Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (immunodeficiency)
71,517 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We studied follicles in sections of lymph nodes and spleen from cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) after infection with simian immunodeficiency virus (SIVsm), by (immuno)histology and (immunogold) electron microscopy. Also isolated follicular dendritic cells (FDC) were investigated. Histology showed ranged from follicular hyperplasia to follicle fragmentation. FDC showed desmin and vimentin, characteristic of mesenchymal cells. Except for two animals who got experimental chemotherapy in the first postinfection period, the cells expressed SIV gag p28 protein. Electron microscopy showed SIVsm-like particles in the germinal centers. A number of cell types in the germinal center, including FDC, showed tubuloreticular structures, indicative of alpha-interferon synthesis during an antiviral response. In immunogold electron microscopy, SIV p28 label was observed on the surface of FDC, on SIVsm-like particles, and in the cytoplasm of macrophages. A relatively high density of CD8-positive cells (T cytotoxic-suppressor phenotype) was observed around and in germinal centers, especially areas depleted of FDC. Cells immunoreactive for serine esterase granzyme-B, a protein occurring in granules of cytotoxic cells, occurred around germinal centers, but not in germinal centers at areas where FDC and SIV p28 label localized. This argues against a role of cytotoxic T cells in mediating follicle destruction.
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PMID:Simian immunodeficiency virus (SIVsm) infection of cynomolgus monkeys: effects on follicular dendritic cells in lymphoid tissue. 149 52

Fifty-six human immunodeficiency virus-1-positive asymptomatic carriers were tested for the presence of a variety of nonorgan-specific autoantibodies. Antinuclear antibodies were detected in 34 sera, of which 27 were directed to the mitotic spindle apparatus and all were of the IgG isotype. Anti-Golgi complex, anti-centriole, and anti-vimentin antibodies were also present in 20.4, and 4 sera, respectively. Ten patients had less than 500 CD4-carrying T lymphocytes per cubic millimeter. Nine of them had more than one autoantibody. No correlation could be demonstrated between the number of autoantibodies and the level of serum immunoglobulins.
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PMID:Nonorgan-specific autoantibodies in individuals infected with type 1 human immunodeficiency virus. 167 41

The intermediate filament (IF) subunit protein vimentin is efficiently cleaved in vitro by purified human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease. Immunological data confirm that identical sites are cleaved when vimentin is polymerized into filaments or occurs as protofilaments. Preformed filaments require 10 times more protease to achieve the same extent of cleavage seen with protofilaments, suggesting that the cleavage sites are partially masked in IFs. The primary cleavage gives rise to molecule lacking most of the tail domain and which not only remains in preformed filaments, but also is capable of polymerizing into essentially normal 10 nm filaments. However, these filaments of the vimentin primary cleavage product show a propensity to form large lateral aggregates. The three secondary cleavage products of vimentin additionally lack portions of the head domain, are almost quantitatively released from preformed filaments and are not capable of forming filaments de novo. These results confirm and extend previous data obtained with desmin and provide a limit for that portion of the tail domain of type III IF subunit proteins that play a role in IF formation and stability. Microinjection of HIV-1 protease into cultured human skin fibroblasts resulted in a large increase in the percentage of cells with an altered and abnormal distribution of vimentin IFs. Most commonly, the IFs were observed to have collapsed into a clump with a juxtanuclear localization. The efficient cleavage of vimentin observed in vitro and the ability of microinjected HIV-1 protease to alter IF distribution in vivo suggest that IF proteins may serve as substrates within HIV-1 infected cells and may play a role in viral infection.
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PMID:Effect of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 protease on the intermediate filament subunit protein vimentin: cleavage, in vitro assembly and altered distribution of filaments in vivo following microinjection of protease. 181 Dec 47

A computer search revealed 10 proteins with homology to the sequence we originally identified in vimentin as the site of cleavage by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease. Of these 10 proteins (actin, alpha-actinin, spectrin, tropomyosins, vinculin, dystrophin, MAP-2, villin, TRK-1 and Ig mu-chain), we show that 4 of the first 5 were cleaved in vitro by this protease, as are MAP-1 and -2 [(1990) J. Gen. Virol. 71, 1985-1991]. In these proteins, cleavage is not restricted to a single motif, but occurs at many sites. However, cleavage is not random, since 9 other proteins including the cytoskeletal proteins filamin and band 4.1 are not cleaved in the in vitro assay. Thus, the ability of HIV-1 protease to cleave specific components of the cytoskeleton may be an important, although as yet unevaluated aspect of the life cycle of this retrovirus and/or may directly contribute to the pathogenesis observed during infection.
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PMID:Non-viral cellular substrates for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 protease. 199 13

We report a familial type of monocyte dysfunction not recognized previously. This disorder was observed in a young adult man with a long clinical history of recurrent, self-limited episodes of cryptogenic fever accompanied by digestive and respiratory symptoms and repeated oral and skin infections. Lectin-induced lymphocyte transformation was reduced and skin tests revealed anergy to tuberculin and candidin. Monocytes from this patient exhibited markedly diminished expression of cytoskeletal vimentin intermediate filaments, HLA-DR antigens and immunological receptors for IgG Fc and C3b. These abnormal monocytes demonstrated impaired phagocytosis and reduced accessory cell function on PHA-mediated lymphocyte activation. Release of soluble lymphocyte-activating factors by these cells was found to be defective. Lymphocytes from the patient responded appropriately to lectin in the presence of normal monocytes. Two family members of the proband presented similar monocyte defects although they only manifested minor clinical symptoms. This syndrome underlines the interest of testing monocyte markers and function in subjects with clinical manifestations of immunodeficiency.
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PMID:Monocyte disorder causing cellular immunodeficiency: a family study. 230 28

Vimentin is one member of the intermediate filament multigene family which exhibits both tissue- and developmental stage-specific expression. In vivo, vimentin is expressed in cells of mesenchymal origin. Previously, we identified both enhancer and promoter elements in the chicken vimentin gene which regulate gene expression in a positive manner. In this report, we have identified a 40-base-pair region at -568 base pairs between the proximal and distal enhancer elements which represses transcriptional activity. This silencer region can also repress the heterologous herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase promoter, which is comparable to the vimentin promoter. In addition, the element is able to function in a position- and orientation-independent manner, and the amount of repression is increased by multiple copies. Here we show by gel retardation assays and DNase I footprinting that this region binds a protein in nuclear extracts from HeLa cells. Southwestern (DNA-protein) blot analysis indicates this protein is approximately 95 kilodaltons in size. Moreover, protein distribution and activity mimic the expression pattern of vimentin during myogenesis, i.e., protein binding increases as vimentin gene expression decreases. The silencer region shares strong sequence similarity with 5'-flanking sequences found in both the human and hamster vimentin genes and with other characterized silencer elements, including the human immunodeficiency virus long terminal repeat, rat growth hormone, chicken lysozyme, and rat insulin genes. Thus, a negative element appears to bind a 95-kilodalton protein involved in regulating the tissue-specific expression of the chicken vimentin gene.
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PMID:A negative element involved in vimentin gene expression. 232 56

Infectious retrovirus particles are derived from structural polyproteins which are cleaved by the viral proteinase (PR) during virion morphogenesis. Besides cleaving viral polyproteins, which is essential for infectivity, PR of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) also cleaves cellular proteins and PR expression causes a pronounced cytotoxic effect. Retroviral PRs are aspartic proteases and contain two copies of the triplet Asp-Thr-Gly in the active center with the threonine adjacent to the catalytic aspartic acid presumed to have an important structural role. We have changed this threonine in HIV type 1 PR to a serine. The purified mutant enzyme had an approximately 5- to 10-fold lower activity against HIV type 1 polyprotein and peptide substrates compared with the wild-type enzyme. It did not induce toxicity on bacterial expression and yielded significantly reduced cleavage of cytoskeletal proteins in vitro. Cleavage of vimentin in mutant-infected T-cell lines was also markedly reduced. Mutant virus did, however, elicit productive infection of several T-cell lines and of primary human lymphocytes with no significant difference in polyprotein cleavage and with similar infection kinetics and titer compared with wild-type virus. The discrepancy between reduced processing in vitro and normal virion maturation can be explained by the observation that reduced activity was due to an increase in Km which may not be relevant at the high substrate concentration in the virus particle. This mutation enables us therefore to dissociate the essential function of PR in viral maturation from its cytotoxic effect.
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PMID:An active-site mutation in the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 proteinase (PR) causes reduced PR activity and loss of PR-mediated cytotoxicity without apparent effect on virus maturation and infectivity. 747 39

Pepstatin A, a pentapeptide with the molecular weight of 686, is a naturally occurring inhibitor of aspartyl proteases secreted by Streptomyces species. Above a critical concentration of 0.1 mM at low ionic strength and neutral pH, it can polymerize into filaments which may extend over several micrometers. After negative staining, these filaments show a helical substructure with characteristic diameters ranging from 6 to 12 nm. Selected images at higher magnification suggest the filaments are composed of two intertwined 6 nm strands. This is in agreement with the optical diffraction analysis which additionally established a periodic pitch of 25 nm for the helical intertwining. Rotary shadowing of the pepstatin A filaments clearly demonstrated the right-handedness of the helical twist. In physiological salt solution or at higher concentrations of pepstatin A, a variety of higher order structures were observed, including ribbons, sheets and cylinders with both regular and twisted or irregular geometries. Pepstatin A can interact with intermediate filament subunit proteins. These proteins possess a long, alpha-helical rod domain that forms coiled-coil dimers, which through both hydrophobic and ionic interactions form tetramers which, in turn, in the presence of physiological salt concentrations, polymerize into the 10 nm intermediate filaments. In the absence of salt, pepstatin A and intermediate filament proteins polymerize into long filaments with a rough surface and a diameter of 15-17 nm. This polymerization appears to be primarily driven by nonionic interactions between pepstatin A and polymerization-competent forms of intermediate filament proteins, resulting in a composite filament. Polymerization-incompetent proteolytic fragments of vimentin, lacking portions of the head and/or tail domain, failed to copolymerize with pepstatin A into long filaments under these conditions. These peptides, as well as bovine serum albumin, were found to stick to the surface of pepstatin A filaments, ribbons and sheets. Independent evidence for direct association of pepstatin A with intermediate filament subunit proteins was provided not only by electron microscopy but also by UV difference spectra. Pepstatin A loses its ability to inhibit the aspartyl protease of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 following polymerization into the higher order structures described here. The amazing fact that pepstatin A can spontaneously self-associate to form very large polymers seems to be a more rare event for such small peptides. The other examples of synthetic or naturally occurring oligopeptides discussed in this review which are able to polymerize into higher order structures possess a common property, their hydrophobicity, often manifested by clusters of valine or isoleucine residues.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Pepstatin A: polymerization of an oligopeptide. 805 47

A case of spindle-cell pseudotumor of the spleen due to nontuberculous mycobacteria in a patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is described. The patient was a 55-year-old, human immunodeficiency virus-positive Haitian man who died of acute neurologic complications while on treatment for central nervous system toxoplasmosis. At autopsy, an enlarged multinodular spleen was noted. Histologic examination revealed coarse nodules of splenic parenchyma replaced by a dense spindle cell proliferation, admixed with scattered inflammatory cells. Immunostains showed strong cytoplasmic positivity of the spindle cells with MAC 387, HAM 56, and alpha-1-antichymotrypsin antibodies and negative staining for actin, vimentin, and S-100 protein antibodies. Ziehl-Neelsen stains revealed numerous elongated acid-fast bacilli within the cytoplasm of the cells that were occasionally lying free within the interstitium. The organisms also had a strongly positive reaction with antibodies to desmin intermediate filaments. Mycobacterial spindle-cell pseudotumor should be included in the differential diagnosis of conditions affecting the spleen in patients with AIDS.
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PMID:Mycobacterial spindle-cell pseudotumor of the spleen. 816 Jun 49

The goal of our study was to assess whether the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) coat protein gp120 induces functional alterations in astrocytes and microglia, known for their reactivity and involvement in most types of brain pathology. We hypothesized that gp120-induced anomalies in glial functions, if present, might be mediated by changes in the levels of intracellular messengers important for signal transduction, such as cAMP. Acute (10 min) exposure of cultured rat cortical astrocytes or microglia to 100 pM gp120 caused only a modest (50-60%), though statistically significant, elevation in cAMP levels, which was antagonized by the beta-adrenergic receptor antagonist propranolol. More importantly, the protein substantially depressed [by 30% (astrocytes) and 50% (microglia)] the large increase in cAMP induced by the beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol (10 nM), without affecting that induced by direct adenylate cyclase stimulation by forskolin. Qualitatively similar results were obtained using a glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)-positive human glioma cell line. The depression of the beta-adrenergic response had functional consequences in both astrocytes and microglia. In astrocytes we studied the phosphorylation of the two major cytoskeletal proteins, vimentin and GFAP, which is normally stimulated by isoproterenol, and found that gp120 partially (40-50%) prevented such stimulation. In microglial cells, which are the major producers of inflammatory cytokines within the brain, gp120 partially antagonized the negative beta-adrenergic modulation of lipopolysaccharide (10 ng/ml)-induced production of tumor necrosis factor alpha. Our results suggest that, by interfering with the beta-adrenergic regulation of astrocytes and microglia, gp120 may alter astroglial "reactivity" and upset the delicate cytokine network responsible for the defense against viral and opportunistic infections.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus coat protein gp120 inhibits the beta-adrenergic regulation of astroglial and microglial functions. 838 71


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