Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (leukemia)
93,477 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The human retroviruses human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and human T-cell leukemia virus type I (HTLV-I) are characterized by complex regulation of gene expression. Each virus encodes a posttranscriptional regulator, the 19-kDa HIV-1 Rev protein and the 27-kDa HTLV-I Rex protein, which is required for viral replication. Expression of these trans activators results in the cytoplasmic accumulation of unspliced or singly spliced viral mRNA which encode the gag, pol, and env gene products. The finding that the HTLV-I Rex protein is able to functionally substitute for the Rev protein of HIV-1 indicates that HIV-1 Rev and HTLV-I Rex may interact with the same component of a cellular pathway involved in either mRNA splicing or transport. In this study, we have generated functional Rev/Rex hybrid proteins by domain exchange. We have defined, using in vivo and in vitro analyses, the activation domains of Rev and Rex which are the putative targets of a common host cell factor(s) required for Rev and Rex function.
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PMID:Definition of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Rev and human T-cell leukemia virus type I Rex protein activation domain by functional exchange. 154 84

Using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), proviral DNA sequences of the pol and env regions of human T-cell leukemia virus type I (HTLV-I) were directly amplified in paraffin-embedded and frozen tissue sections of active inflammatory central nervous system (CNS) lesions in three autopsy cases of HTLV-I-associated myelopathy (HAM) with serological confirmation. In parallel, the enumeration of UCHL-1 (monoclonal antibody reactive to T-cells) positive cells in the tissue sections subjected to PCR were carried out. Although the control DNA sequence of parathyroid hormone-like peptide gene was definitely amplified, no signals for HTLV-I proviral sequences were detected in these specimens. The number of UCHL-1 positive cell nuclei was almost on the border line of our PCR sensitivity in formalin-fixed tissue, which was estimated to be 20-200 copies. Therefore, it is unlikely that the central nervous system tissue damage in HAM/TSP is a consequence of productive infection of HTLV-I in the CNS tissue.
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PMID:Search for human T-cell leukemia virus type I (HTLV-I) proviral sequences by polymerase chain reaction in the central nervous system tissue of HTLV-I-associated myelopathy. 157 Oct 19

Several laboratories have shown that AZT-resistant variants of HIV-1 can be isolated from patients who have received prolonged therapy with this drug. Our laboratory has now been able to generate HIV-1 variants resistant to both AZT and ddI, in tissue culture, by using step-wise increases in the concentrations of each of these compounds over a 10-week period. This work has been performed by culturing wild-type clinical strains of HIV-1 as well as the HIV-3b laboratory strain of this virus under such conditions. The ID50 values obtained for the resistant viruses thus generated vary between 50-100 times above those of the parental wild-type strains in each case. Furthermore, we have identified several new mutation sites in the HIV-1 pol gene that are responsible for the observed resistance to AZT and ddI. We have not succeeded, however, in generating drug-resistant strains of HIV-1, under conditions in which several compounds or anti-viral agents were simultaneously present during the in vitro selection process. Combinations of drugs which failed to yield drug-resistant variants included AZT plus ddI, AZT plus alpha-interferon, and ddI plus alpha-interferon. These findings indicate that HIV drug resistance is less likely to occur in tissue culture when combinations of drugs are used, and provide rationale for the development of combination clinical trials for treatment of HIV-associated disease.
Leukemia 1992
PMID:Generation of nucleoside-resistant variants of HIV-1 by in vitro selection in the presence of AZT or DDI but no by combinations. 160 23

Sera and DNA samples, including cord blood, were examined from six members of a three-generation family suspected of being carriers of HTLV-I. Serum antibodies to HTLV-I were detected by Western blot analysis more clearly in adults than in children. DNA sequences related to HTLV-I-gag and -tax, but not -pol genes were detected more clearly in specific PCR products of DNA of adults than those of children, and of the cord blood by Southern hybridization analysis. HTLV-I-related DNA sequences were also detected in some HTLV-I-seropositive as well as seronegative patients with T-cell dyscrasia and with other diseases, including carcinoma. Frequencies of chromosome abnormalities were found to be significantly higher in lymphocytes of HTLV-I-seropositive persons than in those of HTLV-I-seronegative persons. Immortalization of cultured lymphocytes following infection with HTLV-I was found to be accompanied by chromosome and gene rearrangements. Transformation of these cells following treatment with carcinogens was found to be accompanied by additional chromosome rearrangements. These results suggest that some persons may be born with HTLV-I-related sequences that are repressed in childhood. Repeated expression of their products may result not only in the host antibody response but also in increased chromosomal instability and in increased risk for further genetic changes of carrier cells when exposed to environmental carcinogens.
Leukemia 1992
PMID:Human T-cell leukemia virus type I as agent inducing genetic changes in infected human lymphocytes. 160 28

The pol gene of murine leukemia virus and other mammalian type C retroviruses is expressed by read-through suppression of an in-frame UAG codon which separates the gag and pol coding regions. In this study, we have analyzed the sequence requirements for read-through suppression by placing different portions of wild-type and mutant viral sequences from the gag-pol junction between reporter genes and testing transcripts of these constructs for suppression in reticulocyte lysates. We find that the read-through signal is contained within the first 57 nucleotides on the 3' side of the UAG codon. Our results indicate that the identities of six conserved bases in the eight-nucleotide, purine-rich sequence immediately downstream of the UAG codon are critical for suppression, as is the existence of a pseudoknot structure spanning the next 49 nucleotides. Thus, read-through suppression depends on a complex, bipartite signal in the mRNA.
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PMID:Bipartite signal for read-through suppression in murine leukemia virus mRNA: an eight-nucleotide purine-rich sequence immediately downstream of the gag termination codon followed by an RNA pseudoknot. 162 68

We constructed an infectious molecular clone of simian immunodeficiency virus from an African mandrill (SIVMND). Upon transfection, this clone directed the production of progeny virus particles infectious to and cytopathic for CD4+ human leukemia cells. Thirteen frameshift proviral mutants with an alteration in the eight open reading frames of SIVMND were generated by recombinant DNA techniques, and were analyzed biologically and biochemically. While mutations in the structural genes gag, pol, and env abolished viral growth and induction of cytopathology, mutants of the vif, vpr, and nef genes were fully biologically active. Of the tat and rev mutants, only one rev mutant grew in CD4+ cells with delayed kinetics. In reporter-based transient expression systems, transactivation potentials of the tat and rev mutants were evaluated. A mutant lacking 2nd coding exon of tat gene exhibited tat activity similar to that of the wild type clone. The infectious rev mutant was partially defective for rev gene activity.
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PMID:Genetic characterization of simian immunodeficiency virus isolated from an African mandrill. 164 47

An important question in feline leukemia virus (FeLV) pathogenesis is whether, as in murine leukemia virus infection, homologous recombination between the infecting FeLV and the noninfectious endogenous FeLV-like proviruses serves as a significant base for the generation of proximal pathogens. To begin an analysis of this issue, several recombinant FeLVs were produced by using two different approaches: (i) the regions of the viral envelope (env) gene of a cloned FeLV (subgroup B virus [FeLV-B], Gardner-Arnstein strain) and those of two different endogenous proviral loci were exchanged to create specific FeLV chimeras, and (ii) vectors containing endogenous env and molecularly cloned infectious FeLV-C (Sarma strain) DNA sequences were coexpressed by transfection in nonfeline cells to facilitate recombination. The results of these combined approaches showed that up to three-fourths of the envelope glycoprotein (gp70), beginning from the N-terminal end, could be replaced by endogenous FeLV sequences to produce biologically active chimeric FeLVs. The in vitro replication efficiency or cell tropism of the recombinants appeared to be influenced by the amount of gp70 sequences replaced by the endogenous partner as well as by the locus of origin of the endogenous sequences. Additionally, a characteristic biological effect, aggregation of feline T-lymphoma cells (3201B cell line), was found to be specifically induced by replicating FeLV-C or FeLV-C-based recombinants. Multiple crossover sites in the gp70 protein selected under the conditions used for coexpression were identified. The results of induced coexpression were also supported by rapid generation of FeLV recombinants when FeLV-C was used to infect the feline 3201B cell line that constitutively expresses high levels of endogenous FeLV-specific mRNAs. Furthermore, a large, highly conserved open reading frame in the pol gene of an endogenous FeLV provirus was identified. This observation, particularly in reference to our earlier finding of extensive mutations in the gag gene, reveals a target area for potentially productive homologous recombination upstream of the functional endogenous env gene.
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PMID:Recombination between feline leukemia virus subgroup B or C and endogenous env elements alters the in vitro biological activities of the viruses. 131 96

RNA pseudoknot structural motifs could have implications for a wide range of biological processes of RNAs. In this study, the potential RNA pseudoknots just downstream from the known and suspected retroviral frame-shift sites were predicted in the Rous sarcoma virus, primate immunodeficiency viruses (HIV-1, HIV-2, and SIV), equine infectious anemia virus, visna virus, bovine leukemia virus, human T-cell leukemia virus (types I and II), mouse mammary tumor virus, Mason-Pfizer monkey virus, and simian SRV-1 type-D retrovirus. Also, the putative RNA pseudoknots were detected in the gag-pol overlaps of two retrotransposons of Drosophila, 17.6 and gypsy, and the mouse intracisternal A particle. For each sequence, the thermodynamic stability and statistical significance of the secondary structure involved in the predicted tertiary structure were assessed and compared. Our results show that the stem-loop structures in the pseudoknots are both thermodynamically highly stable and statistically significant relative to other such configurations that potentially occur in the gag-pol or gag-pro and pro-pol junction domains of these viruses (300 nucleotides upstream and downstream from the possible frameshift sites are included). Moreover, the structural features of the predicted pseudoknots following the frameshift site of pro-pol overlaps of the HTLV-1 and HTLV-2 retroviruses are structurally well conserved. The occurrence of eight compensatory base changes in the tertiary interaction of the two related sequences allow the conservation of their tertiary structures in spite of the sequence divergence. The results support the possible control mechanism for frameshifting proposed by Brierley et al. and Jacks et al.
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PMID:RNA pseudoknots downstream of the frameshift sites of retroviruses. 166 82

The presence of budding C-type and intracytoplasmic A-type particles in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells is well documented. However, extensive screening has failed to detect any evidence of infectivity. To investigate the origin and expression of these particles, retrovirus-like sequences which are actively transcribed in CHO cells have been cloned and characterized. Two families of sequences related to intracisternal A-particle (IAP) genomes of mice and Syrian hamsters were identified in cytoplasmic RNA from CHO cells (CHO IAP family I and family II). None of the four clones which were sequenced exhibited intact gag, pol, or env open reading frames. Only IAP family II sequences were present in purified extracellular particles of CHO cells. Several cDNA sequences related to mammalian C-type retrovirus genomes were isolated and cloned from gradient-purified, extracellular particles of recombinant CHO cells. All were homologous to the conserved endonuclease domain of murine leukemia virus. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the largest cDNA revealed multiple interruptions of the endonuclease encoding reading frame providing one possible explanation for the non-infectious nature of the particles observed in CHO cells. Both types of retrovirus-like sequences identified in purified extracellular particles of CHO cells (CHO IAP family II and C-type) were present as conserved, moderately repetitive sequences in DNA of all CHO cell lines examined, as well as in DNA from a Chinese hamster liver. It is therefore likely that the extracellular retrovirus-like particles of CHO cells are the products of endogenous provirus elements present in the germline of Chinese hamsters.
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PMID:Defective endogenous retrovirus-like sequences and particles of Chinese hamster ovary cells. 166 59

S-Antigen (S-Ag) is a well characterized 45,000 m.w. photoreceptor cell protein. When injected into susceptible animal species, including primates, it induces an experimental autoimmune uveitis, a predominantly T cell-mediated autoimmune disease of the retina and uveal tract of the eye, and of the pineal gland. In this study we found an amino acid sequence homology between a uveitopathogenic site of S-Ag, several viral proteins and one additional nonviral protein. An experimental autoimmune uveitis and pinealitis was induced in Lewis rats with these different synthetic peptides, corresponding to the amino sequence of hepatitis B virus DNA polymerase, gag-pol polyprotein of Baboon endogenous virus and gag-pol polyprotein of AKV murine leukemia virus and potato proteinase inhibitor IIa, which contain three or more consecutive amino acids identical to peptide M in S-Ag. Lymph node cells from rats immunized with either peptide M or the different synthetic peptides showed a significant degree of cross-reaction. Mononuclear cells from monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) immunized with peptide M also showed significant proliferation when incubated with either peptide M or synthetic peptides as measured by in vitro lymphocyte mitogenesis assay using [3H]TdR. Based on our findings we conclude that a viral infection may sensitize the mononuclear cells that can cross-react with self proteins by a mechanism termed molecular mimicry. Tissue injury from the resultant autoantigenic event can take place in the absence of the infectious virus that initiated the immune response.
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PMID:Molecular mimicry between a uveitopathogenic site of S-antigen and viral peptides. Induction of experimental autoimmune uveitis in Lewis rats. 168 49


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