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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Repression of viral expression is a major strategy developed by retroviruses to escape from the host immune response. The absence of viral proteins (or derived peptides) at the surface of an infected cell does not permit the establishment of an efficient immune attack. Such a strategy appears to have been adopted by animal oncoviruses such as bovine leukemia virus (BLV) and human T-cell
leukemia
virus (HTLV). In BLV-infected animals, only a small fraction of the infected lymphocytes (between 1 in 5,000 and 1 in 50,000) express large amounts of viral proteins; the vast majority of the proviruses are repressed at the transcriptional level. Induction of BLV transcription involves the interaction of the virus-encoded Tax protein with the CREB/ATF factors; the resulting complex is able to interact with three 21-bp Tax-responsive elements (TxRE) located in the 5' long terminal repeat (5' LTR). These TxRE contain cyclic AMP-responsive elements (CRE), but, remarkably, the "TGACGTCA" consensus is never strictly conserved in any viral strain (e.g.,AGACGTCA, TGACGGCA, TGACCTCA). To assess the role of these suboptimal CREs, we introduced a perfect consensus sequence within the TxRE and showed by gel retardation assays that the binding efficiency of the CREB/ATF proteins was increased. However, trans-activation of a
luciferase
-based reporter by Tax was not affected in transient transfection assays. Still, in the absence of Tax, the basal promoter activity of the mutated LTR was increased as much as 20-fold. In contrast, mutation of other regulatory elements within the LTR (the E box, NF-kappa B, and glucocorticoid- or interferon-responsive sites [GRE or IRF]) did not induce a similar alteration of the basal transcription levels. To evaluate the biological relevance of these observations made in vitro, the mutations were introduced into an infectious BLV molecular clone. After injection into sheep, it appeared that all the recombinants were infectious in vivo and did not revert into a wild-type virus. All of them, except one, propagated at wild-type levels, indicating that viral spread was not affected by the mutation. The sole exception was the CRE mutant; proviral loads were drastically reduced in sheep infected with this type of virus. We conclude that a series of sites (NF-kappa B, IRF, GRE, and the E box) are not required for efficient viral spread in the sheep model, although mutation of some of these motifs might induce a minor phenotype during transient transfection assays in vitro. Remarkably, a provirus (pBLV-Delta 21-bp) harboring only two TxRE was infectious and propagated at wild-type levels. And, most importantly, reconstitution of a consensus CRE, within the 21-bp enhancers increases binding of CREB/ATF proteins but abrogates basal repression of LTR-directed transcription in vitro. Suboptimal CREs are, however, essential for efficient viral spread within infected sheep, although these sites are dispensable for infectivity. These results suggest an evolutionary selection of suboptimal CREs that repress viral expression with escape from the host immune response. These observations, which were obtained in an animal model for HTLV-1, are of interest for oncovirus-induced pathogenesis in humans.
...
PMID:Suboptimal enhancer sequences are required for efficient bovine leukemia virus propagation in vivo: implications for viral latency. 1143 78
The microbicidal activity of sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS) against human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) was studied in cultured cells. Pretreatment of HIV-1(NL4-3) with SLS decreased, in a concentration-dependent manner, its infectivity when using 1G5 as target cells. In the absence of a viral pretreatment period or when 1G5 cells were pretreated with SLS, the surfactant-induced inactivation of viral infectivity was less pronounced, especially at concentrations between 375 and 550 microM. SLS had no effect on HIV-1 when the virus was adsorbed to 1G5 cells by a 2-h incubation period. SLS almost completely inhibited the fusion process by decreasing the attachment of HIV-1 to target cells. SLS also inhibited the infectivity of HIV-1-based
luciferase
reporter viruses pseudotyped with the amphotropic murine
leukemia
virus envelope (which enters cells in a CD4-, CCR5-, and CXCR4-independent manner), indicating that SLS may inactivate other envelope viruses. In contrast, no effect was seen with vesicular stomatitis virus envelope glycoprotein G (which enters cells through receptor-mediated endocytosis) pretreated with up to 700 microM SLS. SLS also decreased, in a dose-dependent manner, the HIV-1-dependent syncytium formation between 1G5 and J1.1 cells after a 24-h incubation. The reduction of
luciferase
activity was more pronounced when J1.1 cells (which express HIV-1 proteins on their surface) were pretreated with SLS rather than 1G5 cells. Taken together, our results suggest that SLS could represent a candidate of choice for use in vaginal microbicides to prevent the sexual transmission of HIV and possibly other pathogens causing sexually transmitted diseases.
...
PMID:Sodium lauryl sulfate abrogates human immunodeficiency virus infectivity by affecting viral attachment. 1145 79
A new human GR gene sequence (hGR 1Ap/e), which is distinct from the previously identified human GR promoter and coding sequences, has been isolated and characterized. The hGR 1Ap/e sequence is approximately 31 kbp upstream of the human GR coding sequence. This sequence (2,056 bp) contains a novel promoter (the hGR 1A promoter; 1,075 bp) and untranslated exon sequence (hGR exon 1A sequence; 981 bp). Alternative splicing produces three different hGR 1A-containing transcripts, 1A1, 1A2, and 1A3. GR transcripts containing exon 1A1, 1A2, 1B, and 1C are expressed at various levels in many cancer cell lines, while the exon 1A3-containing GR transcript is expressed most abundantly in blood cell cancer cell lines. Glucocorticoid hormone treatment causes an up-regulation of exon 1A3-containing GR transcripts in CEM-C7 T-lymphoblast cells and a down-regulation of exon 1A3-containing transcripts in IM-9 B-lymphoma cells. Deoxyribonuclease I footprinting using CEM-C7 cell nuclear extract reveals four footprints in the promoter region and two intraexonic footprints. Much of the basal promoter-activating function is found in the +41/+269 sequence, which contains two deoxyribonuclease I footprints (FP5 and FP6). When this sequence is cloned into the pXP-1
luciferase
reporter gene, hormone treatment causes a significant increase in
luciferase
activity in Jurkat T cells that are cotransfected with a GR expression vector. FP5 is an interferon regulatory factor-binding element, and it contributes significantly to basal transcription rate, but it is not activated by steroid. FP6 resembles a glucocorticoid response element and can bind GRbeta. This novel hGR 1Ap/e sequence may have future applications for the diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of T-cell
leukemia
and lymphoma.
...
PMID:Multiple promoters exist in the human GR gene, one of which is activated by glucocorticoids. 1146 61
A sensitive and quantitative cell-free infection assay, utilizing recombinant human T-cell
leukemia
virus type 1 (HTLV-1)-based vectors, was developed in order to analyze early events in the virus replication cycle. Previous difficulties with the low infectivity and restricted expression of the virus have prevented a clear understanding of these events. Virus stocks were generated by transfecting cells with three plasmids: (i) a packaging plasmid encoding HTLV-1 structural and regulatory proteins, (ii) an HTLV-1 transfer vector containing either firefly luciferase or enhanced yellow fluorescent protein genes, and (iii) an envelope expression plasmid. Single-round infections were initiated by exposing target cells to filtered supernatants and quantified by assaying for
luciferase
activity in cell extracts or by enumerating transduced cells by flow cytometry. Transduction was dependent on reverse transcription and integration of the recombinant virus genome, as shown by the effects of the reverse transcriptase inhibitor 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine (AZT) and by mutation of the integrase gene in the packaging vector, respectively. The 50% inhibitory concentration of AZT was determined to be 30 nM in this HTLV-1 replication system. The stability of HTLV-1 particles, pseudotyped with either vesicular stomatitis virus G protein or HTLV-1 envelope, was typical of retroviruses, exhibiting a half-life of approximately 3.5 h at 37 degrees C. The specific infectivity of recombinant HTLV-1 virions was at least 3 orders of magnitude lower than that of analogous HIV-1 particles, though both were pseudotyped with the same envelope. Thus, the low infectivity of HTLV-1 is determined in large part by properties of the core particle and by the efficiency of postentry processes.
...
PMID:Examining human T-lymphotropic virus type 1 infection and replication by cell-free infection with recombinant virus vectors. 1150 91
It is hypothesized that supernatants from cell cultures contain several factors to modify the human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) infection. Single round infection with pseudotyped viruses with envelope from HIV-1, amphotropic murine
leukemia
virus (A-MLV) and vesicular stomatitis virus G-protein (VSV-G) carrying
luciferase
reporter gene detected that not only human T-cell
leukemia
/lymphoma virus type-I (HTLV-1) transformed cells but also HTLV-I-unrelated T-cells and BJA-B cells released factors enhancing the infection with all pseudotyped viruses in their culture-supernatants. No supernatants upregulated the level of transcription from transfected DNA probe. suggesting that the action of supernatants is different from that of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and Tax of HTLV-I. These results indicated that factors not always related to HTLV-I were ubiquitously produced and promoted viral infections, probably due to non-specific enhancement of early phase of the infection.
...
PMID:Human T-cell leukemia virus type-I (HTLV-I) tax is not the only one factor to enhance human immunodeficiency virus type-I (HIV-1) infection in culture-supernatants. 1155 5
Lentiviral vectors represent an attractive technology platform from which to develop a targetable injectable gene delivery system for transduction of specific cell populations in vivo, irrespective of their cell cycle status. Targeted HIV-1-based lentiviral vectors were generated by pseudotyping them with chimeric murine
leukemia
virus (MLV) envelope glycoproteins displaying N-terminal targeting polypeptides. Vectors displaying an EGF polypeptide were fully infectious on EGF receptor-negative cells, but were inactive on cells with abundant EGF receptors (inverse targeting). Receptor-mediated inactivation of gene transfer was overcome by competing the EGF receptors on the target cells with soluble EGF or by removing the displayed EGF domain from the surface of the vector particles by factor Xa cleavage of a specific protease substrate engineered into its tethering linker (protease targeting). Intravenous infusion of nontargeted HIV-1 vectors led to maximal
luciferase
activity in liver and spleen with moderate or minimal activity in heart, skeletal muscle, lung, brain, kidney, ovaries and bone marrow. In contrast, intravenous EGF-displaying vectors were expressed maximally in spleen with very low level
luciferase
expression detectable in liver (EGF-receptor rich). Liver transduction by the EGF-displaying vector was restored by pretreating the animals with soluble EGF suggesting that these vectors are inversely targeted to spleen.
...
PMID:Organ distribution of gene expression after intravenous infusion of targeted and untargeted lentiviral vectors. 1159 58
SPECs are small Cdc42 signaling molecules. In mammals, two genes, SPEC1 and SPEC2, encode proteins of 79 and 84 amino acid residues, respectively. Here we report the expression and genomic organization of the human SPEC1 gene. Using Northern blot analysis, three major SPEC1 mRNA transcripts of 1.6, 3.3, and 6.3 kb were detected. Identification and sequencing of different sized SPEC1 cDNA clones revealed that the transcript size heterogeneity was due to alternative splicing in the 3'-untranslated region. In addition, a distinct SPEC1 splice variant from within the coding sequence, SPEC1-beta, was identified and detected in a variety of human tissues. Analysis of the genomic organization of SPEC1 revealed that the coding sequence of the SPEC1 isoform was derived from exons 2, 3 and 4, while the SPEC1-beta isoform was derived from exon 2 and a read-through event of intron 2. Examination of the 5'-end of the SPEC1 genomic sequence revealed that AF1q, a previously identified gene involved in translocations with the MLL (mixed-lineage
leukemia
) gene, was 631 bp away in a head-to-head orientation. This intergenic sequence containing the putative promoter region for both SPEC1 and AF1q genes did not contain a TATA box or CAAT box. Transfection experiments using an AF1q promoter
luciferase
reporter construct in a variety of cells including Cos1 cells, Jurkat T-cells, MCF-7 breast cancer cells, and NIH-3T3 fibroblasts showed no promoter activity. In contrast, a SPEC1 promoter
luciferase
reporter construct showed high levels of reporter activity in Cos1 and MCF-7 cells, low activity in NIH-3T3 fibroblasts and no activity in Jurkat T-cells. These promoter analyses suggest that although SPEC1 and AF1q genes share the same promoter region, they are not coordinately regulated.
...
PMID:The genomic structure of the human SPEC1 gene reveals complex splicing and close promoter proximity to the AF1q translocation gene. 1159 76
Natural attenuation of ALVAC virus in mammals makes it an attractive vector for cancer vaccine therapy of immunocompromised hosts, such as patients with lymphoid malignancies. However, the transduction efficiency of ALVAC constructs in lymphoid tumors has not yet been characterized. We studied a wide spectrum of human T- and B-cell
leukemia
and lymphomas and found significant heterogeneity of the ALVAC-mediated gene product expression in these tumors. While ALVAC-B7.1, ALVAC-B7.2, or ALVAC-
luciferase
vectors effectively expressed recombinant genes in malignancies arising from T- or early B-cell precursors, negative or low expression of ALVAC recombinant genes occurred in tumors arising from mature B-cells. We showed that ALVAC-encoded B7.1 or B7.2 was continuously expressed on the infected, and subsequently irradiated,
leukemia
cells, and only cells with ALVAC-mediated expression of costimulatory molecules (but not unmodified
leukemia
cells or those infected with the ALVAC-parental vector) induced significant proliferation and IFN-gamma production by alloreactive T-cells. These data provide the rationale for clinical studies using the ALVAC vector system for gene transfer into lymphoid tumors of T- and early B-cell origin to render them more immunogenic, while alternative strategies should be considered for immunotherapy of mature B-cell malignancies.
...
PMID:ALVAC-mediated gene transfer is efficient in lymphoid malignancies of T-and early B-cell origin, but not in tumors arising from mature B-cells. 1167 94
Inhibitors of Bcl-2 may be useful therapeutic agents for the treatment of a wide variety of malignancies including
leukemia
. A potential prototype of such a compound is the endogenous Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL binding protein BAD. Previous reports indicate that BAD can overcome the anti-apoptotic effect of Bcl-xL but not Bcl-2. If BAD cannot induce apoptosis in cells over-expressing Bcl-2, it would limit the application of molecules like BAD as novel anti-tumor agents. We report that transient transfection of BAD induced cell death in cells with and without over-expression of Bcl-2 or Bcl-xL. Forty-eight hours after transfection, BAD increased cell death in COS, COS Bcl-2, and COS Bcl-xL cells as demonstrated by decreased GFP expression, and an increase in the number of number of floating cells. In addition, BAD induced cell death in leukemic cell lines over-expressing Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL as determined by changes in
luciferase
activity. BAD-induced apoptosis was not accompanied by loss of mitochondrial membrane potential. Therefore, we conclude that transient transfection of BAD directly induces apoptosis in cells over-expressing Bcl-2 or Bcl-xL and validates the pursuit of molecules like BAD as novel therapeutic agents.
...
PMID:BAD induces apoptosis in cells over-expressing Bcl-2 or Bcl-xL without loss of mitochondrial membrane potential. 1169 8
Elevated 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase expression supports synthesis of prenyl pyrophosphate intermediates required for tumor growth. In this study, the copy number of HMG-CoA reductase mRNA was determined in solid tumor and leukemic cell lines using competitive reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. Reductase mRNA was increased about eight-fold in Caco2 human colon adenocarcinoma cells compared with that in CCD18 normal colon cells. We also found a 50-fold enhancement of reductase mRNA in stimulated human lymphocytes compared with unstimulated cells. In CEM human
leukemia
cells, reductase mRNA was increased 8.6 times compared with that in stimulated lymphocytes. Greater low density lipoprotein receptor mRNA was also observed in tumor cells compared with normal counterparts. We hypothesized that elevated reductase mRNA was due to attenuation of sterol-mediated control of tumor reductase promoter activity. We first compared the methylation status of CpG dinucleotides in the promoters of reductase and p16 tumor suppressor genes from solid tumor, leukemic, and normal cells. As reported for other tumor cells the p16 promoter region was hypermethylated in Caco2 and CEM cells but was hypomethylated in corresponding normal cells. However, reductase promoter sequences in both normal and tumor cells were hypomethylated, demonstrating that methylation is not involved in sterol-independent reductase regulation. We addressed altered transcription factor binding to the tumor cell reductase promoter by transiently transfecting Caco2 and CCD18 with a plasmid vector containing a hamster HMG-CoA reductase promoter fused to the
luciferase
gene. We found that increased reductase mRNA was partially due to an approximately three-fold higher reductase promoter activity in Caco2 than in CCD18, measured by
luciferase
reporter assays. Thus, differential binding of transcription factor or factors on the tumor cell reductase promoter attenuates normal sterol-mediated regulation of reductase activity.
...
PMID:Sterol-independent regulation of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase in tumor cells. 1174 27
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