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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two molecular clones of feline
immunodeficiency
virus were compared. The first clone, 34TF10, was from a Petaluma, Calif., isolate; the second, PPR, was isolated from a cat in the San Diego, Calif., area. The cats from which the isolates were obtained suffered from chronic debilitating illnesses. The two molecular clones differed in their in vitro host cell range. The 34TF10 clone infected the Crandall feline kidney and G355-5 cell lines, but replicated less efficiently on feline peripheral blood leukocytes. In contrast, the PPR clone productively infected the primary feline peripheral blood leukocytes but not Crandall feline kidney or G355-5 cells. The 34TF10 and PPR clones had an overall sequence identity of 91%. The
env
gene was the least conserved (85% at the amino acid level). Additionally, the potential open reading frame for a Tat-like protein, ORF 2, contained a stop codon in the 34TF10 isolate which was not found in the PPR clone. This truncation did not prevent in vitro or in vivo replication of 34TF10. Two splice acceptor sites were identified in the 34TF10 clone. One was 5' to the beginning of the putative tat open reading frame, and the other was 5' to the putative vif product. Both of these acceptor sites were conserved in the PPR clone. The long terminal repeats of the viruses were 7% divergent between the two clones, with a lack of conservation in putative NF-kappa B, LBP-1, and CCAAT enhancer-promoter sites.
...
PMID:Comparison of two host cell range variants of feline immunodeficiency virus. 169 7
Fresh peripheral blood mononuclear cells from human
immunodeficiency
virus-1 (HIV-1) seropositive donors can lyse target cells expressing the envelope glycoprotein in vitro. In most cases, this antigen-specific lysis is not mediated by T lymphocytes. Lymphoblastoid cell lines infected with recombinant vaccinia viruses expressing different forms of the envelope protein of HIV-1 were used as target cells in chromium-release assays of primary cytotoxic effector cells and of antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC). By depleting effector cells of CD16+ lymphocytes, or by blocking target cell lysis with an anti-human IgG serum, primary
env
-specific lysis was found to be due to ADCC, the effector cells being armed in vivo with specific, cytophilic antibodies. This phenomenon is dependent on cell surface expression of the envelope protein and is directed against both gp120 and gp41. Human HIV-1 antibody-positive sera are able to mediate ADCC against HIV-infected CD4+ T lymphocytes, suggesting a possible role of ADCC in the natural infection.
...
PMID:Primary cytotoxicity against the envelope glycoprotein of human immunodeficiency virus-1: evidence for antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity in vivo. 169 5
A series of chimeric clones of human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 and simian
immunodeficiency
virus isolated from an African green monkey was constructed in vitro. In transient transfection experiments, all clones produced virion-associated reverse transcriptase, gag proteins, and
env
proteins. Eight out of 10 chimeric viruses clearly grew in the human CD4+ cell line C8166. Susceptibility of other CD4+ cell lines, MT-4, A3.01, and Molt4 clone 8, to infection with these viruses was also demonstrated.
...
PMID:Generation and characterization of infectious chimeric clones between human immunodeficiency virus type 1 and simian immunodeficiency virus from an African green monkey. 170 Aug 27
We have developed a series of murine monoclonal antibodies to a region of the 120 kD envelope glycoprotein (gp120) of human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1). This region has previously been implicated as a site for virus neutralization by antisera raised to recombinant proteins and by antibodies made to full-length gp120 purified from virus. The antigen employed was a synthetic peptide containing 15 amino acids, representing amino acid residues 308-322, RIQRGPGRAFVTIGK, of
env
gp120 (HTLV-IIIB isolate). Five of the monoclonal antibodies raised to this antigen have reactivity with gp120 from divergent strains of HIV-1 in Western blot assays. The two of these five which were tested with live cells infected with the divergent HIV-1 isolates IIIB, MN, and RF were specifically reactive by fluorescence analyses with cells infected with the MN and IIIB isolates. Four of the five monoclonal antibodies blocked the fusion of IIIB-infected cells with uninfected MOLT-4 target cells. The monoclonal antibody most reactive with MN-infected cells by fluorescence, #5025A, blocked the fusion of MN-infected cells with uninfected MOLT-4 cells. Four of the five monoclonal antibodies neutralized the IIIB isolate of HIV-1 in vitro, but none neutralized the MN or RF isolates at the levels of antibody tested (less than or equal to 50 micrograms/ml). Taken together these data indicate that monoclonal antibodies to the immunodominant neutralizing domain of HIV-1 gp120 display different levels of group reactivity depending on the assay system being examined.
...
PMID:HIV-1 neutralizing monoclonal antibodies induced by a synthetic peptide. 170 1
Mutations were introduced by recombinant DNA techniques into 9 genes of an infectious molecular clone of human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1. The 24 mutants generated were characterized biochemically and biologically by transfection and infection experiments. None of the mutants which have mutations in gag (p17, p24, and p15 regions), pol (protease, reverse transcriptase, and endonuclease domains),
env
(gp120 region), tat, or rev were infectious, whereas vif, vpr, vpu, some of
env
(gp41) and nef mutants could grow in human CD4+ cells to various degrees. Of the non-infectious mutants, only endonuclease (pol) and gp41 mutants exhibited normal phenotypes with respect to the production of functional reverse transcriptase, the expression of gag, pol, and
env
proteins, and the generation of progeny virions, when examined in transient assays. All infectious mutants killed the CD4+ cells with the exception of a mutant carrying a defect in the vif gene.
...
PMID:Generation and characterization of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 mutants. 170 90
Human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) IIIB expression and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) B95.8-induced transformation were studied during coinfection. Coinfection of peripheral blood lymphocyte (PBL) cultures with HIV and EBV resulted in down-regulation of HIV expression. EBV-induced and spontaneous transformation were markedly reduced in PBL cultures exposed to HIV before EBV. On the other hand, transformation was enhanced when PBL cultures were infected with HIV either simultaneous to or after EBV. Reconstitution of EBV-infected B cell cultures with autochthonous T cells demonstrated that HIV-infected T cells had a reduced ability to inhibit EBV-induced transformation. PHA stimulation of HIV-infected T cells eliminated their ability to inhibit EBV-induced transformation. Lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) established from coinfected PBLs expressed B cell markers and were EBV positive, while a large proportion of the LCLs expressed HIV antigens, released reverse transcriptase activity into the supernatant, and produced syncytia when cocultivated with indicator cell line SupT1. HIV provirus could be detected in LCLs established from coinfected cultures by PCR amplification using specific sets of amplimers for gag and
env
genes of HIV. To more closely examine the role of various cell types in lymphocyte transformation and HIV replication during coinfection, experiments were carried out using subpopulations enriched for either B or T cells. Simultaneous coinfection of purified B cells with EBV and HIV resulted in a marked reduction of HIV expression, whereas EBV-induced transformation was enhanced. In contrast, spontaneous B cell transformation was inhibited by HIV. A proportion of LCLs established from purified B cells coinfected with EBV and HIV expressed HIV antigens, released reverse transcriptase activity, and produced syncytia on SupT1 cells. These results demonstrate that the IIIB strain of HIV and B95.8 strain of EBV can interact during coinfection of B cells to alter the course of virus expression.
...
PMID:Altered HIV expression and EBV-induced transformation in coinfected PBLs and PBL subpopulations. 170 29
We investigated the antigenicity of a highly conserved region in the transmembrane protein of the human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1). In order to identify antigenically important residues, amino-acid sequences of synthetic peptides representing this region were varied systematically: single residues were omitted from the sequence of HIV-
env
583-599; threonines were substituted for pairs of residues in HIV-
env
581-599; the sequences of heptadeca-peptides were shifted by single residues. The peptides were tested in an enzyme immuno-assay against fourteen HIV-1 antibody-positive human sera, which were previously found to react with HIV-
env
583-599, and against rabbit antisera to the peptides HIV-
env
583-599 and 586-606. Substitutions as well as deletions in the sequence 589-596 (AVERYLKD) aborgated the antigenicity of the peptides with most of the human sera. Changes outside this sequence affected the reactivities differentially. Six overlapping dodeca-peptides, shifted in the sequence by single residues, lacked antigenicity in a competition assay, suggesting antigenic dependence on an ordered peptide conformation, which the longer peptides may preferentially assume. 19- and 21-mers with overlapping sequences competed to different extents with each other for binding to the antibodies of 3 human sera, illustrating that more than one antigenic structure in this narrow region can be recognized by a single polyclonal serum.
...
PMID:A cluster of continuous antigenic structures in the transmembrane protein of HIV-1: individual patterns of reactivity in human sera. 171 46
HIV (human
immunodeficiency
virus) viraemia in serum or plasma of HIV-infected individuals was investigated by the polymerase chain reaction assay (PCR) in combination with reverse transcription to detect HIV-1 genomic RNA. Before PCR, plasma or serum was ultracentrifuged, precipitated virions were then treated with a RNase-free DNase, and a cDNA from the HIV-1 genomic RNA was synthesized. Thirty-three fresh plasma and seven sera from either HIV-1 antibody-positive individuals or patients treated with AZT were tested. Plasma from three patients were assayed 3 or 6 months apart. Twelve sera from HIV-1 antibody-negative individuals were used as negative control. PCR was performed with primers in LTR, gag and
env
regions: 11 of 40 samples were positive with three primer pairs, 16 with two primer pairs and 11 with only one primer pair. PCR on HIV-1 genomic cDNA was positive in 38 out of the 40 plasma or serum samples (95%), regardless of the clinical stage of the infection: HIV-1 was detected in 14 of the 15 untreated subjects and in 24 of the 25 AZT-treated patients. HIV p24 antigen was detected in the serum of 38% of subjects (15 of 40). The results suggest that this method is suitable for the detection of viral particles in plasma or serum from HIV-1-infected individuals irrespective of antiviral treatment.
...
PMID:The polymerase chain reaction for the detection of HIV-1 genomic RNA in plasma from infected individuals. 171 16
The initiation of human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1) reverse transcription occurs by the extension of a tRNA primer bound near the 5' end of the genomic RNA at a position termed the primer-binding site (PBS). The PBS is an 18-nucleotide region of the HIV-1 genome complementary to cellular tRNA(Lys). To further investigate the sequence requirements for the PBS in reverse transcription, deletions in the PBS were created and subcloned into a plasmid containing the infectious HIV-1 proviral genome. The mutations deleted the entire PBS (delta PBS) or the first 9 (delta 1-9), the second 9 (delta 10-18), or 12 (delta 7-18) nucleotides of the PBS. An additional mutation in the PBS was created in which the second nine nucleotides were deleted and nine additional nucleotides were substituted [Lys(1-9)]. The transfection of plasmids containing the wild-type or mutant proviral genomes into tissue culture cells resulted in expression of the HIV-1 gag and
env
gene products, as determined by immunoprecipitation using sera from AIDS patients. HIV-1 virus was released from the transfected cells, as determined by analysis of the supernatants for reverse transcriptase activity. The infectivity of the viruses derived from the transfection was examined by coculture experiments with SupT1 cells, which support high-level replication of HIV-1. The transfection of plasmids containing HIV-1 proviral genomes with the delta PBS and PBS (delta 1-9) mutations did not produce infectious virus. In contrast, the HIV-1 proviral genomes with the delta 10-18, delta 7-18, and Lys(1-9) mutations in the PBS produced infectious virus upon transfection, although the kinetics of appearance was significantly delayed for the mutant viruses compared with the wild type. To further explore the nature of this defect, the PBS region from integrated proviral genomes was amplified by polymerase chain reaction and individual DNA products were subcloned into M13mp19, followed by a sequence analysis of the PBS region from individual M13 phage clones. In each of the PBS regions examined, the 18-nucleotide PBS complementary to tRNA(Lys) was present. However, nucleotide deletions and insertions were found 3' to the PBS from the samples derived from the transfection of plasmids containing mutant proviral genomes. Upon reinfection, the revertant viruses maintained the deletions 3' to the PBS and had kinetics of replication similar to that of the wild-type virus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Deletions in the tRNA(Lys) primer-binding site of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 identify essential regions for reverse transcription. 171 13
An application of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to the direct detection of human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1) viremia is described. The amplification of specific HIV-1 sequences of gag and
env
viral genes was carried out after the reverse-transcription of plasma samples (plasma RT-PCR) from seropositive subjects. The assay is faster and cheaper than detection of specific HIV-1 transcripts from peripheral blood mononuclear cells by RT-PCR. The data suggest that HIV-1 viremia is detectable by plasma RT-PCR in a large proportion of seropositive individuals.
...
PMID:Detection of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 genomic RNA in plasma samples by reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction. 171 97
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