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)

Long-Evans Cinnamon (LEC) rats bear a congenital deficiency in CD4+8- thymocytes and consequently a deficiency in helper T cell function. This mutation is caused by a single recessive gene referred to as thid (T helper immunodeficiency). It has been reported that rat immunoglobulin(Ig) G2a subclass is a counterpart of the mouse IgG1. Serum IgG2a levels in LEC rats were ten-fold lower than those of normal rats. To identify a cause of low IgG2a levels in LEC rats, we made backcross rats, (F344 x LEC)F1 x LEC, and examined linkage to the thid mutation. The serum IgG2a levels of rats showing thid/thid phenotype were much lower than those of rats showing +/thid phenotype. This indicates that the thid mutation correlates with low level of IgG2a subclass. Furthermore, LEC rat B cells were shown to secret IgG2a normally when these were stimulated with LPS and IL-4, suggesting that a cause of low level of IgG2a was due to defect of T cell function but not due to B cell disfunction in LEC rats. These results confirm the idea that T-helper (Th) function is necessary for the class switch to IgG2a subclass in rats.
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PMID:Low level of immunoglobulin G2a subclass correlates with a deficiency in T helper cell function in LEC mutant rats. 754 12

The effects of cysteamine (2-aminoethanethiol, MEA) and its disulfide, cystamine, on the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) expression in chronically infected promonocytic cells (U1), T cell line (ACH-2), and peripheral blood monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM) were investigated. U1 and ACH-2 cells constitutively express low levels of virus, which is increased by the addition of tumor necrosis factor (TNF-alpha), interleukin 6 (IL-6), granulocyte-macrophage-colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), and other inducers. Cystamine, in noncytotoxic doses, suppressed in a concentration-dependent fashion the induction of HIV-1 expression mediated by TNF-alpha, IL-6, GM-CSF, and monokine-enriched monocyte culture supernatants in both U1 and ACH-2 cells as determined by HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT) activity. Similarly, HIV-1 expression was substantially reduced in the cystamine-treated primary MDM cultures compared with the untreated control cultures. The addition of cystamine into HIV-1 chronically infected MDM (12 days after infection was established) also suppressed 80-90% of RT activity in comparison to the untreated controls. HIV-1 (Bal) infected MDM cultures (without cystamine treatment) demonstrated giant syncytium formation, whereas cystamine-treated cultures lacked the giant syncytia induced by HIV-1 infection. Cystamine also inhibited LPS-induced TNF production in MDM. In contrast to cystamine, cysteamine showed no significant effects on either the monokine-induced HIV-1 expression in U1 or ACH-2 or acute and chronic HIV-1 infection in MDM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Cystamine inhibits HIV type 1 replication in cells of monocyte/macrophage and T cell lineages. 763 61

In patients with chronic renal failure alterations in monokine production are a common feature. Their clinical relevance has not yet been proven. We show here a correlation between an overproduction of interleukin-(IL)-6 and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha) upon stimulation with LPS by mononuclear cells in vitro and the clinical grade of immunodeficiency found in these patients. Higher levels of IL-6 and TNF alpha were correlated with an immunocompromized state, that is, non-responsiveness to hepatitis B vaccination, whereas patients with a better immune competence showed the same levels of these cytokines as healthy controls. Only the patients with a good immune function showed a high secretion of IL-10. The feedback mechanism of IL-10 for reducing monokine synthesis seems to be intact in these patients. Thus the secretion of IL-10 might be regarded as a compensatory mechanism which controls monokine induction by chronic renal failure and hemodialysis treatment. Immunocompromized patients who are unresponsive to hepatitis B vaccination seem to be unable to enhance IL-10 synthesis for control of monokine overproduction. This results in higher levels of IL-6 and TNF alpha that might be involved in the pathogenesis of reduced immune defense.
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PMID:Production of interleukin-6, tumor necrosis factor alpha and interleukin-10 in vitro correlates with the clinical immune defect in chronic hemodialysis patients. 772 41

Mice with the x-linked immunodeficiency mutation (xid) are unresponsive to polysaccharide antigens, lack a subset of B cells, and have low serum IgM (2-20% of normal) and IgG3 (3% of normal). Because of the disproportionate reduction of IgG3, the ability of B cells from xid mice to switch to gamma 3 was examined. Switching was indirectly measured by comparing IgG3 production and C gamma 3 mRNA steady state levels of purified B cells activated to switch to IgG3 by LPS in bulk culture. Direct measurement of switching was achieved by enumerating on a percentage basis switched cells in a filter disk culture assay and by FACS analysis. In both bulk culture and the filter disk assay, switching to gamma 3 was equivalent between xid and non-xid B cells.
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PMID:Immunoglobulin isotype switching in xid mice. 778 51

MAIDS is a retrovirus-induced immunodeficiency syndrome in mice that has similarities to human AIDS. Because the functional defects in B cells from retroviral immunodeficiency syndromes have not been characterized in detail, we examined early and late parameters of B cell responses to IgM cross-linking in B cells from MAIDS and normal mice. Splenic B cells from mice with MAIDS have defective in vitro proliferative responses to LPS and anti-IgM-mediated stimuli, as well as to PMA plus calcium ionophore, indicating a generalized defect in proliferative response potential independent of specific receptor-mediated signaling. When early signaling parameters were analyzed in response to IgM cross-linking, it was found that calcium flux in B cells from MAIDS mice was significantly reduced; this reduction was not accounted for by quantitative differences in cell-surface IgM expression and therefore indicates a defect in early signal transduction through the IgM receptor. The tyrosine phosphorylation response to IgM cross-linking was also markedly deficient; tyrosine phosphorylation of Ig-alpha, Ig-beta, and an undefined protein of 80 kDa was detected in MAIDS B cells after anti-IgM stimulation, at levels substantially less than those observed in normal B cells. Multiple other tyrosine phosphorylation events observed in normal B cells, including phosphorylation of GTPase-activating protein, P13-kinase, and syk kinase, were not detected in MAIDS B cells in response to IgM cross-linking. The defect in tyrosine phosphorylation seemed to correlate with reduced surface IgM levels on a subpopulation of MAIDS B cells. B cells from mice expressing the MAIDS retrovirus-induced immunodeficiency thus reflect defects in early signaling through the Ag-specific IgM receptor as well as a generalized defect in proliferative responsiveness.
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PMID:Analysis of antigen receptor signaling in B cells from mice with a retrovirus-induced acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 799 37

Microsporidia cause opportunistic infections in AIDS patients and commonly infect laboratory animals, as well. Euthymic C57B1/6 mice experimentally infected with intraperitoneal injections of 1 x 10(6) Encephalitozoon cuniculi Levaditi, Nicolau et Schoen, 1923, Encephalitozoon hellem Didier et al., 1991, or Nosema corneum Shadduck et al., 1990 displayed no clinical signs of disease. Athymic mice, however, developed ascites and died 8-16 days after inoculation with N. corneum, 21-25 days after inoculation with E. cuniculi, and 34-37 days after inoculation with E. hellem. All athymic mice displayed hepatomegaly, dilated intestine and accumulation of ascites fluid. Granulomatous lesions are primarily located in the liver, lung, pancreas, spleen, and on serosal surfaces of abdominal organs. The murine microsporidiosis model also was used to examine immune response that inhibit microsporidia growth in vitro. Recombinant murine interferon-gamma (mIFN-gamma, 100 mu/ml) alone or in combination with lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 10 ng/ml) could activate thioglycollate-induced peritoneal murine macrophages to destroy E. cuniculi. The production of the nitrogen intermediate, NO2-, correlated with parasite destruction. Inhibition of NO2- generation by addition of the L-arginine analogue, NG-monomethyl L-arginine (NMMA), inhibited microsporidia killing, as well. Since microsporidiosis is becoming an important opportunistic infection in AIDS patients, a microsporidiosis model is being developed using SIV/DeltaB670-infected rhesus macaque monkeys (Macaca mulatta). SIV-infected immunocompetent monkeys given E. cuniculi or E. hellem per os developed specific antibodies, and microsporidia could be detected sporadically by calcofluor or antibody fluorescence staining of stool and urine sediment smears. As immunodeficiency progressed, monkeys developed diarrhoea, cachexia, and anorexia, and organisms were detected in urine and stool with greater frequency. Immunodeficient SIV-infected monkeys died approximately 27 days after receiving E. hellem by intravenous inoculation, and approximately 110 days after receiving E. hellem per os. Lesions typical for SIV-infection were observed in both groups of monkeys and microsporidia were detected in kidney and liver of the intravenously-injected monkeys. The murine microsporidiosis model provides an efficient means for studying protective immune responses to microsporidiosis, and may prove useful for screening immunological and chemotherapeutic agents. The pathogenesis of Encephalitozoon microsporidiosis in SIV-infected monkeys appears to parallel encephalitozoonosis in AIDS patients, suggesting that simian microsporidiosis may provide a useful model for evaluating diagnostic methods and therapeutic strategies during various stages of progressing immunodeficiency.
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PMID:Experimental microsporidiosis in immunocompetent and immunodeficient mice and monkeys. 805 Jul 48

Data from a variety of sources suggest that one target cell for levamisole might be the macrophage. Current results reveal that oral levamisole pre-treatment provides elicited peritoneal macrophages with the ability to respond better to ex vivo LPS stimulation, and that levamisole can directly act on LPS-stimulated macrophages in vitro, resulting in enhanced production of IL-1, a key mediator of the immune response. These data offer further biological and immunologic evidence that IL-1 production is indeed enhanced by levamisole. Finally, these phenomena were not confined to macrophages taken from mice given levamisole. Increased IL-1 expression was found to occur for cells treated in vitro with levamisole, demonstrating that there were direct effects by levamisole on LPS-stimulated macrophage cytokine production. IL-1 has been reported to have a number of direct and indirect anti-tumor effects which might be sufficient to provide localized protection against tumor invasion or growth in the adjuvant setting. The findings described above are therefore consistent with suggestions of an increased host response in certain types of cancer due to levamisole treatment, and are also consistent with reports of levamisole's providing a beneficial effect in other cases of immunodeficiency disease. Recent clinical data provided by Janik et al. demonstrate that levamisole administration caused increases in circulating levels of neopterin and soluble IL-2 receptor (sIL-2R). This in vivo result is consistent with in vitro data showing augmented IL-1 induction after levamisole treatment, since neopterin is a marker for macrophage activation and sIL-2R release correlates with IL-2 production and binding after IL-1 activation of T-cells. These data are therefore consistent with the hypothesis that levamisole can induce a macrophage-derived cytokine cascade which may have beneficial effects in host responses to human cancer. It is attractive to speculate that there may be increased cytokine expression in vivo (yet to be confirmed) which might contribute to the added clinical benefit when 5-FU is combined with levamisole. Data from nude mice bearing human tumor xenografts demonstrate improved antitumor responses to 5-FU in combination with levamisole, and it will be interesting to determine whether increased interferon, TNF, or other cytokines can be observed in this model. In addition, the ability of levamisole to increase ICAM-1 expression on certain tumor cell lines may be a mechanism by which similar cells are rendered more sensitive to host effector mechanisms in vivo.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Experimental modulation of IL-1 production and cell surface molecule expression by levamisole. 810 13

Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) is a key mediator of inflammation and may promote human immunodeficiency virus replication in latently infected cells. Since cryptococcosis often is associated with aberrations in the host inflammatory response and occurs preferentially in persons with AIDS, we defined the conditions under which human leukocytes produce TNF-alpha when stimulated by Cryptococcus neoformans. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) produced comparable amounts of TNF-alpha following stimulation with C. neoformans and lipopolysaccharide. Detectable TNF-alpha release in response to C. neoformans occurred only when fungi with small-sized capsules were used and complement-sufficient serum was added. Fractionation of PBMC established that monocytes were the predominant source of TNF-alpha. TNF-alpha gene expression and release occurred significantly later in PBMC stimulated with C. neoformans than in PBMC stimulated with LPS. C. neoformans was also a potent inducer of TNF-alpha from freshly isolated bronchoalveolar macrophages (BAM). Upon in vitro culture, BAM and monocytes bound greater numbers of fungal cells, yet their capacity to produce TNF-alpha following cryptococcal stimulation declined by 74 to 100%. However, this decline was reversed if the BAM and monocytes were cultured with gamma interferon. These data establish that C. neoformans can potently stimulate TNF-alpha release from human leukocytes. However, several variables profoundly affected the amount of TNF-alpha released, including the type of leukocyte and its state of activation, the size of the cryptococcal capsule, and the availability of opsonins.
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PMID:Production of tumor necrosis factor alpha in human leukocytes stimulated by Cryptococcus neoformans. 816 65

Furin is a membrane-associated calcium-dependent serine endoprotease that cleaves proproteins on the carboxyl side of the consensus sequence -Arg-X-Lys/Arg-Arg-. Using site-directed mutagenesis, a variant alpha 1-antitrypsin (alpha 1-AT) was constructed which contains in its reactive site -Arg-X-X-Arg-, the minimal sequence required for efficient processing by furin (Molloy, S. S., Bresnahan, P. A., Leppla, S. H., Klimpel, K. R., and Thomas, G. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 16396-16402). This alpha 1-AT variant, [Arg355 Arg358]alpha 1-AT (alpha 1-PDX), is greater than 3,000-fold more effective than [Arg358]alpha 1-AT (alpha 1-AT Pittsburgh, alpha 1-PIT) at inhibiting furin in vitro (K0.5 = 0.03 microgram/ml). Furthermore, the P4 Arg in alpha 1-PDX greatly attenuates the thrombin inhibitory properties of this serpin (> 300-fold) compared with alpha 1-PIT (which contains a P4 Ala), thus increasing the selectivity of alpha 1-PDX for furin. Expression studies show that alpha 1-PDX, and not alpha 1-PIT, blocks the processing of two furin substrates, pro-beta-nerve growth factor and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 gp160 in transfected cells. In addition, a syncytium assay shows that alpha 1-PDX blocks the membrane fusogenic properties of HIV-1 gp160. The potential use of alpha 1-PDX in manipulating the activation of proproteins in a tissue- and time-specific manner is discussed.
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PMID:Inhibition of HIV-1 gp160-dependent membrane fusion by a furin-directed alpha 1-antitrypsin variant. 822 51

Infection with the avirulent Fukaya strain of Toxoplasma gondii induced few inflammatory responses in the brain of C57BL/6 mice. When mice with chronic infection with the Fukaya strain were challenged with murine leukemia virus (MuLV) LP-BM5, which is known to induce a remarkable immunodeficiency in mice, those mice suffered from a severe encephalitis. Infiltration of mononuclear cells was remarkable in both meninges and parenchyma in those mice. Numerous sites of acute focal inflammation were noted in the brain and the presence of tachyzoites and Toxoplasma antigens was demonstrable in those areas by immunoperoxidase staining using rabbit anti-Toxoplasma IgG antibodies. All mice infected with both T. gondii and LP-BM5 MuLV died from 9 to 14 weeks after the virus infection, whereas no mice died in the infection with either T. gondii or the virus alone. Spleen cells from the mice with coinfection failed to respond to both T cell (Con A) and B cell mitogens (LPS) in vitro in contrast to the cells from mice infected with T. gondii alone that responded to those mitogens just as cells from normal mice did. Mice chronically infected with T. gondii and challenged with LP-BM5 MuLV appears to provide a good animal model of toxoplasmic encephalitis which is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in AIDS patients.
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PMID:Toxoplasma gondii: induction of toxoplasmic encephalitis in mice with chronic infection by inoculation of a murine leukemia virus inducing immunodeficiency. 838 26


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