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Enzyme
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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The p6(Gag) protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is produced as the carboxyl-terminal sequence within the Gag polyprotein. The amino acid composition of this protein is high in hydrophilic and polar residues except for a patch of relatively hydrophobic amino acids found in the carboxyl-terminal 16 amino acids. Internal cleavage of p6(Gag) between Y36 and P37, apparently by the
HIV-1 protease
, removes this hydrophobic tail region from approximately 30% of the mature p6(Gag) proteins in HIV-1MN. To investigate the importance of this cleavage and the hydrophobic nature of this portion of p6(Gag), site-directed mutations were made at the minor protease cleavage site and within the hydrophobic tail. The results showed that all of the single-amino-acid-replacement mutants exhibited either reduced or undetectable cleavage at the site yet almost all were nearly as infectious as wild-type virus, demonstrating that processing at this site is not important for viral replication. However, one exception, Y36F, was 300-fold as infectious the wild type. In contrast to the single-substitution mutants, a virus with two substitutions in this region of p6(Gag), Y36S-L41P, could not infect susceptible cells. Protein analysis showed that while the processing of the Gag precursor was normal, the double mutant did not incorporate Env into virus particles. This mutant could be complemented with surface glycoproteins from vesicular stomatitis virus and murine
leukemia
virus, showing that the inability to incorporate Env was the lethal defect for the Y36S-L41P virus. However, this mutant was not rescued by an HIV-1 Env with a truncated gp41(TM) cytoplasmic domain, showing that it is phenotypically different from the previously described MA mutants that do not incorporate their full-length Env proteins. Cotransfection experiments with Y36S-L41P and wild-type proviral DNAs revealed that the mutant Gag dominantly blocked the incorporation of Env by wild-type Gag. These results show that the Y36S-L41P p6(Gag) mutation dramatically blocks the incorporation of HIV-1 Env, presumably acting late in assembly and early during budding.
...
PMID:Mutational analysis of the hydrophobic tail of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 p6(Gag) protein produces a mutant that fails to package its envelope protein. 984 2
HTLV-I is an oncogenic retrovirus that is associated with adult T-cell
leukemia
. HTLV-I protease and HTLV-I protease fused to a deca-histidine containing leader peptide (His-protease) have been cloned, expressed, and purified. The refolded proteases were active and exhibited nearly identical enzymatic activities. To begin to characterize the specificity of HTLV-I, we measured protease cleavage of peptide substrates and inhibition by protease inhibitors. HTLV-I protease cleavage of a peptide representing the HTLV-I retroviral processing site P19/24 (APQVLPVMHPHG) yielded Km and kcat values of 470 microM and 0.184 s-1 while cleavage of a peptide representing the processing site P24/15 (KTKVLVVQPK) yielded Km and kcat values of 310 microM and 0.0060 s-1. When the P1' proline of P19/24 was replaced with p-nitro-phenylalanine (Nph), the ability of HTLV-I protease to cleave the substrate (APQVLNphVMHPL) was improved. Inhibition of HTLV-I protease and His-protease by a series of protease inhibitors was also tested. It was found that the Ki values for inhibition of HTLV-I protease and His-protease by a series of pepsin inhibitors ranged from 7 nM to 10 microM, while the Ki values of a series of
HIV-1 protease
inhibitors ranged from 6 nM to 127 microM. In comparison, the Ki values for inhibition of pepsin by the pepsin inhibitors ranged from 0.72 to 19.2 nM, and the Ki values for inhibition of
HIV-1 protease
by the HIV protease inhibitors ranged from 0.24 nM to 1.0 microM. The data suggested that the substrate binding site of HTLV-I protease is different from the substrate binding sites of pepsin and
HIV-1 protease
, and that currently employed
HIV-1 protease
inhibitors would not be effective for the treatment of HTLV-I infections.
...
PMID:Substrates and inhibitors of human T-cell leukemia virus type I protease. 986 Aug 66
The vif gene, one of the six auxiliary genes of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), is essential for virus propagation in peripheral blood lymphocytes and macrophages and in certain T-cell lines. Previously, it was demonstrated that Vif inhibits the autoprocessing of truncated HIV type 1 (HIV-1) Gag-Pol polyproteins expressed in bacterial cells, as well as the protease-mediated cleavage of synthetic peptides in vitro. Peptides derived from the aa 78-98 region in the Vif molecule specifically inhibit and bind the
HIV-1 protease
in vitro and arrest the production of infectious viruses in HIV-1-infected cells. This study demonstrates that (i) purified recombinant Vif protein and HIV-1 but not avian sarcoma
leukaemia
virus protease specifically bind each other and (ii) the interaction between these two proteins takes place at the N terminus of the protease (aa 1-9) and the central part of Vif (aa 78-98). The data presented in this report suggest a model in which Vif interacts with the dimerization sites of the viral protease.
...
PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Vif binds the viral protease by interaction with its N-terminal region. 1218 77
Human immunodeficiency virus protease activity can be regulated by reversible oxidation of a sulfur-containing amino acid at the dimer interface. We show here that oxidation of this amino acid in
human immunodeficiency virus type 1 protease
prevents dimer formation. Moreover, we show that human T-cell
leukemia
virus type 1 protease can be similarly regulated through reversible glutathionylation of its two conserved cysteine residues. Based on the known three-dimensional structures and multiple sequence alignments of retroviral proteases, it is predicted that the majority of retroviral proteases have sulfur-containing amino acids at the dimer interface. The regulation of protease activity by the modification of a sulfur-containing amino acid at the dimer interface may be a conserved mechanism among the majority of retroviruses.
...
PMID:Reversible oxidative modification as a mechanism for regulating retroviral protease dimerization and activation. 1258 57
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-based vectors are currently made by transient transfection, or using packaging cell lines in which expression of HIV-1 Gag and Pol proteins is induced. Continuous vector production by cells in which HIV-1 Gag-Pol is stably expressed would allow rapid and reproducible generation of large vector batches. However, attempts to make stable HIV-1 packaging cells by transfection of plasmids encoding HIV-1 Gag-Pol have resulted in cells which secrete only low levels of p24 antigen (20-80 ng/ml), possibly because of the cytotoxicity of
HIV-1 protease
. Infection of cells with HIV-1 can result in stable virus production; cell clones that produce up to 1,000 ng/ml secreted p24 antigen have been described. Here we report that expression of HIV-1 Gag-Pol by a murine
leukemia
virus (MLV) vector allows constitutive, long-term, high-level (up to 850 ng/ml p24) expression of HIV-1 Gag. Stable packaging cells were constructed using codon-optimized HIV-1 Gag-Pol and envelope proteins of gammaretroviruses; these producer cells could make up to 10(7) 293T infectious units (i.u.)/ml (20 293T i.u./cell/day) for at least three months in culture.
...
PMID:Continuous high-titer HIV-1 vector production. 1267 87
Human T-cell
leukemia
virus type 1 (HTLV-1) is associated with a number of human diseases; therefore, its protease is a potential target for chemotherapy. To compare the specificity of HTLV-1 protease with that of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease, oligopeptides representing naturally occurring cleavage sites in various retroviruses were tested. The number of hydrolyzed peptides as well as the specificity constants suggested a substantially broader specificity of the HIV protease. Amino acid residues of HTLV-1 protease substrate-binding sites were replaced by equivalent ones of
HIV-1 protease
. Most of the single and multiple mutants had altered specificity and a dramatically reduced folding and catalytic capability, suggesting that mutations are not well tolerated in HTLV-1 protease. The catalytically most efficient mutant was that with the flap residues of
HIV-1 protease
. The inhibition profile of the mutants was also determined for five inhibitors used in clinical practice and inhibitor analogs of HTLV-1 cleavage sites. Except for indinavir, the
HIV-1 protease
inhibitors did not inhibit wild type and most of the mutant HTLV-1 proteases. The wild type HTLV-1 protease was inhibited by the reduced peptide bond-containing substrate analogs, whereas the mutants showed various degrees of weakened binding capability. Most interesting, the enzyme with HIV-1-like residues in the flap region was the most sensitive to the
HIV-1 protease
inhibitors and least sensitive to the HTLV-1 protease inhibitors, indicating that the flap plays an important role in defining the specificity differences of retroviral proteases.
...
PMID:Narrow substrate specificity and sensitivity toward ligand-binding site mutations of human T-cell Leukemia virus type 1 protease. 1510 58
The PABP [poly(A)-binding protein] is able to interact with the 3' poly(A) tail of eukaryotic mRNA, promoting its translation. Cleavage of PABP by viral proteases encoded by several picornaviruses and caliciviruses plays a role in the abrogation of cellular protein synthesis. We report that infection of MT-2 cells with HIV-1 leads to efficient proteolysis of PABP. Analysis of PABP integrity was carried out in BHK-21 (baby-hamster kidney) and COS-7 cells upon individual expression of the protease from several members of the Retroviridae family, e.g. MoMLV (Moloney murine
leukaemia
virus), MMTV (mouse mammary tumour virus), HTLV-I (human T-cell
leukaemia
virus type I), SIV (simian immunodeficiency virus), HIV-1 and HIV-2. Moreover, protease activity against PABP was tested in a HeLa-cell-free system. Only MMTV, HIV-1 and HIV-2 proteases were able to cleave PABP in the absence of other viral proteins. Purified HIV-1 and HIV-2 proteases cleave PABP1 directly at positions 237 and 477, separating the two first RNA-recognition motifs from the C-terminal domain of PABP. An additional cleavage site located at position 410 was detected for
HIV-2 protease
. These findings indicate that some retroviruses may share with picornaviruses and caliciviruses the capacity to proteolyse PABP.
...
PMID:HIV protease cleaves poly(A)-binding protein. 1670 65
Human T-cell
leukemia
virus type-1 (HTLV-1) is associated with a number of human diseases. Although the mechanism by which the virus causes diseases is still not known, studies indicate that viral replication is critical for the development of HTLV-1 associated myelopathy, and initial studies suggested that blocking replication with reverse transcriptase inhibitors had a therapeutic effect. Therefore, based on the success of
HIV-1 protease
inhibitors, the HTLV-1 protease is also a potential target for chemotherapy. Furthermore, mutated residues in
HIV-1 protease
that confer drug resistance are frequently seen in equivalent positions of other retroviral proteases, like HTLV-1 protease. Therefore, comparison of HTLV-1 and HIV-1 proteases is expected to aid the rational design of broad spectrum inhibitors effective against various retroviral proteases, including the mutant HIV-1 enzymes appearing in drug resistance. This review describes the characteristics of HTLV-1 protease, makes comparison with
HIV-1 protease
, and discusses the status of inhibitor development for the HTLV-1 protease.
...
PMID:The protease of human T-cell leukemia virus type-1 is a potential therapeutic target. 1750 36
The causative agent behind adult T-cell
leukemia
and tropical spastic paraparesis/HTLV-I-associated myelopathy is the human T-cell
leukemia
virus type 1 (HTLV-I). Tetrapeptidic HTLV-I protease inhibitors were designed on a previously reported potent inhibitor KNI-10516, with modifications at the P(3)-cap moieties. All the inhibitors showed high
HIV-1 protease
inhibitory activity (over 98% inhibition at 50nM) and most exhibited highly potent inhibition against HTLV-I protease (IC(50) values were less than 100nM).
...
PMID:Synthesis and activity of tetrapeptidic HTLV-I protease inhibitors possessing different P3-cap moieties. 1840 May 2
Adult T-cell leukemia and tropical spastic paraparesis/HTLV-I-associated myelopathy are only some of the more common end results of an infection with a human T-cell
leukemia
virus type 1 (HTLV-I). Expanding from our previous reports, we synthesized all different permutations of tetrapeptidic HTLV-I protease inhibitors using at least eight P(3)-cap and five P(1)(')-cap moieties. The inhibitors exhibited over 97% inhibition against
HIV-1 protease
and a wide range of inhibitory activity against HTLV-I protease.
...
PMID:Locking the two ends of tetrapeptidic HTLV-I protease inhibitors inside the enzyme. 1855 91
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