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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
2',3'-dideoxycytidine (ddC) inhibits replication of the immunodeficiency inducing strain of feline
leukemia
virus (FeLV-FAIDS) in vitro at concentrations ranging from 1-10 micrograms/ml. Additive antiviral effect is achieved when ddC is combined with either human recombinant alpha interferon (IFN alpha) or tumor necrosis factor (TNF) plus IFN alpha. Initial in vivo pharmacokinetic studies in cats, utilizing bolus intravenous administration of ddC (20 mg/kg), resulted in peak plasma concentrations of 15 micrograms/ml 1 min after administration and a half-life of approximately 1 h. These values could not be augmented with high levels of the deaminase blocker tetrahydrouridine administered prior to or concurrently with ddC. In vivo trials utilizing multiple, daily intravenous injections of ddC could not prevent the development of persistent
viremia
in cats infected with FeLV-FAIDS. To enhance ddC pharmacokinetics and antiviral activity, controlled release capsular implants were developed by blending ddC with a copolymer consisting of DL-lactide glycolide and hydroxypropyl cellulose, which was melt-spun into fibers and encapsulated in a sheath of polyethylene glycol for subcutaneous implantation. Pharmacokinetic studies, conducted in cats receiving an average dose of 600 mg of ddC, indicated an average peak plasma concentration of 17 micrograms/ml achieved at 6 h post implantation with 3.5 micrograms/ml noted at 48 h; and an extension of plasma half-life from 1.5 (bolus subcutaneous injection) to 20 h. sustained plasma concentrations of 1.5 to 10 micrograms/ml, equivalent to ddC levels previously shown to have anti-FeLV activity in vitro, were maintained throughout a 72 h period. Implantation devices could be replenished every 48 h and elevated plasma levels were sustained for four weeks without signs of clinical toxicity, sepsis or significant alterations in the hemogram. Initial clinical trials employing controlled release capsular ddC implants in vivo indicate significant retardation of FeLV-FAIDS replication throughout a four week treatment period.
...
PMID:Treatment of FeLV-induced immunodeficiency syndrome (FeLV-FAIDS) with controlled release capsular implantation of 2',3'-dideoxycytidine. 254 37
Administration of the aromatic polycyclic dione compounds hypericin or pseudohypericin to experimental animals provides protection from disease induced by retroviruses that give rise to acute, as well as slowly progressive, diseases. For example, survival from Friend virus-induced
leukemia
is significantly prolonged by both compounds, with hypericin showing the greater potency.
Viremia
induced by LP-BM5 murine immunodeficiency virus is markedly suppressed after infrequent dosage of either substance. These compounds affect the retroviral infection and replication cycle at least at two different points: (i) Assembly or processing of intact virions from infected cells was shown to be affected by hypericin. Electron microscopy of hypericin-treated, virus-producing cells revealed the production of particles containing immature or abnormally assembled cores, suggesting the compounds may interfere with processing of gag-encoded precursor polyproteins. The released virions contain no detectable activity of reverse transcriptase. (ii) Hypericin and pseudohypericin also directly inactivate mature and properly assembled retroviruses as determined by assays for reverse transcriptase and infectivity. Accumulating data from our laboratories suggest that these compounds inhibit retroviruses by unconventional mechanisms and that the potential therapeutic value of hypericin and pseudohypericin should be explored in diseases such as AIDS.
...
PMID:Studies of the mechanisms of action of the antiretroviral agents hypericin and pseudohypericin. 254 93
Challenge of naive experimental animals with a retroviral inoculum may result in one of two broad sequelae. The first is the establishment of an appropriate humoral and cellular immune response leading to a condition of immunity to subsequent infection with the retrovirus. Alternatively, the host may fail to develop a successful immune response, resulting in a chronic
viremia
associated with immunosuppression and ultimately death due to secondary pathogens. An alternate disease course is the establishment of a latent infection characterized by the presence of neutralizing antibody and strong cellular immune reactivity. Recent data from the feline
leukemia
virus (FeLV) system suggest that cats infected with this virus may develop immunosuppression in the form of persistent neutrophil dysfunction. The potential effect of this cellular dysfunction is the possible susceptibility of the host to the same opportunistic pathogens which are responsible for the increased mortality noted in chronic FeLV infections. These data demonstrate that persistent retroviremia is not essential for the establishment of immunosuppression. This overview presents data accumulated from the feline model of the human acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and discusses its relationship to human retroviral infections.
...
PMID:Immunodeficiency in latent feline leukemia virus infections. 254 92
A representative sample of the pet cat population of the United Kingdom was surveyed. Blood samples from 1204 sick and 1007 healthy cats of known breed, age and sex were tested for antibodies to feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) and feline
leukaemia
virus (FeLV). The prevalence of FIV was 19 per cent in sick cats and 6 per cent in healthy cats, and the prevalence of FeLV was 18 per cent in sick cats and 5 per cent in healthy cats; both infections were more common in domestic cats than in pedigree cats. Feline immunodeficiency virus was more prevalent in older cats but FeLV was more prevalent in younger cats. There was no difference between the prevalence of FeLV in male and female cats but male cats were more likely to be infected with FIV than female cats. No interaction was demonstrated between FIV and FeLV infections. Of the cats which were in contact with FIV in households with more than one cat, 21 per cent had seroconverted. The prevalence of FeLV
viraemia
in cats in contact with FeLV was 14 per cent. The clinical signs associated with FIV were pyrexia, gingivitis/stomatitis and respiratory signs, and with FeLV, pyrexia and anaemia. It was concluded that both viruses were significant causes of disease, and that the cats most likely to be infected with FIV were older, free-roaming male cats and for FeLV, younger, free-roaming cats.
...
PMID:Prevalence of feline leukaemia virus and antibodies to feline immunodeficiency virus in cats in the United Kingdom. 255 56
In this survey for the presence of the feline
leukaemia
virus (FeLV) in the Singapore domestic cat population, the sera of two different groups of unvaccinated mainly short haired cats which were over 6 months old were sampled. The FeLV enzyme-linked immunoadsorbent assay (ELISA) diagnostic test kit was used to detect the presence of the FeLV group specific (gs) antigens in the blood of cats. Of the 345 clinically healthy cats surveyed, 34 sera (9.9%) were found to be positive and of the group of 123 cats with clinical signs such as chronic wasting, marked by anaemia, anorexia and lethargy, 33 sera (26.8%) were found to be positive. From the time of diagnosis of a
viraemia
, 70% of cats will die within 20 months. The results are therefore indicative that annually a small proportion of cats in the local environment will die from a FeLV infection. This survey reflects the natural distribution of an infectious oncovirus in a susceptible host population which is unaffected by any control programme to interfere with the normal sequence of events of host virus interactions.
...
PMID:A survey of the feline leukaemia virus in Singapore. 256 Mar 57
The drug 5-azacytidine was injected into mice to activate silent retroviral genomes. The Mov-7 and Mov-10 substrains of mice were used, each of which carries a Moloney murine
leukemia
provirus with mutations in the coding regions at nonidentical positions. These proviral genomes are highly methylated and are not expressed in the animal. A single injection of the drug into postnatal mice induced transcription of the endogenous defective proviral genomes in thymus, spleen, and liver at 3 days after treatment. No viral transcription was detected in the brain of drug-exposed animals. When postnatal Mov-7/Mov-10 F1 mice were treated with the drug, infectious virus was generated efficiently and resulted in virus spread and
viremia
in all animals by 3 weeks of age. In contrast, infectious virus was not generated in F1 mice that had been treated during gestation with up to sublethal doses of the drug. Our results demonstrate that injection of 5-azacytidine can be used to efficiently and reproducibly activate silent genes in different cell populations of postnatal mice.
...
PMID:Treatment of mice with 5-azacytidine efficiently activates silent retroviral genomes in different tissues. 257 97
Five- to six-month-old specific-pathogen-free cats were exposed to cobra venom factor (CVF) alone (4 cats), Rickard feline
leukemia
virus (FeLV; 9 cats), or CVF and FeLV (6 cats). Host-virus relationships were evaluated by monitoring the development of
viremia
, production of antibody against feline oncornavirus-associated cell membrane antigen, and amount of circulating immune complexes (CIC). Exposure to CVF induced complement depletion, which lasted 8 to 15 days. However, complement depletion did not promote the development of persistent
viremia
nor alter the production of antibody to feline oncornavirus-associated cell membrane antigen or CIC. Results indicated that the complement system did not protect cats during their initial exposure to FeLV and that an intact complement system was not necessary for the development of antibody against feline oncornavirus-associated antigen or for the formation of CIC.
...
PMID:Effects of treatment with cobra venom factor on experimentally induced feline leukemia. 282 Feb 73
We describe the identification, experimental transmission, and pathogenesis of a naturally occurring powerfully immunosuppressive isolate of feline
leukemia
virus (designated here as FeLV-FAIDS) which induces fatal acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in 100% (25 of 25) of persistently viremic experimentally infected specific pathogen-free (SPF) cats after predictable survival periods ranging from less than 3 months (acute immunodeficiency syndrome) to greater than one year (chronic immunodeficiency syndrome), depending on the age of the cat at time of virus exposure. The pathogenesis of FeLV-FAIDS-induced feline immunodeficiency disease is characterized by: a prodromal period of largely asymptomatic
viremia
; progressive weight loss, lymphoid hyperplasia associated with viral replication in lymphoid follicles, lymphoid depletion associated with extinction of viral replication in lymphoid follicles, intractable diarrhea associated with necrosis of intestinal crypt epithelium, lymphopenia, suppressed lymphocyte blastogenesis, impaired cutaneous allograft rejection, hypogammaglobulinemia, and opportunistic infections such as bacterial respiratory disease and necrotizing stomatitis. The clinical onset of immunodeficiency syndrome correlates with the replication of a specific FeLV-FAIDS viral variant, detected principally as unintegrated viral DNA, in bone marrow, lymphoid tissues, and intestine. Two of seven cats with chronic immunodeficiency disease that survived greater than 1 year after inoculation developed lymphoma affecting the marrow, intestine, spleen, and mesenteric nodes. Experimentally induced feline immunodeficiency syndrome, therefore, is a rapid and consistent in vivo model for prospective studies of the viral genetic determinants, pathogenesis, prevention, and therapy of retrovirus-induced immunodeficiency disease.
...
PMID:Experimental transmission and pathogenesis of immunodeficiency syndrome in cats. 282 40
We report the first complete nucleotide sequence (8,440 base pairs) of a biologically active feline
leukemia
virus (FeLV), designated FeLV-61E (or F6A), and the molecular cloning, biological activity, and env-long terminal repeat (LTR) sequence of another FeLV isolate, FeLV-3281 (or F3A). F6A corresponds to the non-disease-specific common-form component of the immunodeficiency disease-inducing strain of FeLV, FeLV-FAIDS, and was isolated from tissue DNA of a cat following experimental transmission of naturally occurring feline acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. F3A clones were derived from a subgroup-A-virus-producing feline tumor cell line. Both are unusual relative to other molecularly cloned FeLVs studied to date in their ability to induce
viremia
in weanling (8-week-old) cats and in their failure to induce acute disease. The F6A provirus is organized into 5'-LTR-gag-pol-env-LTR-3' regions; the gag and pol open reading frames are separated by an amber codon, and env is in a different reading frame. The deduced extracellular glycoproteins of F6A, F3A, and the Glasgow-1 subgroup A isolate of FeLV (M. Stewart, M. Warnock, A. Wheeler, N. Wilkie, J. Mullins, D. Onions, and J. Neil, J. Virol. 58:825-834, 1986) are 98% homologous, despite having been isolated from naturally infected cats 6 to 13 years apart and from widely different geographic locations. As a group, their envelope gene sequences differ markedly from those of the disease-associated subgroup B and acutely pathogenic subgroup C viruses. Thus, F6A and F3A correspond to members of a highly conserved family and represent prototypes of the horizontally transmitted, minimally pathogenic FeLV present in all naturally occurring infections.
...
PMID:Strong sequence conservation among horizontally transmissible, minimally pathogenic feline leukemia viruses. 282 67
Bovine leukaemia virus (BLV) is the etiological agent of chronic lymphatic
leukaemia
/lymphoma in cows, sheep and goats. Infection without neoplastic transformation was also obtained in pigs, rhesus monkeys, chimpanzees, rabbits and observed in capybaras and water-buffaloes. Structurally and functionally, BLV is a relative of human T lymphotropic viruses 1 and 2 (HTLV-I and HTLV-II) In humans, HTLV-I induces a T-cell
leukaemia
and its type 2 counterpart has been found in dermatopathic lymphadenopathy, hairy T-cell
leukaemia
and prolymphocytic
leukaemia
cases. At variance with HTLV-I, BLV has not been associated with neurological diseases of the degenerative type. Bovine leukaemia virus, HTLV-I and HTLV-II show clearcut sequence homologies. The pathology of the BLV-induced disease, most notably the absence of chronic
viraemia
, a long latency period and lack of preferred proviral integration sites in tumours, is similar to that of adult T-cell
leukaemia
/lymphoma induced by HTLV-I. The most striking feature of these three naturally transmitted
leukaemia
viruses is the X region located between the env gene and the long terminal repeat (LTR) sequence. The X region contains several overlapping long open reading frames. One of them, designated XBL-I, encodes a trans-activator function capable of increasing the level of gene expression directed by BLV-LTR and most probably is involved in "genetic instability" of BLV-infected cells of the B cell lineage. The "genetic instability" renders the infected cell susceptible to move, along a number of stages, towards full malignancy. Little is known about these events and their causes; we present some theoretical possibilities. Bovine leukaemia virus infection has a worldwide distribution. In temperate climates, the virus spreads mostly via iatrogenic transfer of infected lymphocytes. In warm climates and in areas heavily populated by haematophagous insects, there are indications of insect-borne propagation of the virus.
...
PMID:Bovine leukaemia: facts and hypotheses derived from the study of an infectious cancer. 284 91
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