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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The water-soluble
ammonium
salt of 3'-azido-5'-(O-ethoxycarbonylphosphinyl)-3'-deoxythymidine (ECP-AZT), the prototype of a novel class of compounds incorporating two active antiretroviral agents, in this case 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine (AZT) and phosphonoformic acid (PFA), within the same structure, was synthesized and tested as an inhibitor of the replication of human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1) in Jurkat cells, a CD4+ human T-lymphocyte cell line. The corresponding 5'-(O-methoxycarbonylphosphinyl) derivative (MCP-AZT) was also prepared. The rationale for the synthesis of ECP-AZT and MCP-AZT was that they may be cleaved intracellularly to AZT and PFA via hydrolysis of the phosphate ester bond or to AZT 5'-monophosphate by oxidative cleavage of the carbon-phosphorus bond. ECP-AZT was found to block viral replication at a 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) of ca. 10(-6) M as measured by reverse transcriptase (RT) activity in supernatants from cultures of infected cells. Little or no inhibition of cell growth was observed at this concentration, and there was less than 20% inhibition of cell growth at 10(-4) M. AZT itself was a more potent inhibitor of HIV-1 replication than ECP-AZT, but was also more cytotoxic. The antiviral selectivity of ECP-AZT, defined as the ratio IC50 (virus inhibition)/IC50(cell growth inhibition), was in the range considered to be therapeutic for anti-AIDS nucleosides.
...
PMID:Inhibition of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 replication by phosphonoformate esters of 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine. 222 76
We have investigated the effects of the fusion of liposomes with human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1LVA) on the ability of the virus to infect CD4+ and CD4- cells. Fluorescence dequenching measurements indicated that HIV-1 fuses with liposomes composed of either cardiolipin (CL) or N-[2,3-(dioleyloxy) propyl]-N,N,N-trimethyl
ammonium
chloride (DOTMA) but not appreciably with dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) liposomes. Pre-incubation of HIV-1 with DOTMA liposomes enhanced virus production (measured by p24 gag antigen production in the culture medium and in situ) in CD4+ A3.01 and H9 cells in a concentration-dependent manner, but did not mediate the infection of the CD4- cell line, K562. Preincubation of HIV-1 with between 10 and 30 microM-DOTMA liposomes, and subsequent incubation with A3.01 cells, resulted in the production of about 30-fold greater levels of virus than controls. The presence of DOTMA liposomes during the incubation of A3.01 cells with HIV-1 enhanced the infectivity of the virus up to 90-fold compared to controls. Conversely, preincubation of HIV-1 with CL liposomes inhibited infection of A3.01 cells, dependent on the concentration of liposomes; DOPC liposomes did not alter the infectivity of the virus under any of the incubation conditions. Our results thus indicate that fusion of HIV-1 with liposomes alters the ability of the virus to infect its target cells.
...
PMID:Liposomes modulate human immunodeficiency virus infectivity. 227 89
A Keggin polyoxotungstate PM-19 K7[PTi2W10O40].6H2O was found to be a potent inhibitor of the replication of human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV), which causes acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), in OKT4+ cells. In contrast, the effect of HPA 23 (
NH4
)17Na[NaSb9W21O86], an inhibitor of reverse transcriptase of HIV, was not significant.
...
PMID:Inhibition of replication of human immunodeficiency virus by a heteropolyoxotungstate (PM-19). 233 49
A sensitive high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) assay has been developed to simultaneously determine levels of the anti human
immunodeficiency
virus agent, zidovudine (AZT), and its major metabolite (the 5'-O-glucuronide) in serum. Samples were first mixed with an internal standard (a stereoisomer of AZT), then prepared for analysis using solid-phase extraction columns and chromatographed using a reversed-phase analytical column. Isocratic elution with a mobile phase of 15% acetonitrile, buffered to pH 2.70 with
ammonium
phosphate, gave good resolution of the three analytes and endogenous serum components. The HPLC analysis time required per sample was 34 min and analyte recoveries were reproducibly high (greater than 93%). Replicate analyses of prepared standards gave satisfactory precision and accuracy, with coefficients of variation less than 15% and deviations from expected concentrations less than 10%.
...
PMID:Simultaneous quantification of zidovudine and its glucuronide in serum by high-performance liquid chromatography. 323 23
Antiviral agents under investigation for the treatment of patients infected with the human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) are reviewed. Multiple mechanisms exist by which antiviral agents might inhibit the replication of HIV or eradicate its latent form in affected cells, or both. These mechanisms include (1) interference with the cell surface receptor for HIV, (2) prevention of uncoating of viral particles, (3) inhibition of reverse transcriptase, (4) prevention of integration and posttranscription processing, (5) interference with viral assembly, and (6) interference with virus release. Most agents developed thus far work by inhibiting HIV reverse transcriptase. Suramin, ribavirin,
ammonium
21-tungsten-9-antimoniate (HPA-23), foscarnet (phosphonoformate, PFA), inosine pranobex (isoprinosine), peptide T, ampligen, AL 721, dideoxycytidine, and zidovudine (formerly azidothymidine) have antiretroviral activity in vitro. To date zidovudine is the only antiretroviral agent approved by the FDA as clinically effective. However, zidovudine has serious toxicities, including neutropenia and anemia; in some patients dosage reduction or cessation of therapy may be necessary. Because treatment with zidovudine does not cure HIV infection, numerous studies are under way with other anti-HIV agents. Ultimately, combinations of agents probably will be used to suppress or eradicate HIV. While the search for more efficacious and less toxic treatments continues, the development of zidovudine in such a short time provides hope that progress toward a cure will be made rapidly.
...
PMID:Development of antiviral agents for the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus infection. 332 38
Protein folding conditions were established for human
immunodeficiency
virus integrase (IN) obtained from purified bacterial inclusion bodies. IN was denatured by 6 M guanidine.HCl-5 mM dithiothreitol, purified by gel filtration, and precipitated by
ammonium
sulfate. The reversible solvation of precipitated IN by 6 M guanidine.HCl allowed for wide variation of protein concentration in the folding reaction. A 6-fold dilution of denatured IN by 1 M NaCl buffer followed by dialysis produced enzymatically active IN capable of 3' OH end processing, strand transfer, and disintegration using various human
immunodeficiency
virus-1 (HIV-1) long terminal repeat DNA substrates. The specific activities of folded IN preparations for these enzymatic reactions were comparable to those of soluble IN purified directly from bacteria. The subunit composition and enzymatic activities of IN were affected by the folding conditions. Standard folding conditions were defined in which monomers and protein aggregates sedimenting as dimers and tetramers wree produced. These protein aggregates were enzymatically active, whereas monomers had reduced strand transfer activity. Temperature modifications of the folding conditions permitted formation of mainly monomers. Upon assaying, these monomers were efficient for strand transfer and disintegration, but the oligomeric state of IN under the conditions of the assay is determinate. Our results suggest that monomers of the multidomain HIV-1 IN are folded correctly for various catalytic activities, but the conditions for specific oligomerization in the absence of catalytic activity are undefined.
...
PMID:Folding of the multidomain human immunodeficiency virus type-I integrase. 806 20
The aim of this study was to develop a standardised technique for assessing the virucidal activity of commercial disinfectants against human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV). In the absence of any model procedure for HIV a protocol based on German DVV guidelines was developed. A major difficulty associated with such studies is the cytotoxic effect of the biocide on the target cells used in infectivity assays. This problem is most commonly overcome by dilution of the virus-disinfectant mixture, however, this requires high titre (> or = 10(7) TCID50) virus which is difficult to achieve with HIV. We employed a simple washing technique which effectively removed cytotoxicity while retaining infectivity. Incorporated into a standard suspension test, this method supported by virus isolation procedures was sensitive and reproducible. The reliability of the procedure was confirmed by evaluating the efficacy of some commercially available cidals which were known to be cytotoxic; namely two instrument disinfectants, Sactimed-I-Steril, an aldehyde based product, Sactimed-I-Sinald a guanide/quaternary-
ammonium
combination, and Levermed, an alcohol based hand disinfectant.
...
PMID:Assessment of chemical disinfectants against human immunodeficiency virus: overcoming the problem of cytotoxicity and the evaluation of selected actives. 810 99
The National Cancer Institute is pursuing preclinical development of michellamine B (MB), a novel dimeric polyhydroxylated naphthalene-tetrahydroisoquinoline alkaloid isolated from Ancistrocladus abbreviatus, as an anti-human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) agent. MB protects human lymphoid cells from the cytopathic effects of both HIV-1 and HIV-2 in vitro. A specific, sensitive, and convenient method for assaying the compound in biological fluids has been developed. Samples were prepared for analysis by initial treatment with dilute trichloroacetic acid followed by thorough mixing with a solution of the internal standard (alpha-naphthoflavone) in acetonitrile to denature macromolecules. The supernatant afforded by centrifugation, upon dilution with the aqueous component of the liquid chromatographic eluent, was loaded onto a 4-microns Nova-Pak phenyl column (3.9 mm x 15 cm). Chromatography was performed at ambient temperature using an isocratic mobile phase composed of 10 mM octyl sodium sulfate and 15 microM tetrabutylammonium hydrogen sulfate in acetonitrile/0.05 M
ammonium
formate buffer, pH 4.0 (46/54, v/v), at a flow rate of 0.6 ml/min. The intense native fluorescence of MB, which exhibited excitation and emission maxima in the mobile phase at 232 and 393 nm, respectively, provided a highly sensitive and selective means of detection. Mean values of the retention times for the drug and internal standard determined over 11 months were 10.71 +/- 0.53 and 13.14 +/- 0.52 min, respectively (SD, n = 52). Employing a sample volume of 50 microliters, the lowest concentration of MB included in the standard curves of mouse, dog, and human plasma, 10 ng/ml (11.4 nM), was quantified with coefficients of variation less than 10%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Determination of michellamine B in biological fluids by high-performance liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection. 813 66
Genomic human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1) RNA fragments containing the dimer linkage structure (DLS) can be dimerized and multimerized in the presence of
NH4+
and in the absence of any other cation and any viral or cellular protein. This effect strongly supports the notion that dimerization and multimerization of genomic RNA occurs via purine-quartet formation in quadruple helical RNA structures. The efficiency of RNA dimerization and multimerization in the presence of
ammonium
ions is about 400 fold increased as compared to alkali metal ions such as potassium. Dimerized retroviral RNA representing a pseudodiploid genome could account for genetic recombination within the virion and during reverse transcription. Application of a novel South-Northern-Blotting procedure with biotinylated RNA and digoxigenin-labelled cDNA in vitro reveals that efficient human- and bovine tRNA(Lys3) primed full-length cDNA-synthesis only takes place with a predominantly monomerized RNA template. Dimerization and multimerization of the RNA significantly reduces full-length cDNA-synthesis. This suggests that monomerization of the dimerized RNA, effected by deionization in vitro, is essential for efficient retroviral reverse transcription in vivo.
...
PMID:The multimerization state of retroviral RNA is modulated by ammonium ions and affects HIV-1 full-length cDNA synthesis in vitro. 817 34
A method for checking the purity of N-acyl aminonaphthalene disulphonic acid derivatives was required for a systematic study of the anti-human
immunodeficiency
virus activity of these agents. We describe the use of thin-layer chromatography and flame ionization detection for the separation of these compounds, which are difficult to analyse by conventional methods. All the samples were prepared in methanol solutions (1 microliter) containing 5 micrograms of aminonaphthalene derivative. These samples were applied to each type SIII Chromarod by a single injection and developed with pure methanol or a methanol-chloroform-
ammonium
hydroxide (35:55:10, v/v/v) solvent system.
...
PMID:Analysis of N-acyl aminonaphthalene sulphonic acid derivatives with potential anti-human immunodeficiency virus activity by thin-layer chromatography and flame ionization detection. 826 52
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