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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two synthetic peptides corresponding to the N- and C-terminal halves of a 23 amino acid sequence representing an immunodominant domain of the simian
immunodeficiency
virus of macaque origin (SIVmac) were examined for conformational preferences in aqueous solution by proton nuclear magnetic resonance methods. The two constituent peptides, termed A12-7 (Ala597-Ile-Glu-Lys-Tyr-
Leu
-Glu-Asp-Gln-Ala-Gln607) and A12-9 (Leu608-Asn-Ala-Trp-Gly-Cys-Ala-Phe-Arg-Gln-Val-Ser619), were found to contain a considerable conformational preference for states in which the backbone phi and psi angles populate the alpha region of the Ramachandran plot. Further, for peptide A12-9, the types and intensities of the nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) connectivities between protons in the polypeptide backbone suggest that these states appear to include helical turns. The temperature dependence of the amide proton chemical shifts indicates that some degree of intramolecular hydrogen bonding occurs in these peptides. These results are consistent with a model in which immunogenic peptides which induce antibodies reactive with the intact protein from which the peptide sequence was derived contain conformational preferences in water solution for states other than the extended-chain forms typically found in "random coil" peptides.
...
PMID:Immunogenic peptides corresponding to the dominant antigenic region alanine-597 to cysteine-619 in the transmembrane protein of simian immunodeficiency virus have a propensity to fold in aqueous solution. 173 4
The standard angiotensin I (Ang I) radioimmunoassay for renin activity determination is a useful clinical tool for the diagnosis of high renin levels in certain cases of hypertension. It depends upon the liberation of Ang I from human plasma angiotensinogen. We considered whether a commercially available synthetic tetradecapeptide (TDP), Asp-Arg-Val-Tyr-Ile-His-Pro-Phe-His-Leu-
Leu
-Val-Tyr-Ser, would produce authentic Ang I upon incubation with protease from human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1). This peptide is also known to be cleaved by renin at the
Leu
-
Leu
bond to yield the decapeptide Ang I. When the TDP is incubated with the HIV-1 protease, the peptide is readily hydrolyzed. Product formation is linear with respect to time and enzyme concentration. HPLC analysis of reaction products showed two new peaks, as one would expect from the cleavage of a TDP into a decapeptide and a tetrapeptide. Amino acid analysis of HPLC-purified peaks confirmed that the HIV-1 protease cleaves TDP at the Leu10-Leu11 site to produce the desired decapeptide, Ang I. Production of Ang I by the HIV-1 protease, like human renin, is inhibited in the presence of a protease inhibitor. Implications of the discovery of an HIV-1 protease substrate that produces authentic Ang I are discussed in light of a screening assay for soluble HIV-1 protease inhibitors.
...
PMID:Could angiotensin I be produced from a renin substrate by the HIV-1 protease? 179 23
Recombinant A' protein could be reconstituted into U2 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particles (snRNPs) upon addition to HeLa cell extracts as determined by coimmunoprecipitation and particle density; however, direct binding to U2 RNA could not be demonstrated except in the presence of the U2 snRNP B" protein. Mutational analysis indicated that a central core region of A' was required for particle reconstitution. This region consists of five tandem repeats of approximately 24 amino acids each that exhibit a periodicity of
leucine
and asparagine residues that is distinct from the leucine zipper. Similar
leucine
-rich (
Leu
-
Leu
motif) repeats are characteristic of a diverse array of soluble and membrane-associated proteins from yeasts to humans but have not been reported previously to reside in nuclear proteins. Several of these proteins, including Toll, chaoptin, RNase/angiogenin inhibitors, lutropin-choriogonadotropin receptor, carboxypeptidase N, adenylyl cyclase, CD14, and human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 Rev, may be involved in protein-protein interactions. Our findings suggest that in cell extracts the
Leu
-
Leu
motif of A' is required for reconstitution with U2 snRNPs and perhaps with other components involved in splicing through protein-protein interactions.
...
PMID:Leucine periodicity of U2 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particle (snRNP) A' protein is implicated in snRNP assembly via protein-protein interactions. 182 47
Synthetic peptides described as dog renin inhibitors were found to effectively inhibit the aspartyl protease of human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV). The selection of oligopeptides for the HIV protease inhibition study was based on 1) the current strategy of inhibiting aspartyl proteases with transition state analogs, and 2) our previous observations regarding optimal structural differentiation at the P2 position among human, dog, and rat renin inhibitors. In an in vitro assay system consisting of recombinant HIV protease and a synthetic decapeptide substrate (at pH 5.5), results show that HIV protease was unaffected by statine-containing analogs carrying histidine at the P2 position whereas analogs containing valine at the same position yielded anti-protease IC50 values ranging from 50 to 500 nM. As anticipated, some analogs were also shown to inhibit processing of recombinant polyprotein substrate by HIV protease in vitro. The anti-viral activity of three inhibitors was studied in HIV-infected CEM and MT-2 cells. Results showed that one compound, Ac-Naphthylalanyl-Pro-Phe-Val-Statine-
Leu
-Phe-NH2 (antiprotease IC50 value = 0.4 microM), protected the infected cells effectively with IC50 values (0.73 microM for CEM cells and 0.88 microM for MT-2 cells). This antiviral effect is comparable to those obtained with AZT and ddC in parallel studies of MT-2 cells.
...
PMID:A rational approach in the search for potent inhibitors against HIV proteinase. 186 85
The expression of the gag-pol polyprotein of human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1) occurs via ribosomal frameshifting between the gag and pol genes. Because low levels of the gag-pol precursor are naturally produced in HIV-1-infected cells, a limited amount of information is available on the biology of this molecule. To further study this polyprotein, two mutant HIV-1 proviral genomes were created to position the gag and pol genes in the same translational reading frame. The mutations inserted a single thymidine nucleotide at the site of ribosomal frameshifting (nucleotide 1635), which results in the addition of a phenylalanine residue (frameshift 1 [FS1]), or a single adenine nucleotide, which results in the addition of a
leucine
residue (frameshift 2 [FS2]). Transfection of the mutant proviral genomes into COS-1 cells resulted in the expression of the p160gag-pol polyprotein precursor as well as the proteolytically processed gag and pol gene products. Metabolic labeling of the transfected cells with [3H]myristic acid revealed that the p160gag-pol and p17gag proteins expressed from the mutant genomes were myristylated. While the supernatants from COS-1 cells transfected with wild-type or mutant proviral genomes contained similar amounts of p24 antigen, the levels of reverse transcriptase were, on the average, 10 times greater in the supernatants from cells transfected with the FS1 and FS2 proviral genomes. The cells transfected with the wild-type proviral genome released infectious viral particles, while the mutant proviral genomes released p24 and reverse transcriptase in the absence of detectable particle formation. The mutant proviral genomes were completely noninfectious as determined by coculture of the transfected COS-1 cells with SupT1 cells. These results demonstrate that the gag-pol polyprotein of HIV-1 contains the appropriate signals for proteolytic processing and association with intracytoplasmic membranes in the absence of virion formation.
...
PMID:Overexpression of the gag-pol precursor from human immunodeficiency virus type 1 proviral genomes results in efficient proteolytic processing in the absence of virion production. 187 Feb 15
Human
immunodeficiency
virus 1 (HIV-1) protease is an aspartyl protease composed of two identical protomers linked by a four-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet consisting of the NH2- and COOH-terminal segments (Weber, I.T. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 10492-10496). Kinetic analysis of the HIV-1 protease-catalyzed hydrolysis of a fluorogenic substrate demonstrates that the enzyme is an obligatory dimer. At pH = 5.0, 0.1 M sodium acetate, 1 M NaCl, 1 mM EDTA buffer, 37 degrees C, the equilibrium dissociation constant, Kd = 3.6 +/- 1.9 nM. We found that the tetrapeptide Ac-Thr-
Leu
-Asn-Phe-COOH, corresponding to the COOH-terminal segment of the enzyme, is an excellent inhibitor of the enzyme. Kinetic analysis shows that the inhibitor binds to the inactive protomers and prevents their association into the active dimer (dissociative inhibition). The dissociative nature of this inhibition is consistent with the results obtained from sedimentation equilibrium experiments in which the apparent molecular weight of the enzyme was observed to be 20,800 +/- 1,500 and 12,100 +/- 300, in the absence and presence of the COOH-terminal tetrapeptide, respectively. The dissociation constant of the protomer-inhibitor complex is Ki = 45.1 +/- 1.8 microM. This is the first kinetic analysis and direct experimental demonstration of noncovalent dissociative inhibition.
...
PMID:Dissociative inhibition of dimeric enzymes. Kinetic characterization of the inhibition of HIV-1 protease by its COOH-terminal tetrapeptide. 187 17
A principal neutralizing domain (PND) of the major envelope glycoprotein (gp120) of the HTLV-III BH10 strain of human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1) has significant amino acid similarities to a reactive site of Kunitz-type basic proteinase inhibitors. We therefore thought that the PND may interact with cellular proteinase-like molecule(s) upon HIV-1 infection and measured the cellular proteolytic activities at the surface of intact Molt-4 clone 8 cells, which are highly susceptible to HIV-1 infection. The cells preferentially cleaved succinyl-
Leu
-
Leu
-Val-Tyr-4-methylcoumaryl-7-amide, a good substrate of chymotrypsin, and the activity was strongly inhibited by N-tosyl-L-phenylalanyl chloromethyl ketone (IC50 = 11.5 microM) and chymostatin (IC50 = 4.8 microM). A synthetic peptide of 24 residues (amino acids 308-331) that correspond to the PND also inhibited the cellular proteolytic activity in a dose-dependent manner (IC50 = 79.2 microM). The inhibition was still observed at low temperature (IC50 = 42.7 microM) and even after the peptide-treated cells were washed. We therefore think that the peptide interacts with proteinase-like molecule(s) located at the surface of the cells. The synthetic peptides from four other strains of HIV-1 corresponding to the PND similarly inhibited the proteolytic activity. These results may be helpful to clarify the novel mechanism(s) for HIV-1 infection.
...
PMID:A principal neutralizing domain of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 interacts with proteinase-like molecule(s) at the surface of Molt-4 clone 8 cells. 191 51
For the purpose to establish the system to express foreign antigen from Mycobacterium bovis BCG. We have cloned, sequenced and expressed genes for secreting proteins, alpha antigen, MPB64, MPB57 and MPB70 from M. bovis BCG. The upstreams and structural genes were characterized. The gene for alpha antigen of Mycobacterium kansasii was also characterized. The gene for alpha antigen of M. kansasii (k-alpha) was chosen for the further study at first. This gene was fused with shuttle plasmid PIJ666-PAL5000 obtained from T. Kisser and transfected to M. bovis BCG (Tokyo). Transformant was obtained by a selection with kanamycin. It was able to secrete k-alpha antigen. DNA-containing a B-cell epitope (Glu-12-
Leu
-Asp-Arg-Trp-Glu-Lys-Ile-19) of human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 P17 gag was fused to this vector at C terminal of k-alpha. Using this vector, we have succeeded to express foreign antigen in M. bovis BCG. The products were analyzed in one or two dimensional electro-phoresis. The results thus obtained will be reported elsewhere.
...
PMID:[Study on recombinant BCG]. 194 33
Peptidomimetic inhibitors of the human
immunodeficiency
virus 1 protease show considerable promise for treatment of AIDS. We have, therefore, been seeking computer-assisted drug design methods to aid in the systematic design of such inhibitors from a lead compound. Here we report thermodynamic cycle-perturbation calculations (using molecular dynamics simulations) to compute the relative difference in free energy of binding that results when one entire residue (valine) is deleted from one such inhibitor. In particular, we studied the "alchemic" mutation of the inhibitor Ac-Ser-
Leu
-Asn-(Phe-Hea-Pro)-Ile-Val-OMe (S1) to Ac-Ser-
Leu
-Asn-(Phe-Hea-Pro)-Ile-OMe (S2), where Hea is hydroxyethylamine, in two different (R and S) diastereomeric configurations of the hydroxyethylene group. The calculated (averaged for R and S) difference in binding free energy [3.3 +/- 1.1 kcal/mol (mean +/- SD); 1 cal = 4.184 J] is in good agreement with the experimental value of 3.8 +/- 1.3 kcal/mol, obtained from the measured Ki values for an equilibrium mixture of R and S configurations. Precise testing of our predictions will be possible when binding data become available for the two disastereomers separately. The observed binding preference for S1 is explained by the stronger ligand-protein interaction, which dominates an opposing contribution arising from the large desolvation penalty of S1 relative to S2. This calculation suggests that the thermodynamic cycle-perturbation approach can be useful even when a relatively large change in the ligand is simulated and supports the use of the thermodynamic cycle-perturbation algorithm for screening proposed derivatives of a lead inhibitor/drug prior to their synthesis.
...
PMID:Relative differences in the binding free energies of human immunodeficiency virus 1 protease inhibitors: a thermodynamic cycle-perturbation approach. 194 47
We have demonstrated the use of a radioimmunoassay to quantitate the peptidolytic activity of human
immunodeficiency
virus, type 1 (HIV-1) protease using a tetradecapeptide substrate of porcine renin, Asp-Arg-Val-Tyr-Ile-His-Pro-Phe-His-Leu-
Leu
-Val-Tyr-Ser. HIV-1 protease catalyzes cleavage of this substrate at the same
Leu
-
Leu
bond as does porcine renin, resulting in the formation of authentic angiotensin-I. The angiotensin-I product is then detected by use of a commercially available renin plasma assay kit, which constitutes the basis of the RIA. The radioimmunoassay provides detection of the protease-catalyzed formation of angiotensin-I at picomolar concentrations in vitro. We demonstrate the use of this assay in determining IC50 values for two HIV-1 protease inhibitors present in cell culture media and in standard assay buffer. An example of the potential development of this assay for the quantitation of these inhibitors present in ex vivo plasma samples is also presented.
...
PMID:Adaptation of the plasma renin radioimmunoassay for use with HIV-1 protease. 195 69
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