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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Viral variation has been proposed to play a role in the pathogenesis of human
immunodeficiency
virus type-1 (HIV-1) infection, and is an important consideration in vaccine design. During the course of an infection, isolates with sequence changes in CD8 T-cell and B-cell epitopes arise. To determine whether sequence variation within the V3 loop of HIV-1 gp120 affects HLA-DR beta 1*0101-restricted CD4 T-cell recognition, we have generated CD4 T-cell clones (TLC) specific to gp120 V3 loop peptides. Four HLA-DR beta 1*0101-restricted groups of TLC were defined by distinct patterns of responses to a panel of peptides, consistent with a highly diverse T-cell repertoire recognizing the 30 amino acid stretch (296-326) of the gp120 V3 loop. Nevertheless, a single residue change at position 311 was found to abolish the recognition of two of the four groups of TLC. This was not due to an effect of the residue at 311 on binding to major histocompatibility complex (MHC), because: (1) irrespective of the residue at 311, peptides competed well with the influenza haemagglutinin peptide 307-319 for binding to cell-bound DR1; and (2) R311-specific TLC were also HLA DR beta 1*0101 restricted. Instead, the substitution of arginine for
serine
at position 311 blocked the interaction of the peptide with the T-cell receptor. Thus, despite the diversity of the T-cell response to the V3 loop of HIV-1, a single amino acid change can have a considerable influence on the responding T-cell population. As residue 311 is one of the most variable of the V3 loop residues, these results suggest that CD4 recognition can also exert pressure on viral variation consistent with a role for these cells in antiviral immunity.
...
PMID:The effect of a single amino acid substitution within the V3 loop of HIV-1 gp120 on HLA-DR1-restricted CD4 T-cell recognition. 764 8
Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to assess the importance of lysine 263 in substrate binding of human
immunodeficiency
virus-1 (HIV-1) reverse transcriptase. Previous studies have indicated that lysine 263 functions in the binding of 2'-deoxynucleoside 5'-triphosphate (dNTP) substrates (Basu, A., Tirumalai, R. S., and Modak, M. J. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 8746-8752). We studied this interaction directly by using site-specific mutagenesis to change lysine 263 to a
serine
. Highly purified mutant enzyme K263S bound natural dNTP substrates and primed polynucleic acid substrates with equal affinity when compared to the wild type reverse transcriptase. No difference was observed in the binding of 3'-azido-2',3'-dideoxythymidine 5'-triphosphate to the mutant reverse transcriptase on the basis of Km and Ki determinations. The
serine
substitution had no effect on RNase H activity. These results indicate that lysine 263 is not essential in the binding of substrates to HIV-1 reverse transcriptase.
...
PMID:Biochemical analysis of human immunodeficiency virus-1 reverse transcriptase containing a mutation at position lysine 263. 767 98
Illimaquinone, a natural marine product, was shown by us to inhibit preferentially the ribonuclease H (RNase H) activity of the reverse transcriptase (RT) of human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1). We have also shown that illimaquinone inhibits the RNase H activity of HIV-2 RT in addition to that of HIV-1 RT, murine leukemia virus RT, and Escherichia coli RNase H. Chemical modifications of HIV-1 RT by sulfhydryl-specific reagents, such as N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) have been demonstrated to specifically inhibit the RNase H activity of the enzyme. Since our previous studies have suggested that cysteine 280 in HIV-1 RT interacts with the sulfhydryl reagents, we have examined the possibility that illimaquinone interacts with the RT molecules via amino acid residues located in the vicinity of cysteine 280 in both HIV-1 and HIV-2 RTs. In the combined effect studies of illimaquinone and NEM, the two structurally unrelated compounds were shown to be mutually exclusive, exhibiting an antagonistic interaction with both HIV-1 and murine leukemia virus-associated RNase H activities. This implicates cysteine 280, in both HIV-1 and HIV-2 RTs, to be in close proximity to the putative binding site of the enzyme to illimaquinone. The above conclusion is further supported by the fact that the RNase H activity of an enzymatically active mutant of HIV-1 RT, in which cysteine 280 was replaced by
serine
, was substantially more resistant to illimaquinone than the corresponding activity of the wild-type enzyme. The fact that NEM failed to inhibit E. coli RNase H as opposed to illimaquinone highlights a major difference between the retroviral and bacterial RNase H.
...
PMID:The interaction of illimaquinone, a selective inhibitor of the RNase H activity, with the reverse transcriptases of human immunodeficiency and murine leukemia retroviruses. 768 48
Pentosan polysulfate, a polyanionic mucopolysaccharide, which has been shown to exert inhibitory effects on human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV-I) replication, inhibited the activities of protein tyrosine kinases from lymphocytes (Jurkat cells) and rat lung in a concentration dependent manner. In addition, the autophosphorylation of p56lck, a lymphocyte associated protein tyrosine kinase from Jurkat cells was also inhibited by pentosan polysulfate (100 micrograms/ml). Furthermore, the activities of protein
serine
/threonine kinases such as Ca2+, phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C) from human platelets and the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase from skeletal muscle were also inhibited by this mucopolysaccharide. However, the activity of phosphorylase kinase was not altered. The inhibition of rat lung protein tyrosine kinase was rapid and competitive with respect to ATP with an apparent Ki value of 5-20 micrograms/ml. These results suggest that the ability of pentosan polysulfate to inhibit various protein
serine
/threonine and tyrosine kinases may be one of the mechanisms by which this compound exerts its inhibitory effect of HIV-I replication.
...
PMID:Pentosan polysulfate, a potent anti HIV and anti tumor agent, inhibits protein serine/threonine and tyrosine kinases. 768 45
The human
immunodeficiency
virus type 2 (HIV-2) Nef protein expressed in Escherichia coli forms highly stable homooligomeric complexes in vitro. Similarly, the native protein synthesized in the persistently infected H9 T cell line also forms stable homooligomers in vivo. To determine whether homooligomer formation is mediated by the leucine zipper-type sequence located in the middle region of the protein, site-directed mutagenesis was used to introduce double and triple point mutations at heptad leucine positions L1, L2, and L4 within the HIV-2NIHZ Nef protein sequence. Here, we show that substitution of a
serine
residue for the L1 (residue 108) and L2 (residue 115) heptad leucines, and a glutamine residue for the L4 (residue 129) heptad leucine, did not prevent Nef homooligomer formation in vitro. However, a more drastic substitution of alpha-helix-breaking proline residue for the L2 and L4 heptad leucines significantly abrogated ability of the protein to form stable homooligomers. In addition, because significantly higher levels of the Nef oligomers were consistently observed under the nonreducing SDS-PAGE condition, site-specific mutagenesis was also used to examine the role of cysteine residues in generating disulfide-linked Nef dimers in vitro. Here, we also show that single cysteine-to-glycine substitutions at positions 28, 32, or 55 drastically reduced covalent Nef dimer formation and thermal stability of the Nef protein in vitro. Therefore, these results demonstrate that the leucine zipper-type motif in the HIV-2 Nef protein mediates stable homooligomer formation in vitro, and also establish a role for covalent disulfide bonds in the formation of linked Nef dimers and thermal stability of the monomer Nef in vitro.
...
PMID:Oligomerization of the HIV type 2 Nef protein: mutational analysis of the heptad leucine repeat motif and cysteine residues. 773 98
The eukaryotic transcription factor NF-kappa B plays a central role in the induced expression of human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 and in many aspects of the genetic program mediating normal T-cell activation and growth. The nuclear activity of NF-kappa B is tightly regulated from the cytoplasmic compartment by an inhibitory subunit called I kappa B alpha. This cytoplasmic inhibitor is rapidly phosphorylated and degraded in response to a diverse set of NF-kappa B-inducing agents, including T-cell mitogens, proinflammatory cytokines, and viral transactivators such as the Tax protein of human T-cell leukemia virus type 1. To explore these I kappa B alpha-dependent mechanisms for NF-kappa B induction, we identified novel mutants of I kappa B alpha that uncouple its inhibitory and signal-transducing functions in human T lymphocytes. Specifically, removal of the N-terminal 36 amino acids of I kappa B alpha failed to disrupt its ability to form latent complexes with NF-kappa B in the cytoplasm. However, this deletion mutation prevented the induced phosphorylation, degradative loss, and functional release of I kappa B alpha from NF-kappa B in Tax-expressing cells. Alanine substitutions introduced at two
serine
residues positioned within this N-terminal regulatory region of I kappa B alpha also yielded constitutive repressors that escaped from Tax-induced turnover and that potently inhibited immune activation pathways for NF-kappa B induction, including those initiated from antigen and cytokine receptors. In contrast, introduction of a phosphoserine mimetic at these sites rectified this functional defect, a finding consistent with a causal linkage between the phosphorylation status and proteolytic stability of this cytoplasmic inhibitor. Together, these in vivo studies define a critical signal response domain in I kappa B alpha that coordinately controls the biologic activities of I kappa B alpha and NF-kappa B in response to viral and immune stimuli.
...
PMID:Coupling of a signal response domain in I kappa B alpha to multiple pathways for NF-kappa B activation. 773 62
Recent analysis of the crystal structures, both of the retroviral aspartyl proteases from Rous sarcoma virus and human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 and of the
serine
proteases subtilisin and alpha-lytic protease, has enabled the rational design of mutations in the substrate-binding pocket of these enzymes. Alterations in steady-state kinetic properties of the purified mutant enzymes have been detected in vitro by following the cleavage of synthetic peptide substrates. These analyses have identified key amino acid residues in each of these enzymes that are involved in substrate specificity, and they have provided the foundation for the design of proteases with novel substrate specificities.
...
PMID:Engineering proteases with altered specificity. 776 73
We have examined structural interactions between Gag proteins within Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV) particles by making use of the cysteine-specific cross-linking agents iodine and bis-maleimido hexane. Virion-associated wild-type M-MuLV Pr65Gag proteins in immature particles were intermolecularly cross-linked at cysteines to form Pr65Gag oligomers, from dimers to pentamers or hexamers. Following a systematic approach of cysteine-to-
serine
mutagenesis, we have shown that cross-linking of Pr65Gag occurred at cysteines of the nucleocapsid (NC) Cys-His motif, suggesting that the Cys-His motifs within virus particles are packed in close proximity. The M-MuLV Pr65Gag protein did not cross-link to the human
immunodeficiency
virus Pr55Gag protein when the two molecules were coexpressed, indicating either that they did not coassemble or that heterologous Gag proteins were not in close enough proximity to be cross-linked. Using an assembly-competent, protease-minus, cysteine-minus Pr65Gag protein as a template, novel cysteine residues were generated in the M-MuLV capsid domain major homology region (MHR). Cross-linking of proteins containing MHR cysteines showed above-background levels of Gag-Gag dimers but also identified a novel cellular factor, present in virions, that cross-linked to MHR residues. Although the NC cysteine mutation was compatible with M-MuLV particle assembly, deletions of the NC domain were not tolerated. These results suggest that the Cys-His motif is held in close proximity within immature M-MuLV particles by interactions between CA domains and/or non-Cys-His motif domains of the NC.
...
PMID:Structural interactions between retroviral Gag proteins examined by cysteine cross-linking. 781 93
The multiple roles of the viral proteinase 2A in poliovirus replication have been difficult to assess because, to date, it has not been possible to isolate and characterize a viral genome with an inactive 2Apro. We have previously reported that a poliovirus replicon containing an inactive 2Apro by virtue of a change at amino acid 109 from a cysteine to a
serine
(C109S) was replication competent when transfected into cells previously infected with vaccinia virus (R. Pal-Ghosh and C. D. Morrow, J. Virol. 67:4621-4629, 1993). To further develop this system, we have used a poliovirus replicon which contains the human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1) gag gene positioned between nucleotides 1174 and 2470 of the poliovirus genome and have engineered a second mutation within this replicon to change the codon for amino acid 109 of the 2Apro from cysteine to
serine
(2AC109S). Transfection of this replicon into cells previously infected with vaccinia virus results in the replication and expression of a protein with a molecular mass consistent with that of a P1-HIV-1 Gag-2A fusion protein. Using a recently described complementation system which relies on the capacity of a recombinant vaccinia virus (VV-P1) to provide the capsid precursor (P1) in trans (D. C. Ansardi, D. C. Porter, and C. D. Morrow, J. Virol. 67:3684-3690, 1993; and D. C. Porter, D. C. Ansardi, W. S. Choi, and C. D. Morrow, J. Virol. 67:3712-3719, 1993), we have encapsidated this replicon containing the 2AC109S mutation. By using reverse transcription PCR, we demonstrated that after 15 serial passages the encapsidated replicon still contained the 2AC109S mutation. Infection of cells with a stock of encapsidated replicon, either in the presence or in the absence of vaccinia virus, resulted in the expression of the P1-HIV-1 Gag-2A fusion protein. Expression of the P1-HIV-1 Gag fusion protein in cells infected with the encapsidated replicon containing the 2AC109S mutation was reduced compared with the expression of P1-HIV-1 Gag in those cells infected with a replicon containing a wild type 2A gene. The protein expression and replication of the replicon RNA in cells containing the 2AC109S mutation was maintained for a longer period of time than for the replicons containing the wild-type 2A gene, possibly because of a reduced cytopathic effect.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Encapsidation and serial passage of a poliovirus replicon which expresses an inactive 2A proteinase. 781 22
The nucleocapsid protein NCp7 of human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1), which has key functions in the virus life cycle, possesses two zinc fingers of the CX2CX4HX4C type characterized by three successive loops containing a tetrahedrally coordinated zinc atom. The replacement of any cysteine by a
serine
in either finger has been shown to result in the production of noninfectious viruses, probably by impairing the biological functions of NCp7. In order to more precisely elucidate the structural role of the zinc finger motif, His23 was replaced by Cys in the proximal finger of the peptide (13-64)NCp7 which retains NCp7 activities in vitro. The peptide Cys23(13-64)NCp7 was synthesized by solid phase and studied by 2D 1H NMR and molecular modeling. The His to Cys modification causes important structural modifications of the N-terminal zinc finger which impair the spatial proximity of the two zinc fingers as shown by the disappearance of several interresidue NOEs. The side chains of Val13, Lys14, Phe16, Thr24, Ala25, Trp37, Gln45, and Met46, which are thought to be involved in nucleic acid recognition, are no longer found clustered in the Cys23(13-64)NCp7 mutant as they are in the wild-type NCp7 structure. In vitro, Cys23(13-64)NCp7 is unable to tightly interact with the viral RNA or replication primer tRNA(Lys,3). The Cys23(NCp7) mutation was introduced into an infectious HIV-1 molecular clone, and virions produced upon DNA transfection into cells were analyzed for their viral protein and RNA compositions as well as for their infectivity. Results show that, while the Cys23(NCp7) mutation does not impair virion production, viruses contain a low amount of degraded viral RNA and are not infectious. These findings suggest that a bona fide conformation of the HIV-1 NCp7 is critical for the packaging of viral RNA, its stability in virions, and virus infectivity.
...
PMID:1H NMR structure and biological studies of the His23-->Cys mutant nucleocapsid protein of HIV-1 indicate that the conformation of the first zinc finger is critical for virus infectivity. 791 87
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