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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The envelope glycoprotein (gp70) of a molecularly cloned, replication-defective feline leukemia virus (FeLV-
FAIDS
clone 61C) carries determinants for induction of fatal
immunodeficiency
disease, whereas the gp70 of its companion replication-competent, probably parent virus (clone 61E) does not. Immunoprecipitation analysis of the extracellular glycoproteins of 61E and EECC, a replication-competent viral construct composed of the 61C env and 3' long terminal repeat fused to the 61E gag-pol genes, demonstrated that the gp70 of EECC could be distinguished from that of 61E by both feline immune serum and a murine monoclonal antibody. Molecular weights of both the envelope precursor polyprotein (gp80) and the mature extracellular glycoprotein (gp70) of 61E were smaller than the corresponding proteins from the pathogenic EECC. Both the molecular weight disparity and monoclonal antibody discrimination of the two gp80s were abolished by inhibition of envelope protein glycosylation with tunicamycin, whereas the apparent gp70 size differences were resolved by enzymatic removal of N-linked oligosaccharides. Pulse-chase studies in EECC-infected cells demonstrated that processing of gp80 to gp70 was delayed and that this retardation of envelope glycoprotein processing could be simulated in 61E-infected cells by treatment with the glucosidase inhibitor N-methyldeoxynojirimycin, a compound that causes retention of oligosaccharides in the high-mannose form. The resultant 61E gp70 then could be recognized by sera from EECC-immunized cats. The presence of a higher content of sialic acid on the apathogenic 61E gp70 indicated that oligosaccharides of 61E and EECC gp70 were processed differently. These data suggested that the unique biochemical properties which distinguish the envelope glycoproteins of the FeLV-
FAIDS
variant from its companion apathogenic parent virus were responsible for T-cell cytopathicity and induction of
immunodeficiency
disease. Further biochemical characterization of these glycoproteins should be useful in understanding the pathogenic mechanisms of
immunodeficiency
disease induced by retroviruses.
...
PMID:Posttranslational modifications distinguish the envelope glycoprotein of the immunodeficiency disease-inducing feline leukemia virus retrovirus. 253 25
The identification and molecular cloning of a feline leukemia virus (FeLV) isolate (FeLV-
FAIDS
) that consistently produces
immunodeficiency syndrome
has allowed prospective investigation of events that occur in the prodromal phase of disease. Using a T-lymphocyte colony forming assay (T-CFU-Ic) we have demonstrated that a drastic depletion of circulating T-CFU-Ic prefigures the development of clinical
immunodeficiency
disease in inoculated cats and correlates with the appearance and replication of the FeLV-
FAIDS
variant genome in serially collected bone marrow samples. During the same presymptomatic time period, no significant alterations in conventional mitogen-induced lymphocyte blastogenic responses or in circulating lymphocyte numbers were evident. Thus T-CFU-Ic assay but not conventional mitogen-driven blastogenesis identified animals destined to develop
immunodeficiency syndrome
. The correlation among T-CFU-Ic depletion, the replication of the lymphocytopathic FeLV-
FAIDS
variant genome in hematopoietic and lymphoid tissues, and the onset of clinical disease, infers that ablation of a colony-forming T lymphocyte progenitor subset is important in the early pathogenesis of feline retrovirus-induced
immunodeficiency syndrome
.
...
PMID:Colony forming T lymphocyte deficit in the development of feline retrovirus induced immunodeficiency syndrome. 253 13
Severe progressive
immunodeficiency syndrome
can be induced experimentally with a molecularly cloned isolate of feline leukemia virus (FeLV-
FAIDS
). The resultant disease syndrome is characterized by persistent viremia, lymphopenia, progressive weight loss, persistent diarrhea, enteropathy, and opportunistic infections. The onset of clinical
immunodeficiency
disease is prefigured by the replication of the FeLV-
FAIDS
variant virus in bone marrow and other tissues. The FeLV-
FAIDS
system can be used to evaluate antiviral agents which act on steps in the replication cycle which are conserved among retroviruses (e.g. reverse transcriptase, protease, assembly). The persistence and magnitude of viremia serves as a useful parameter in antiviral studies because it can be easily measured, presages the eventual development of
immunodeficiency
, and provides a convenient indicator of therapeutic efficacy either in preventing de novo FeLV infection or in reversing or ameliorating established infection. We describe here the evaluation of 2',3'-dideoxycytidine (ddC) against FeLV-
FAIDS
infection - both in vitro in cell culture assay systems and in vivo in cats administered ddC either via intravenous bolus dosage or via controlled release subcutaneous implants. We found that, although controlled release delivery of ddC inhibited de novo FeLV-
FAIDS
replication and delayed onset of viremia when therapy was discontinued (after 3 weeks), an equivalent incidence and level of viremia were established rapidly in both ddC-treated and control cats. The FeLV model, therefore, can be used to assess rapidly experimental single agent or combined antiviral therapies for persistent retrovirus infection and disease.
...
PMID:Feline leukemia virus-induced immunodeficiency syndrome in cats as a model for evaluation of antiretroviral therapy. 254 Jan 9
2',3'-dideoxycytidine (ddC) inhibits replication of the
immunodeficiency
inducing strain of feline leukemia virus (FeLV-
FAIDS
) in vitro at concentrations ranging from 1-10 micrograms/ml. Additive antiviral effect is achieved when ddC is combined with either human recombinant alpha interferon (IFN alpha) or tumor necrosis factor (TNF) plus IFN alpha. Initial in vivo pharmacokinetic studies in cats, utilizing bolus intravenous administration of ddC (20 mg/kg), resulted in peak plasma concentrations of 15 micrograms/ml 1 min after administration and a half-life of approximately 1 h. These values could not be augmented with high levels of the deaminase blocker tetrahydrouridine administered prior to or concurrently with ddC. In vivo trials utilizing multiple, daily intravenous injections of ddC could not prevent the development of persistent viremia in cats infected with FeLV-
FAIDS
. To enhance ddC pharmacokinetics and antiviral activity, controlled release capsular implants were developed by blending ddC with a copolymer consisting of DL-lactide glycolide and hydroxypropyl cellulose, which was melt-spun into fibers and encapsulated in a sheath of polyethylene glycol for subcutaneous implantation. Pharmacokinetic studies, conducted in cats receiving an average dose of 600 mg of ddC, indicated an average peak plasma concentration of 17 micrograms/ml achieved at 6 h post implantation with 3.5 micrograms/ml noted at 48 h; and an extension of plasma half-life from 1.5 (bolus subcutaneous injection) to 20 h. sustained plasma concentrations of 1.5 to 10 micrograms/ml, equivalent to ddC levels previously shown to have anti-FeLV activity in vitro, were maintained throughout a 72 h period. Implantation devices could be replenished every 48 h and elevated plasma levels were sustained for four weeks without signs of clinical toxicity, sepsis or significant alterations in the hemogram. Initial clinical trials employing controlled release capsular ddC implants in vivo indicate significant retardation of FeLV-
FAIDS
replication throughout a four week treatment period.
...
PMID:Treatment of FeLV-induced immunodeficiency syndrome (FeLV-FAIDS) with controlled release capsular implantation of 2',3'-dideoxycytidine. 254 37
Findings are reviewed, relevant to elucidation of the pathogenic, genetic and biochemical properties of a single, genetically heterogeneous isolate of feline leukemia virus (FeLV-
FAIDS
) shown to induce fatal
immunodeficiency
disease in nearly 100% of inoculated cats. Hypotheses are suggested which pertain to the mechanism of T-cell killing by this virus, and which extrapolate findings in the FeLV-
FAIDS
animal model to AIDS induced in humans by human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV).
...
PMID:FeLV-FAIDS-induced immunodeficiency syndrome in cats. 254 91
We describe the identification, experimental transmission, and pathogenesis of a naturally occurring powerfully immunosuppressive isolate of feline leukemia virus (designated here as FeLV-
FAIDS
) which induces fatal acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in 100% (25 of 25) of persistently viremic experimentally infected specific pathogen-free (SPF) cats after predictable survival periods ranging from less than 3 months (acute
immunodeficiency syndrome
) to greater than one year (chronic
immunodeficiency syndrome
), depending on the age of the cat at time of virus exposure. The pathogenesis of FeLV-
FAIDS
-induced feline
immunodeficiency
disease is characterized by: a prodromal period of largely asymptomatic viremia; progressive weight loss, lymphoid hyperplasia associated with viral replication in lymphoid follicles, lymphoid depletion associated with extinction of viral replication in lymphoid follicles, intractable diarrhea associated with necrosis of intestinal crypt epithelium, lymphopenia, suppressed lymphocyte blastogenesis, impaired cutaneous allograft rejection, hypogammaglobulinemia, and opportunistic infections such as bacterial respiratory disease and necrotizing stomatitis. The clinical onset of
immunodeficiency syndrome
correlates with the replication of a specific FeLV-
FAIDS
viral variant, detected principally as unintegrated viral DNA, in bone marrow, lymphoid tissues, and intestine. Two of seven cats with chronic
immunodeficiency
disease that survived greater than 1 year after inoculation developed lymphoma affecting the marrow, intestine, spleen, and mesenteric nodes. Experimentally induced feline
immunodeficiency syndrome
, therefore, is a rapid and consistent in vivo model for prospective studies of the viral genetic determinants, pathogenesis, prevention, and therapy of retrovirus-induced
immunodeficiency
disease.
...
PMID:Experimental transmission and pathogenesis of immunodeficiency syndrome in cats. 282 40
We report the first complete nucleotide sequence (8,440 base pairs) of a biologically active feline leukemia virus (FeLV), designated FeLV-61E (or F6A), and the molecular cloning, biological activity, and env-long terminal repeat (LTR) sequence of another FeLV isolate, FeLV-3281 (or F3A). F6A corresponds to the non-disease-specific common-form component of the
immunodeficiency
disease-inducing strain of FeLV, FeLV-
FAIDS
, and was isolated from tissue DNA of a cat following experimental transmission of naturally occurring feline acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. F3A clones were derived from a subgroup-A-virus-producing feline tumor cell line. Both are unusual relative to other molecularly cloned FeLVs studied to date in their ability to induce viremia in weanling (8-week-old) cats and in their failure to induce acute disease. The F6A provirus is organized into 5'-LTR-gag-pol-env-LTR-3' regions; the gag and pol open reading frames are separated by an amber codon, and env is in a different reading frame. The deduced extracellular glycoproteins of F6A, F3A, and the Glasgow-1 subgroup A isolate of FeLV (M. Stewart, M. Warnock, A. Wheeler, N. Wilkie, J. Mullins, D. Onions, and J. Neil, J. Virol. 58:825-834, 1986) are 98% homologous, despite having been isolated from naturally infected cats 6 to 13 years apart and from widely different geographic locations. As a group, their envelope gene sequences differ markedly from those of the disease-associated subgroup B and acutely pathogenic subgroup C viruses. Thus, F6A and F3A correspond to members of a highly conserved family and represent prototypes of the horizontally transmitted, minimally pathogenic FeLV present in all naturally occurring infections.
...
PMID:Strong sequence conservation among horizontally transmissible, minimally pathogenic feline leukemia viruses. 282 67
Cats exposed to the feline leukemia virus (FeLV) may mount an effective immune response and eliminate the virus, develop a non-viremic, latent infection or become persistently infected and shed the virus. Persistently infected cats commonly die of secondary opportunistic infections that result from FeLV-induced immunosuppression. The acquired immunosuppression is the most frequent and most devastating consequence of FeLV infection in the cat. Immunosuppression is targeted primarily to the cell-mediated immune system and has been attributed to the viral p15e envelope protein. The decreased IgG response and proliferative response to T cell mitogens is thought to be due to a defect in the helper cell function. As a result of T helper cell immunosuppression, infected cats may also have defective cytotoxic lymphocyte and activated macrophage functions which are regulated by their lymphokines. Research has shown that the virus causes a general suppression in the production of T cell-derived lymphokines, including gamma interferon and interleukin 2. A decrease in the function of polymorphonuclear leukocytes has also been reported and may contribute to deaths due to opportunistic infections in FeLV-positive cats. There are numerous parallels between the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in man and the FeLV-induced
immunodeficiency syndrome
in cats. Frequent deaths due to opportunistic infections, lymphopenia, depressed cell-mediated immune responses to T cell-dependent antigens despite hypergammaglobulinemia and the presence of a long period of time between infection and the onset of clinical signs are just a few of the syndromes that are similar between the 2 retroviral diseases. A new strain of FeLV, FeLV-
FAIDS
has been associated with a naturally occurring immunosuppressive syndrome that is strikingly similar to AIDS in man. In addition, a T-lymphotropic retrovirus has recently been identified from cats with an
immunodeficiency
-like syndrome; this feline lentivirus disease is morphologically similar, but antigenically distinct from the human
immunodeficiency
virus, the cause of AIDS. Treatment for FeLV immunosuppression is primarily supportive. The development of a soluble tumor cell antigen vaccine has been shown to be efficacious in preventing FeLV infections.
...
PMID:Clinical and immunologic aspects of FeLV-induced immunosuppression. 284 93
The functions of the surface glycoproteins (SU) of feline leukemia viruses (FeLVs) are of interest since these proteins mediate virus infection and interference and are critical determinants of disease specificity. In this study, we examined the biochemical and genetic determinants of SU important to virus entry and cell killing. In particular, we developed and used vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV)/FeLV pseudotype virus interference assays to determine interference subgroupings and assess mechanisms of host cell restriction. We also assessed roles of SU in virus growth kinetics and in the inhibition of cell killing caused by superinfection with cytopathic virus. Subgroup classification by VSV/FeLV pseudotype assay was in agreement with that defined previously by focus interference assay and was found to be determined by changes near the N terminus of SU for FeLV subgroups A (FeLV-A) and C. Virus host range restriction was found to be mediated at the level of virus entry in most cases, although postentry events mediated restriction in the failure of a subgroup A-like, T-cell cytopathic and
immunodeficiency
-inducing clone (FeLV-
FAIDS
-EECC) to replicate in feline fibroblasts. FeLV-
FAIDS
-EECC-induced cell killing was also inhibited by prior infection with one of two FeLV-A isolates. This inhibition could be conveyed by as few as four amino acid changes near the N terminus of the FeLV-A SU and also appeared to be mediated at a postentry level. Lastly, the SU-coding sequence was also found to determine differences in growth kinetics of viruses within the same subgroup. These studies demonstrate that subtle alterations in the FeLV SU, particularly in the N-terminal region, impart multiple significant functional differences which distinguish virus variants.
...
PMID:Interference with superinfection and with cell killing and determination of host range and growth kinetics mediated by feline leukemia virus surface glycoproteins. 838 21
Cell killing by cytopathic retroviruses is often associated with a delay or failure in the establishment of superinfection interference. Superinfection has been observed during T-cell killing and fatal
immunodeficiency
disease induction by the feline leukemia virus (FeLV) chimera FeLV-
FAIDS
-EECC, containing the surface envelope glycoprotein (SU) of FeLV-
FAIDS
clone 61C. We demonstrate here that 61C SU has a defect that results in a nearly complete failure to establish superinfection interference against homologous virus challenge. This failure was evident only in feline T (FeT) cell clones expressing envelope protein, not in the rare cells that have survived cytopathic infection to become chronically infected. The regions of SU responsible for this defect were the same as those previously identified as responsible for T-cell killing. The superinfection interference properties of a noncytophatic molecular clone, FeLV-
FAIDS
-61E, were different in that 61E established interference to homologous virus challenge, both in SU-expressing cell clones and in chronically infected cells. Neither 61E nor EECC established interference against heterologous virus challenge. Viruses expressing chimeric SU proteins displayed varied and intermediate interference properties. Purified 61E and 61C SU competed for binding sites on FeT cell surfaces, and purified 61E SU blocked infection of virus bearing 61E or 61C SU. In addition, purified 61E and 61C SU each coprecipitated 70-kDa FeT cell surface proteins. Our data are consistent with the hypothesis that there are multiple cellular components necessary for 61E and 61C attachment to and penetration of FeT cells, a primary receptor that is utilized by both 61E and 61C, and secondary receptors that are likely to be virus specific.
...
PMID:Distinct superinfection interference properties yet similar receptor utilization by cytopathic and noncytopathic feline leukemia viruses. 839 43
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