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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Tryptic peptide maps from more than 50 isolates of murine
leukemia
virus (MuLV) have shown that, in general, the structure of
core protein
p30 is highly conserved. However, a structurally variable region of p30 has been identified that is functionally associated with Fv-1 tropism. On the basis of this structural variability, MuLV strains can be classified as B-tropic, N-tropic, xenotropic, and/or as being derived from wild mice. Certain xenotropic viruses have a p30 like that of B-tropic MuLV and presumably would be subject to restriction in cells containing an Fv-In allele. Other p30 structural markers serve to distinguish the exogenous Friend, Moloney, and Rauscher viruses from endogenous MuLV. Furthermore, some MuLV strains have structural differences in their p30s that are useful as strain-specific markers. Finally, a possible sarcoma-associated alteration in the structure of p30 has been noted in the ml clone of Moloney murine sarcoma virus.
...
PMID:Structural markers on core protein p30 of murine leukemia virus: functional correlation with Fv-1 tropism. 21 38
Methods for the purification of both murine mammary tumor (type B) and murine
leukemia
(type C) oncornaviral phosphoproteins are described, in which chromatography on alkyl-agarose derivatives is used as the primary fractionation step. Gel filtration or ion exchange chromatography on phosphocellulose was the only subsequent step required for the purification of the type B and type C viral proteins, respectively. The two-step protocols also resulted in the co-purification of a low molecular weight
core protein
from each virus. Recoveries of the viral proteins purified by this method, based on per cent contribution of individual polypeptides to total virion proteins, were 70% or greater. Radioimmunocompetition analysis of the purified murine mammary tumor virus major
core protein
as well as analysis of the RNA binding properties of purified low molecular weight type C virus proteins suggests that neither antigenic reactivity nor specific RNA binding characteristics are altered by the purification protocols. The availability of these procedures should aid studies on the possible function and immunochemical properties of the native murine oncornaviral phosphoproteins and may also be extended to the purification of other oncornaviral proteins.
...
PMID:Purification of murine oncornaviral phosphoproteins using alkyl agarose derivatives.. 22 Feb 61
Cells infected with a temperature-sensitive mutant (ts-26) of Rauscher murine
leukemia
virus (R-MuLV) or with wild-type virus were labeled with 35S-methionine, and cell extracts were examined for radioactive polypeptides which could be precipitated by monospecific antisera to viral proteins. When shifted from permissive (31 degrees C) to nonpermissive (39 degrees C) temperature, cells infected with ts-26 rapidly begin to accumulate gPr90enr, the glycoprotein precursor to the membrane envelope glycoprotein gp70 and to the membrane-associated protein p15E. Simultaneously, formation of these mature virion proteins ceases. In addition, lactoperoxidase-catalyzed surface labeling with 125I--iodine indicates that the plasma membrane of cells infected with ts-26 becomes depleted of gp70 antigens at 39 degrees C. Nevertheless, at 39 degrees C these cells release defective MuLVs which lack gp70 and p15E but contain an outer membrane. The released particles also contain an aberrantly processed form of the major virion
core protein
p30, and many of these virion cores have an unusual immature crescent shape. It has previously been reported that cells infected with the ts-26 mutant of R-MuLV process a 65,000 dalton precursor (Pr65gag) of the virion core proteins more slowly at 39 degrees C than do cells infected with wild-type virus (Stephenson, Tronick and Aaronson, 1975). Although we have confirmed these results, this effect is relatively small and it is known that various alterations of MuLV assembly can lead secondarily to inhibited processing of Pr65gag. We propose that the ts-26 mutant has a primary temperature-sensitive defect in membrane glycoprotein synthesis and that this change causes pleiotropic effects on core morphogenesis.
...
PMID:A murine leukemia virus mutant with a temperature-sensitive defect in membrane glycoprotein synthesis. 42 Dec 71
Feline
leukemia
viruses (FeLVs) belonging to interference subgroup C induce fatal anemia resembling human pure red cell aplasia (PRCA). Subgroup A FeLVs, although closely related genetically to FeLVs of subgroup C, do not induce PRCA. The determinants for PRCA induction by a molecularly cloned prototype subgroup C virus (FeLV-Sarma-C [FSC]) have been localized to the N-terminal 241 amino acids of the surface glycoprotein (SU) gp70. To investigate whether the anemogenic activity of FSC reflects a unique capacity to infect erythroid progenitor cells, we used correlative immunogold, immunofluorescence, and cytological staining to study prospectively the hemopoietic cell populations infected by either FSC or FeLV-FAIDS-61E-A (F6A), a prototype of subgroup A virus. The results demonstrated that although only FSC-infected animals developed erythrocyte aplasia, the env SU and the major
core protein
(p27) were expressed in a surprisingly large fraction of the lymphoid, erythroid, and myeloid lineage marrow cells in both FSC- and F6A-infected cats. Between days 8 and 17 postinoculation, gp70 and p27 were detected in 43 to 73% of erythroid, 25 to 75% of lymphoid, and 35 to 50% of myeloid lineage cells, regardless of whether the cats were infected with FSC or F6A. Thus, anemogenic subgroup C and nonanemogenic subgroup A FeLVs have similar hemopoietic cell tropism and infection kinetics, despite their divergent effects on erythroid progenitor cell function. Acute anemia induction by subgroup C FeLV, therefore, does not reflect a unique tropism for marrow erythroid cells but rather indicates a unique cytopathic effect of the SU on erythroid progenitor cells.
...
PMID:Hematopoietic target cells of anemogenic subgroup C versus nonanemogenic subgroup A feline leukemia virus. 132 10
Feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) has morphological, physical and biochemical characteristics similar to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the cause of AIDS in man. However, it is antigenically and genetically distinct from HIV; an antigenic relatedness with equine infectious anaemia virus has been demonstrated. FIV has been molecularly cloned and sequenced. Diagnostic tests are commercially available and attempts at preparing inactivated, subunit and molecularly engineered vaccines are being made in different laboratories. During FIV infection a transient primary illness can be recognized, with fever, neutropenia and lymphadenopathy. After a long period of clinical normalcy a secondary stage is distinguished with signs of an immunodeficiency-like syndrome. The incubation period for this stage can be as long as 5 years, during which gradual impairment of immune function develops. Many FIV-infected cats are presented for the first time showing vague signs of illness: recurrent fevers, emaciation, lack of appetite, lymphadenopathy, anaemia, leucopenia and behavioural changes. Later, the predominant clinical signs observed are chronic stomatitis/gingivitis, enteritis, upper respiratory tract infections, and infections of the skin. Neoplasias, neurological, immunological and haematological disorder are seen in a smaller proportion. The immunodeficiency-like syndrome is progressive over a period of months to years. Concomitant infection with feline
leukaemia
virus has been shown to accelerate the progression of disease. In vitro, phenotypic mixing between FIV and an endogenous feline oncovirus (RD114) has been demonstrated which leads to a broadening of the cell spectrum of the lentivirus. Bovine immunodeficiency virus (BIV) has been isolated only once, and all attempts to obtain additional isolates have failed; it has been recovered from the leucocytes of cattle with persistent lymphocytosis, lymphadenopathy, lesions in the central nervous system, progressive weakness and emaciation. As with the feline representative, BIV also was found to possess a lentivirus morphology and to encode a reverse transcriptase with Mg++ preference; it replicates and induces syncytia in a variety of embryonic bovine tissues in vitro. Antigenic analyses have demonstrated a conservation of epitopes between the major
core protein
of BIV and HIV. The original isolate has been molecularly cloned and sequenced. Besides the three large open reading frames (ORFs) comprising the gag, pol, and env genes common to all replication-competent retroviruses, five additional small ORFs were found. Numerous point mutations and deletions were found, mostly in the env-encoding ORF. These data suggest that, within a single virus isolate, BIV displays extensive genomic variation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Animal immunodeficiency viruses. 133 43
The human lymphotropic retrovirus type I (HTLV-I) has been recently associated with neurological diseases. Antibodies against HTLV-I were found in the sera and in the CSF of patients affected by Tropic Spastic Paraparesis (TSP), diffused in tropical areas such as Caraibi, south America, Seychelles. A similar clinical pattern was found in Japan and was named Human myelopathy (HAM). The virus was isolated from mononuclear cells either of the peripheral blood, and of the CSF. Molecular studies have shown that the "neurotropic" HTLV-I is similar to that associated to T cell
leukemia
. In vitro studies have shown that tumoral and fetal astroglial cells are susceptible to HTLV-I entry. Actually after 7 days, cells exposed to HTLV-I showed the virus
core protein
p19 together with an high expression of class II antigens and a disorganization of the GFAP. Multiple sclerosis (MS) has also been associated with HTLV-I infection, on the basis of finding antibodies against HTLV-I in the sera and in the CSF of some patients. However the presence of HTLV-I genome detected by PCR analysis within mononuclear cells from peripheral blood lymphocytes of MS patients is still a controversial question. The aim of the present review is to critically analyze the role of a lymphotropic retrovirus in demyelinating diseases.
...
PMID:HTLV-I in neurological diseases. 134 39
Moloney Murine
Leukemia
Virus (MoMuLV) causes T cell neoplasms in rodents but is not known to be a pathogen in primates. The
core protein
and enzyme genes of the MoMuLV genome together with an amphotropic envelope gene are utilized to engineer the cell lines that generate retroviral vectors for use in current human gene therapy applications. We developed a producer clone that generates a very high concentration of retroviral vector particles to optimize conditions for gene insertion into pluripotent hematopoietic stem cells. This producer cell line also generates a much lower concentration of replication-competent virus that arose through recombination. Stem cells from rhesus monkeys were purified by immunoselection with an anti-CD34 antibody, incubated in vitro for 80-86 h in the presence of retroviral vector particles with accompanying replication-competent virus and used to reconstitute recipients whose bone marrow had been ablated by total body irradiation. The retroviral vector genome was detected in circulating cells of five of eight transplant recipients of CD34+ cells and in the circulating cells of two recipients of infected, unfractionated bone marrow mononuclear cells. Three recipients of CD34+ cells had a productive infection with replication-competent virus. Six or seven mo after transplantation, each of these animals developed a rapidly progressive T cell neoplasm involving the thymus, lymph nodes, liver, spleen, and bone marrow. Lymphoma cells contained 10-50 copies of the replication-competent virus, but lacked the retroviral vector genome. We conclude that replication-competent viruses arising from producer cells making retroviral vectors can be pathogenic in primates, which underscores the importance of carefully screening retroviral producer clones used in human trials to exclude contamination with replication-competent virus.
...
PMID:Helper virus induced T cell lymphoma in nonhuman primates after retroviral mediated gene transfer. 138 75
High sequence variability in the envelope gene of human immunodeficiency virus has provoked interest in nonenvelope antigens as potential immunogens against retrovirus infection. However, the role of
core protein
antigens encoded by the gag gene in protective immunity against retroviruses is unclear. By using recombinant vaccinia viruses expressing the Friend murine
leukemia
helper virus (F-MuLV) gag gene, we could prime CD4+ T-helper cells and protectively immunize susceptible strains of mice against Friend retrovirus infection. Recovery from leukemic splenomegaly developed more slowly after immunization with vaccinia virus-F-MuLV gag than with vaccinia virus-F-MuLV env; however, genetic nonresponders to the envelope protein could be partially protected with Gag vaccines. Class switching of F-MuLV-neutralizing antibodies from immunoglobulin M to immunoglobulin G after challenge with Friend virus complex was facilitated in mice immunized with the Gag antigen. Sequential deletion of the gag gene revealed that the major protective epitope was located on the N-terminal hydrophobic protein p15.
...
PMID:Protection against Friend retrovirus-induced leukemia by recombinant vaccinia viruses expressing the gag gene. 153 53
The knowledge about the differentiation of basophilic leukocytes is fragmentary. This report discusses a detailed phenotypic characterization of molecular markers for hematopoietic differentiation in a basophilic
leukemia
cell line, KU812. The expression of markers for lymphoid, erythroid, neutrophil, eosinophil, monocytic, megakaryocytic, mast cell and basophil differentiation was analyzed at the mRNA level by Northern blots in the KU812 cells, and for reference, in a panel of human cell lines representative of the different hematopoietic differentiation lineages. KU812 was found to express a number of mast cell and basophil-related proteins, i.e. mast cell tryptase, mast cell carboxypeptidase A, high-affinity immunoglobulin (IgE) receptor alpha and gamma chains and the
core protein
for heparin and chondroitin sulphate synthesis. We found no expression of a number of monocyte/-macrophage or neutrophil leukocyte markers except for lysozyme. From earlier studies, it has been shown that lysozyme is not expressed in murine mucosal mast cell lines. This finding, together with the expression of the mast cell carboxypeptidase in KU812 might distinguish the phenotype of this cell line from that typical of mucosal mast cell lines in rodents. We found a low level of expression of the eosinophil and basophil marker, major basic protein, which might indicate a relationship between basophils and eosinophils. No expression is, however, detected with the eosinophil-specific markers eosinophil cationic protein, eosinophil-derived neurotoxin or eosinophil peroxidase. We also report an extensive screening for inducers of basophilic differentiation of the KU812 cells. The most efficient protocol of induction included serum starvation which led to a dramatic increase in a number of markers specific for mast cells and basophils such as tryptase, carboxypeptidase A and the heparin
core protein
. Finally, diisopropylfluorophosphate analysis of total protein extracts from KU812 show four labeled protein bands with sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, indicating that this cell line expresses at least three previously undescribed serine proteases of which one or more could be a potential basophil-specific marker(s).
...
PMID:Phenotypic characterization of KU812, a cell line identified as an immature human basophilic leukocyte. 163 3
The main
core protein
and segments of envelope proteins of bovine
leukaemia
virus fused to MS2 polymerase were expressed in E. coli. The synthesis rate varied between 3 and 25% of the total cellular proteins. BLV-MS2 polymerase fusion proteins were detected immunologically using rabbit anti-BLV sera, monoclonal antibodies and a serum of a BLV-infected cow.
...
PMID:Expression of bovine leukaemia virus antigens fused to MS2 polymerase in E. coli. 168 64
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