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)

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) isolates from 8 Ethiopian and 8 Swedish AIDS patients, none of them treated with antiviral drugs, were compared for sensitivity to azido-deoxy-thymidine (AZT), dideoxy-inosine (ddI) and interferon-alpha. HIV was isolated from peripheral blood mononuclear class, identified by Western blot and nucleotide sequencing, and passaged 1-3 times. Sensitivity to the 3 drugs, expressed as ED50s relative to positive controls, was determined by culturing HIV in the presence of drugs in a range of concentrations and assaying the supernatant for p24 antigen and the virus pellet for reverse transcriptase (RT). Dose-dependent anti-HIV activity for AZT was seen in the 8 Ethiopian isolates, and ED50s for p24 antigen and RT activity were correlated. 1 Ethiopian HIV isolate was sensitive to ddI, and another, to interferon-alpha. 1 Swedish HIV was resistant to AZT, and on analysis had a mutation from threonine to tyrosine at position 215. There were no significant differences between ED50s for interferon in the Swedish and Ethiopian HIVs. Combined data for each drug showed correlation between the p24 antigen and RT activities of the Ethiopian and Swedish HIVs. Since there was no resistance observed in the Ethiopian HIV to AZT or ddI, low-dose treatment would probably slow progression of HIV infection in Ethiopians, if these drugs could be made available for clinical trials.
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PMID:Response of Ethiopian human immunodeficiency virus type 1 isolates to antiviral compounds. 128 93

Mutations designed by analysis of the Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 protease (PR) crystal structures were introduced into 1) the substrate binding pocket, 2) the substrate enclosing "flaps," and 3) surface loops of RSV PR. Each mutant PR was expressed in Escherichia coli. Changes in activity were detected by following cleavage of a truncated (NC-PR) precursor polypeptide in E. coli and cleavage of synthetic peptide substrates representing RSV and HIV-1 PR cleavage sites in vitro. Mutations in the substrate binding pocket exchanged amino acid residues located close to the substrate in the HIV-1 PR for structurally equivalent residues in the RSV PR. Changing histidine 65 to glycine (H65G) gave an inactive enzyme, while a double mutant R105P,G106V, as well as the triple mutant, H65G,R105P,G106V, produced enzymes which showed significant activity toward a substrate that represented a HIV-1 cleavage site. Mutating the catalytic aspartate (D37S) or an adjacent conserved alanine to threonine (A40T), produced inactive enzymes. In contrast, the substitution A40S was active, but showed a reduced rate of catalysis. Mutations in the flaps of conserved glycines (G69L, G70L) produced inactive PRs. Two extended RSV PR surface loops were shortened to the size found in HIV-1 PR and resulted in drastically reduced activity. These results have confirmed some of the basic predictions made from structural models but have also revealed unexpected roles and interactions in the protein.
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PMID:Mutations that alter the activity of the Rous sarcoma virus protease. 131 55

To investigate whether human immunodeficiency virus type 1 pol gene mutations are selected during prolonged 2',3'-dideoxycytidine (ddC) therapy, we used the polymerase chain reaction to amplify a portion of the reverse transcriptase segment of the pol gene from the peripheral blood mononuclear cell DNA of a patient with AIDS before and after an 80-week course of ddC therapy. The consensus sequence from the second sample contained a unique double mutation (ACT to GAT) in the codon for reverse transcriptase amino acid 69, causing substitution of aspartic acid (Asp) for the wild-type threonine (Thr). A mutation (ACA to ATA) also occurred in the codon for position 165, causing substitution of isoleucine (Ile) for Thr. The GAT (Asp) codon was introduced into the pol gene of a molecular clone of human immunodeficiency virus via site-directed mutagenesis. Following transfection, mutant and wild-type viruses were tested for susceptibility to ddC by a plaque reduction assay. The mutant virus was fivefold less susceptible to ddC than the wild type; cross-resistance to 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine or 2'3'-dideoxyinosine was not found. The Ile-165 mutation did not confer additional ddC resistance. The Asp-69 substitution may have contributed to the generation of resistant virus in this patient.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 pol gene mutations which cause decreased susceptibility to 2',3'-dideoxycytidine. 131 43

Two immunologically distinct glycoproteins, fractions C4 and C6, with a molecular weight of 28,000 and 28,500, respectively, estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, were isolated from seeds of Luffa cyclindrica using acetone precipitation, gel filtration on Sephadex G-75, and ion exchange chromatography on CM-Sepharose CL-6B. Fractions C4 and C6 correspond to luffin-a and luffin-b, respectively, according to the ion exchange chromatographic behavior and amino acid compositions. Fraction C6 and luffin-b were characterized by a lower content of threonine and a higher content of proline than fraction C4 and luffin-a. The 2 luffins, the protein from Luffa acutangula (luffaculin) and trichosanthin exhibited an overall similarity in amino acid composition. The proteins differed in the content of aspartic acid, threonine, proline, and alanine but were otherwise similar in amino acid composition. The ribosome inactivating proteins from Luffa cylindrica seeds also possessed abortifacient activity: they were capable of inducing mid term abortion in mice, inhibiting protein synthesis in a cell-free system, and suppressing thymidine uptake by human choriocarcinoma cells. The abortifacient activity of these proteins is possibly the result of their inhibitory effects on the biosynthetic activity of implanting embryos and endometrial cells. Trichosanthin inhibits the replication of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in acutely and chronically infected cells of lymphocyte and mononuclear phagocyte lineage with a potential in AIDS therapy. However, it is still unknown whether the proteins from Luffa cylindrica seeds also possess anti-HIV activity.
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PMID:Two proteins with ribosome-inactivating, cytotoxic and abortifacient activities from seeds of Luffa cylindrica roem (Cucurbitaceae). 150 59

Genetic diversity is a hallmark of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) genome, but the role of distinct HIV variants in the development of AIDS is unclear. Envelope (env) is the most highly variable gene in HIV as well as in other retroviruses. We have previously demonstrated that variation in simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) env is primarily localized in two regions (V1 and V4) during progression to simian AIDS. To determine whether there is a common genotype that evolves as AIDS develops, a total of 160 SIV env genes isolated directly from the tissue DNAs of four macaques infected with cloned virus were compared. Common amino acid sequence changes were identified within V1, V4, and, in the late stages of disease, near V3. At several positions, the same amino acid change was seen frequently in the variant genomes from all four animals. As AIDS developed, the majority of viruses evolved an extended sequence in V1 that was rich in serine and threonine residues and shared similarity with proteins modified by O-linked glycosylation. Several of the predominant common sequence changes in V1 and V4 created new sites for N-linked glycosylation. Thus, common features of the SIV variants that evolve during progression to AIDS are motifs that potentially allow for structural and functional changes in the env protein as a result of carbohydrate addition.
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PMID:Alterations in potential sites for glycosylation predominate during evolution of the simian immunodeficiency virus envelope gene in macaques. 152 47

The studies presented here define an internally consistent experimental system that permits systematic analysis of the effect of nef on the rate of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) replication in a CD4+ tumor T-cell line and in primary peripheral blood mononuclear cells. The parental full-length Nef protein, derived from the Eli strain of HIV-1, accelerates virus replication in both cell types. Mutations that destabilize or alter the intracellular location of the protein affect the ability of the Nef protein to accelerate virus replication. A set of mutants was made in amino acids proposed to be required for Nef function, including threonine and serine residues proposed to be targets for phosphorylation, and in sequences thought to resemble the G-1, G-3, and G-4 sites of the family of G proteins. In most cases alterations of the critical amino acids yield stable Nef proteins of parental phenotype. These results challenge the existing theories for the mechanism of Nef function. The results also identify two residues in the carboxyl half of the protein that are important for Nef function.
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PMID:Mutational analysis of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Eli Nef function. 163 Nov 66

The nef gene product of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is suggested to be a negative factor involved in down-regulating viral expression by a mechanism in which the correct conformation of the nef protein is essential. The nef protein expressed by vaccinia virus recombinants is phosphorylated by protein kinase C. We investigated the synthesis of the nef protein and its state of phosphorylation during HIV-1 infection of a T4 cell line (CEM cells). Maximum synthesis of viral proteins occurred 3 days after infection, when more than 90% of cells were producing viral proteins. The synthesis of the nef protein was detected in parallel with the env and gag proteins. As expected, the nef protein was myristylated but not phosphorylated, and its half-life was less than 1 h. By the use of the polymerase chain reaction technique, we isolated and sequenced the nef gene of this HIV-1 stock. Two significant mutations were observed. Firstly, threonine, at amino acid number 15, the site of phosphorylation by protein kinase C, was mutated into an alanine, and secondly aspartic acid of the tetrapeptide WRFD, which is probably involved in GTP binding, was mutated into an asparagine. The mutated nef gene was expressed in a vaccinia virus system, in which it was not phosphorylated and its half-life was dramatically reduced compared to the wild-type nef gene product. Furthermore, down-regulation of CD4 cell surface expression was no longer affected by the mutated nef gene. These results emphasize that phosphorylation of the nef protein provides an efficient test to monitor its biological activity.
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PMID:Production of a non-functional nef protein in human immunodeficiency virus type 1-infected CEM cells. 197 71

Stable transformants of the Jurkat T-cell line have been obtained that express either of two distinct forms of the type 1 human immunodeficiency virus nef gene: the nef-1-encoded protein (Nef-1) contains alanine, glycine, and valine at positions 15, 29, and 33, respectively; the protein specified by nef-2 (Nef-2) has threonine, arginine, and alanine at the corresponding positions. When Jurkat cells or their Nef-2-expressing transformants are treated with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) plus either phytohemagglutinin (PHA) or antibodies against CD3 epsilon, T-cell receptor beta chain, or CD2, there is a prompt increase in interleukin 2 (IL-2) mRNA and intracellular calcium and in the IL-2 receptor alpha chain on the cell surface. Although cells expressing Nef-1 also induce calcium mobilization and the production of IL-2 receptor alpha chain, the formation of IL-2 mRNA is blocked in response to these stimuli. Moreover, Nef-1-expressing cells transfected with a plasmid in which the IL-2 promoter is fused to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene fail to induce CAT following treatment with PMA and PHA. By contrast, the parental and Nef-2-containing cells induce CAT normally. Nef-1-expressing cells can produce IL-2 mRNA in response to a combination of PMA and ionomycin, although much less efficiently than the parental Jurkat cells or Nef-2-expressing cells. These findings, and others described herein, suggest that the virally encoded Nef protein interferes with a signal emanating from the T-cell receptor complex that induces IL-2 gene transcription.
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PMID:Expression of the type 1 human immunodeficiency virus Nef protein in T cells prevents antigen receptor-mediated induction of interleukin 2 mRNA. 205 9

The envelope proteins of retroviruses are derived from a polypeptide precursor protein by cleavage adjacent to a cluster of basic amino acids. Site-specific mutagenesis was used to construct a mutant of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in which the arginine residue at the carboxy-terminus of the gp120 was changed to a threonine residue. This single substitution was sufficient to abolish all detectable cleavage of the gp160 envelope precursor polypeptide as well as virus infectivity. The gp160 was produced in normal quantities from a biologically active clone of the mutant virus after transfection into cos-1 cells. The mutant gp160 contained N-linked oligosaccharide chains with mannose-rich cores similar to those of the gp160 produced by the wild-type clone. Immunofluorescence assays showed that gp160 was transported to the surface of transfected CD4+ HeLa cells. No envelope proteins of known size could be detected in the media of cells transfected with the mutant virus, suggesting that functional virions were not formed. Binding of the mutant gp160 to the CD4 receptor molecule was unimpaired. Despite this and the presence of gp160 on the cell surface, neither growth of mutant-transfected CD4+ HeLa cells nor cocultivation of transfected cos-1 cells with H9 cells resulted in significant syncytium formation. The data indicate that the carboxy-terminal arginine residue of HIV-1 gp120 is necessary for envelope protein cleavage and suggest cleavage is important in the virus life cycle in both functional virus release and membrane fusion.
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PMID:Characterization of an HIV-1 point mutant blocked in envelope glycoprotein cleavage. 210 82

Infection of Molt-3 cells with human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) was found to cause a rapid increase in extractable poly(A) polymerase activity, while the activity of poly(A) degrading endoribonuclease IV strongly decreased at the same time. The increase in poly(A) polymerase activity seems not to be due to a change in the actual number of enzyme molecules, but rather to posttranslational enzyme modification, most likely caused by phosphorylation by nuclear protein kinase NI or protein kinase C. Both kinases were found to be able to phosphorylate poly(A) polymerase in vitro [homogeneous enzyme as well as poly(A) polymerase in intact nuclei]. Phosphoamino acid analysis revealed an incorporation of phosphate into serine and, to a lower extent, into threonine residues of the enzyme protein; no phosphotyrosine could be detected. In the nucleus, the poly(A) polymerase and the endoribonuclease IV are bound to the nuclear matrix. The phosphorylation related enhancement of nuclear poly(A) polymerase activity could be abolished by addition of the zinc and copper chelator o-phenanthroline, which inhibited zinc-containing purified poly(A) polymerase and destroyed the poly(A) polymerase containing nuclear matrix structure, resulting in a solubilization of the enzyme.
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PMID:Dramatic increase in poly(A) synthesis after infection of Molt-3 cells with HIV. 234 76


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