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:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We studied granulomatous inflammation in
simian AIDS
using histologic, immunohistologic, and in situ hybridization techniques. Complete Freund's adjuvant was used to induce granulomas in two control animals and two macaques infected with simian
immunodeficiency
virus (SIV) and having low peripheral CD4+ T cell counts. Control animals developed large (> 2 cm diameter) epithelioid granulomas containing CD68+ macrophages (m phi s), epithelioid m phi s and multinucleated giant cells (MNGCs), CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, and small perivascular collections of CD20+ B cells. Lymphocytes rarely expressed proliferating cell nuclear antigen (Ki-67), and only rare endothelial cells expressed vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1). In contrast, SIV+ animals had smaller (< 0.5 cm diameter) epithelioid granulomas characterized by numerous large, dense CD8+, CD20+ lymphocyte aggregates with prominent local division (Ki-67+). Despite low blood CD4+ T cell numbers, there was a substantial CD4+ T cell infiltrate, accompanied by enhanced endothelial VCAM-1 expression. These granulomas contained no detectable SIV antigen or RNA. Thus, in
simian AIDS
, experimentally induced granulomatous responses are grossly attenuated, yet associated with increased local endothelial-leukocyte signaling and lymphocyte division.
...
PMID:An immunohistologic study of granulomatous inflammation in SIV-infected rhesus monkeys. 768 65
To evaluate how viral variants may affect disease progression in human pediatric AIDS, we studied the potential of three simian
immunodeficiency
virus (SIV) isolates to induce
simian AIDS
in newborn rhesus macaques. The three virus isolates were previously shown to range from pathogenic (SIVmac251 and SIVmac239) to nonpathogenic (SIVmac1A11) when inoculated intravenously into juvenile and adult rhesus macaques. Six newborn macaques inoculated with pathogenic, uncloned SIVmac251 developed persistent, high levels of cell-associated and cell-free viremia, had no detectable antiviral antibodies, and had poor weight gain; these animals all exhibited severe clinical disease and pathologic lesions diagnostic for
simian AIDS
and were euthanatized 10 to 26 weeks after inoculation. Two newborns inoculated with pathogenic, molecularly cloned SIVmac239 developed persistent high virus load in peripheral blood, but both animals had normal weight gain and developed antiviral antibodies. One of the SIVmac239-infected neonates exhibited pathologic lesions diagnostic for
SAIDS
and was euthanatized at 34 weeks after inoculation; the other SIVmac239-infected neonate remained alive and exhibited no significant clinical disease for more than 1 year after inoculation. In contrast, three newborn rhesus macaques inoculated with the nonpathogenic molecular clone, SIVmac1A11, had transient, low-level viremia, seroconverted by 10 weeks after inoculation, had normal weight gain, and remained healthy for over 1 year. These results indicate that (i) newborn rhesus macaques infected with an uncloned, virulent SIVmac isolate have a more rapid, fulminant disease course than do adults inoculated with the same virus, (ii) the most rapid disease progression is associated with lack of a detectable humoral immune response in SIV-infected infant macaques, (iii) a molecularly cloned, attenuated SIV isolate is nonpathogenic in neonatal macaques, and (iv) SIV-infected neonatal macaques exhibit patterns of infection, virus load, and disease progression similar to those observed in human
immunodeficiency
virus-infected children. This SIV/neonatal rhesus model of pediatric AIDS provides a rapid, sensitive model with which to compare the virulence of SIV isolates and to study the mechanisms underlying the differences in disease progression in human
immunodeficiency
virus-infected infants.
...
PMID:Viral factors determine progression to AIDS in simian immunodeficiency virus-infected newborn rhesus macaques. 776 79
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) typically evolves from a macrophage-tropic, noncytopathic virus at early asymptomatic stages of infection to a T-cell-tropic, cytopathic, and syncytia-inducing virus population as humans progress to AIDS. This suggests that changes in virus phenotype may influence disease. Because simian
immunodeficiency
virus (SIV) infection in macaques is a common model system for HIV-1 pathogenesis, we determined whether SIV infection in macaques that develop
simian AIDS
is associated with a similar shift in viral tropism, replication, and cytopathic properties. The virus that infected the monkeys (SIVMneCL8) and predominated at early times in infection is a macrophage-tropic virus that replicates with relatively low efficiency in human T cell lines. The variant populations that arise in macaques as they progress to AIDS are more infectious for human T cell lines, exhibiting enhanced replication in CEM x 174 cells and an expanded host range that includes Molt-4 Clone 8 cells. Infections starting with equal doses of the viruses demonstrated that the late variants are cytopathic and syncytia-inducing compared to SIVMneCL8, but the variants replicate less efficiently in primary macaque macrophages. V3 sequences were generally conserved between the early and the late variants, suggesting that changes in SIVMne tropism, replication, and cytopathicity were apparently not due to alterations in V3. This study demonstrates important similarities in the phenotypic viral changes that accompany development of AIDS in SIV and HIV-1 infections and suggest that SIV may provide a model system for determining whether the rapidly replicating, T-cell-tropic cytopathic variants present late in infection and disease are indeed important in determining progression to AIDS.
...
PMID:Progression to AIDS in macaques is associated with changes in the replication, tropism, and cytopathic properties of the simian immunodeficiency virus variant population. 788 56
The simian
immunodeficiency
virus (SIV)-rhesus macaque model of heterosexual human
immunodeficiency
virus transmission consists of atraumatic application of cell-free SIVmac onto the intact vaginal mucosa of mature female rhesus macaques. This procedure results in systemic infection, and eventually infected animals develop the clinical signs and pathologic changes of
simian AIDS
. To achieve 100% transmission with the virus stocks used to date, multiple intravaginal inoculations are required. The current titration study utilized two stocks of SIVmac and demonstrated that a single intravaginal dose of cell-free SIV can reliably produce infection in rhesus macaques. This study also demonstrated that some animals intravaginally inoculated with cell-free SIVmac develop transient viremia characterized by a limited ability to isolate virus from peripheral blood mononuclear cells and lymph node mononuclear cells and no seroconversion to SIV antigen. SIV could be isolated from the peripheral lymph nodes of transiently viremic animals only during periods of viremia and not at times when SIV was not detected in circulating mononuclear cells. Thus, peripheral lymphoid tissues were not reservoirs of infection in the transiently viremic animals. Taken together, these results suggest either that the SIV infection was cleared in the transiently viremic animals or that SIV infection is limited to a compartment of the genital mucosal immune system that cannot be assessed by monitoring SIV infection in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and peripheral lymphoid tissue.
...
PMID:Intravaginal inoculation of rhesus macaques with cell-free simian immunodeficiency virus results in persistent or transient viremia. 808 77
Simian
immunodeficiency
virus infection of macaques is a model for human immunodeficiency virus infection of humans. In vivo-titrated stocks of SIV are essential for the utilization of this model for vaccine development. The elicitation of anti-human cell antibodies by some vaccines prepared in human cells and the related protective effects of the vaccine produced in human cells suggest a need for new macaque-derived SIV stocks. Here we describe the titration and characterization of two stocks of SIVmac that were produced in primary rhesus macaque cells. The first virus is SIVmac251, isolated from tissues of macaque 251, and the second is a molecular clone designated as SIVmac239. A 50% rhesus monkey infectious dose (MID50) was titrated for each virus stock by intravenous inoculation. An additional five macaques were inoculated with 10 MID50 of the SIVmac251 stock and were followed for disease outcome. All five monkeys developed antigenemia by 14 days postchallenge. Two of the five monkeys developed strong anti-SIV humoral immunity, whereas three developed little or no humoral immunity. As has been observed previously, the rapidity of disease progression correlated with the lack of a strong antibody response. The three animals with low humoral immunity died within 7 months of challenge, with antigenemia, cachexia, hypoproteinemia, hypoalbuminemia, weight loss, and intractable diarrhea, while maintaining their circulating CD4 numbers. One animal died at 1.5 years of more typical
simian AIDS
.
...
PMID:Titration and characterization of two rhesus-derived SIVmac challenge stocks. 819 74
Rhesus macaque monkeys infected with the simian
immunodeficiency
virus develop a syndrome mimicking AIDS in humans. We have demonstrated previously that sera from individuals infected with human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 inhibit the proliferation of lymphocytes from healthy noninfected subjects and that this phenomenon is associated with the development of clinical AIDS. We have also shown that sera from monkeys infected with SIV also have such inhibitors. In this body of work, we attempted to document the onset of these inhibitors in relation to the time of SIV infection. Twenty rhesus macaques were injected with one of two tissue strains of SIV or media. Blood was drawn on a set schedule and the serum samples frozen at -70 degrees C. The animals were monitored and observed for up to 42 weeks. All test animals were autopsied. Sera from all the draws were assayed against the same populations of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells in the same experiment using suboptimal amounts of phytohemagglutinin (PHA). Sera from those animals that subsequently developed
SAIDS
were more likely to demonstrate serum inhibition. This inhibition could be seen as early as 8-10 weeks after infection. By week 14, the assay could differentiate animals into
SAIDS
or healthy groups with a sensitivity of 67% and a specificity of 89%.
...
PMID:Serum inhibitors precede the development of SAIDS. 834 Sep 1
To identify viral determinants of simian
immunodeficiency
virus (SIV) virulence, two pairs of reciprocal recombinants constructed from a pathogenic (SIVmac239) and a nonpathogenic (SIVmac1A11) molecular clone of SIV were tested in rhesus macaques. A large 6.2-kb fragment containing gag, pol, env, and the regulatory genes from each of the cloned (parental) viruses was exchanged to produce one pair of recombinant viruses (designated SIVmac1A11/239gag-env/1A11 and SIVmac239/1A11gag-env/239 to indicate the genetic origins of the 5'/internal/3' regions, respectively, of the virus). A smaller 1.4-kb fragment containing the external env domain of each of the parental viruses was exchanged to create the second pair (SIVmac1A11/239env/1A11 and SIVmac239/1A11env/239) of recombinant viruses. Each of the two parental and four recombinant viruses was inoculated intravenously into four rhesus macaques, and all 24 animals were viremic by 4 weeks postinoculation (p.i.). Virus could not be isolated from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of any animals infected with SIVmac1A11 after 6 weeks p.i. but was consistently isolated from all macaques inoculated with SIVmac239 for 92 weeks p.i. Virus isolation was variable from animals infected with recombinant viruses; SIVmac1A11/239gag-env/1A11 and SIVmac239/1A11env/239 were isolated most frequently. Animals inoculated with SIVmac239 had 10 to 100 times more virus-infected PBMC than those infected with recombinant viruses. Three animals infected with SIVmac239 died with
simian AIDS
(
SAIDS
) during the 2-year observation period after inoculation, and the fourth SIVmac239-infected animal had clinical signs of
SAIDS
. Two animals infected with recombinant viruses died with
SAIDS
; one was infected with SIVmac239/1A11gag-env/239, and the other was infected with SIVmac1A11/239gag-env/1A11. The remaining 18 macaques remained healthy by 2 years p.i., and 13 were aviremic. One year after inoculation, peripheral lymph nodes of some of these healthy, aviremic animals harbored infected cells. All animals seroconverted within the first few weeks of infection, and the magnitude of antibody response to SIV was proportional to the levels and duration of viremia. Virus-suppressive PBMC were detected within 2 to 4 weeks p.i. in all animals but tended to decline as viremia disappeared. There was no association of levels of cell-mediated virus-suppressive activity and either virus load or disease progression. Taken together, these results indicate that differences in more than one region of the viral genome are responsible for the lack of virulence of SIVmac1A11.
...
PMID:Viral determinants of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) virulence in rhesus macaques assessed by using attenuated and pathogenic molecular clones of SIVmac. 837 53
Comparison of immune responses to infection by a pathogenic or a nonpathogenic
immunodeficiency
virus in macaques may provide insights into pathogenetic events leading to
simian AIDS
. This work is aimed at exploring cytokine expression during infection by simian
immunodeficiency
virus (SIV). We used semiquantitative reverse transcription-PCR to monitor interleukin (IL)-2/interferon (IFN)-gamma (Th1-like), and IL-4/IL-10 (Th2-like) expression in unmanipulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), during the acute phase of infection of eight cynomolgus macaques (Macaca fascicularis) with a pathogenic primary isolate of SIVmac251 (full-length nef), and of four other cynomolgus macaques by an attenuated molecular clone of SIVmac251 (nef-truncated). All the monkeys became infected, as clearly shown by the presence of infected PBMCs and by seroconversion. Nevertheless, PBMC-associated virus loads and p27 antigenemia in monkeys infected by the attenuated virus clone remained lower than those observed in animals infected with the pathogenic SIVmac251 isolate. A rise of IL-10 mRNA expression occurred in both groups of monkeys coincident with the peak of viral replication. In monkeys infected with the pathogenic SIVmac251, IL-2, IL-4, and IFN-gamma mRNAs were either weakly detectable or undetectable. On the contrary, animals infected by the attenuated virus exhibited an overexpression of these cytokine mRNAs during the first weeks after inoculation. The lack of expression of these cytokines in monkeys infected with the pathogenic primary isolate may reflect early
immunodeficiency
.
...
PMID:Comparative interleukin (IL-2)/interferon IFN-gamma and IL-4/IL-10 responses during acute infection of macaques inoculated with attenuated nef-truncated or pathogenic SICmac251 virus. 862 92
Six newborn rhesus macaques were experimentally infected with pathogenic Simian
immunodeficiency
virus of macaques (SIVmac251), and three newborn macaques were infected with avirulent SIVmac1A11. The former developed rapidly fatal
simian AIDS
and died within 26 wk of age, whereas the latter remained clinically normal. Infant monkeys that developed rapidly progressive disease had rapid declines in CD4+ cells and were unable to mount IgG and IgA antibody responses to SIV or to an unrelated antigen, tetanus toxoid. IgM antibody responses were near normal to both SIV-specific and nonspecific antigens. Cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses to SIV envelope were observed in animals infected with either virulent or avirulent SIV. These studies demonstrated that virulent SIVmac infection induced a rapid immunosuppression that was both SIV-specific and nonspecific in nature. The observation that virulent strains of SIV can rapidly induce a global immunosuppression provides one explanation for the rapid disease course in some HIV-infected children and supports the strategy of early and vigorous antiviral drug therapy to alter the disease course even if this does not prevent infection.
...
PMID:Virus-induced immunosuppression is linked to rapidly fatal disease in infant rhesus macaques infected with simian immunodeficiency virus. 884 37
Retrospective data indicate that two separate outbreaks of
simian AIDS
and associated lymphoma were caused by Simian
Immunodeficiency
Virus (SIVmac and SIVstm, respectively) in group-housed macaques at the California Regional Primate Research Center (CRPRC) in the early and mid-1970s. Because these epizootics were not then recognized as infectious in nature, surviving healthy SIV carriers were sent to other primate centers where they transmitted the viruses to resident macaques. The source of SIV at the CRPRC was by contact with co-housed seropositive sooty mangabeys. Spread of SIV via saliva and blood while fighting most likely accounted for these epizootics. Separate outbreaks of a somewhat different version of
simian AIDS
, caused by the simian Type D retrovirus (SRV-1), and spread from healthy carriers via saliva and blood also occurred in the late 1970s and early 1980s in group-housed macaques at the CRPRC. Initially, these SRV-1 outbreaks were also not recognized as infectious.
...
PMID:The history of simian AIDS. 889 35
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Next >>