plays a role in the
immunodeficiency
. A priori self-targeting immunity is a key mechanism to explain autoimmunity in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. In the treatment of the
immunodeficiency
due to hyperimmunity, I propose immunological suppression by agents and reconstitution of the network by bone-marrow transplantation.
...
PMID:Acquired immune deficiency syndrome caused by hyperimmunity. 880 28
In addition to their role in reverse transcription, the R-region sequences of some retroviruses affect viral transcription. The first 28 nucleotides of the R region within the long terminal repeat (LTR) of the murine type C retrovirus SL3 were predicted to form a stem-loop structure. We tested whether this structure affected the transcriptional activity of the viral LTR. Mutations that altered either side of the stem and thus disrupted base pairing were generated. These decreased the level of expression of a reporter gene under the control of viral LTR sequences about 5-fold in transient expression assays and 10-fold in cells stably transformed with the LTR-reporter plasmids. We also generated a compensatory mutant in which both the ascending and descending sides of the stem were mutated such that the nucleotide sequence was different but the predicted secondary structure was maintained. Most of the activity of the wild-type SL3 element was restored in this mutant. Thus, the stem-loop structure was important for the maximum activity of the SL3 LTR. Primer extension analysis indicated that the stem-loop structure affected the levels of cytoplasmic RNA. Nuclear run-on assays indicated that deletion of the R region had a small effect on transcriptional initiation and no effect on RNA polymerase processivity. Thus, the main effect of the R-region element was on one or more steps that occurred after the template was transcribed by RNA polymerase. This finding implied that the main function of the R-region element involved RNA processing. R-region sequences of human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 or mouse mammary tumor virus could not replace the SL3 element. R-region sequences from an avian
reticuloendotheliosis
virus partially substituted for the SL3 sequences. R-region sequences from Moloney murine leukemia virus or feline leukemia virus did function in place of the SL3 element. Thus, the R region element appears to be a general feature of the mammalian type C genus of retroviruses.
...
PMID:The secondary structure of the R region of a murine leukemia virus is important for stimulation of long terminal repeat-driven gene expression. 973 16
The 5' leader of Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) genomic RNA and of retroviruses in general is long and contains stable secondary structures that are critical in the early and late steps of virus replication such as RNA dimerization and packaging and in the process of reverse transcription. The initiation of RSV Gag translation has been reported to be 5' cap dependent and controlled by three short open reading frames located in the 380-nucleotide leader upstream of the Gag start codon. Translation of RSV Gag would thus differ from that prevailing in other retroviruses such as murine leukemia virus,
reticuloendotheliosis
virus type A, and simian
immunodeficiency
virus, in which an internal ribosome entry segment (IRES) in the 5' end of the genomic RNA directs efficient Gag expression despite stable 5' secondary structures. This prompted us to investigate whether RSV Gag translation might be controlled by an IRES-dependent mechanism. The results show that the 5' leaders of RSV and v-Src RNA exhibit IRES properties, since these viral elements can promote efficient translation of monocistronic RNAs in conditions inhibiting 5' cap-dependent translation. When inserted between two cistrons in a canonical bicistronic construct, both the RSV and v-Src leaders promote expression of the 3' cistron. A genetic analysis of the RSV leader allowed the identification of two nonoverlapping 5' and 3' leader domains with IRES activity. In addition, the v-Src leader was found to contain unique 3' sequences promoting an efficient reinitiation of translation. Taken together, these data lead us to propose a new model for RSV translation.
...
PMID:Rous sarcoma virus translation revisited: characterization of an internal ribosome entry segment in the 5' leader of the genomic RNA. 1109 Jan 56
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