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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The absence of erythrocytic adenosine deaminase (ADA) or purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) has been associated with severe
immunodeficiency
disease in children. We have developed a cell culture model to study the possible relationships between purine salvage enzymes and immunologic function using an established T cell lymphosarcoma (S49) and a potent inhibitor of ADA, erythro-9(2-hydroxy-3-nonyl) adenine (EHNA). Wild-type S49 cells are killed by dexamethasone or dbc AMP, and adenosine (5 muM) in the presence of an ADA inhibitor (6 muM EHNA) also prevents the growth of and kills these S49 cells. It has been proposed that adenosine is toxic to lymphoid cells by virtue of its ability to increase the intracellular concentrations of cyclic AMP. We examined the sensitivity of three mutants of S49 cells, with distinctive defects in some component of cyclic AMP metabolism or action, to killing by adenosine and EHNA. All three mutants are resistant to killing by isoproterenol or cholera toxin and two are resistant to dbc AMP itself, but all are sensitive to killing by adenosine and EHNA. Similarly, two dexamethasone-resistant S49 mutants are as sensitive to adenosine and EHNA as are the wildtype cells. We have also simulated the purine nucleoside phosphorylase deficiency in S49 cells by adding inosine and adenosine to the growth medium. In the presence of EHNA or inosine, the toxic effects of adenosine can be partially reversed by addition of (10-20 muM) uridine, an observation suggesting that adenosine is toxic as the result of its inducing pyrimidine
starvation
.
...
PMID:Characterization of a cell culture model for the study of adenosine deaminase- and purine nucleoside phosphorylase-deficient immunologic disease. 18 61
The human colonic adenocarcinoma cell line HT29 can be infected with various isolates of human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1) and type 2 (HIV-2). In some cases, the virus was able to perform its complete cycle of replication as demonstrated by the persistent production of mature viral particles in the cell-free culture supernatant. We have cultured HT29 cells chronically infected with the replicative strain HIV1-NDK in a chemically defined serum-free medium. Under these conditions, the cells were able to maintain a high level of viral replication, as demonstrated by reverse transcriptase activities and in situ hybridization studies. By indirect immunofluorescence labeling and electron microscopy, we observed that serum
starvation
was associated with the differentiation of HIV-1-infected HT29 cells into mucous-secreting cells resembling epithelial goblet cells of the colonic mucosa. These mucous-secreting cells, which accounted for 50% of the overall population, produced mature particles of HIV through their apical membrane in the vicinity of mucous granules. These data suggest that HIV-infected goblet cells in the colonic mucosa may produce the virus in the colorectal lumen; this could explain the route of transmission of HIV in the case of anal intercourse.
...
PMID:Replication and apical budding of HIV-1 in mucous-secreting colonic epithelial cells. 128 Jun 83
1. In eight clinically stable symptomatic human-
immunodeficiency
-virus-infected patients and in seven healthy control subjects, glucose and fat metabolism were studied, using indirect calorimetry and primed continuous infusions of [3-3H]glucose and [14C]palmitate. 2. Studies were performed in the post-absorptive state (16 h of overnight fasting) and again after 22 h of overnight fasting. 3. In the post-absorptive state, net fat oxidation and triacylglycerol ('triglyceride') concentrations were significantly higher in the patients, but concentrations and turnover of free fatty acids were not significantly different between patients and control subjects. After 22 h of overnight fasting, free fatty acid turnover in the patients rose to significantly higher levels when compared with the control subjects. 4. Post-absorptive glucose oxidation, glucose turnover and glucose clearance did not differ between patients and control subjects. Although fasting induced a significantly greater decline in glucose turnover in the patients, plasma glucose concentrations decreased comparably in patients and control subjects. 5. No differences were found in plasma concentrations of insulin or of the counter-regulatory hormones between patients and control subjects. 6. It is concluded that the metabolic adaptation to short-term
starvation
in clinically stable human-immuno-deficiency-virus-infected patients differs from that in healthy control subjects. Short-term
starvation
results in a significantly greater fall in glucose turnover, whereas fat metabolism is clearly stimulated. These alterations cannot be explained by differences in the concentrations of insulin or of the counter-regulatory hormones.
...
PMID:Basal fuel homoeostasis in symptomatic human immunodeficiency virus infection. 185 Oct 73
The objective of this study was to investigate protein and glucose metabolism in ambulatory, asymptomatic acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients. Nine asymptomatic AIDS patients were compared against 13 controls. We measured whole-body protein synthesis (PSRM), breakdown (PBRM), and the fractional fibrinogen synthesis rate with 15N glycine, glucose cycling from the difference between the glucose appearance rates as measured with 2-d (Ra2-d)- and 6,6-d2 (Ra6,6-d)-labeled glucose. All of these parameters are increased with hypermetabolism and decreased with undernutrition. In addition, we also determined the plasma aminogram. The principal findings were (1) whole-body protein synthesis and breakdown and the fibrinogen fractional synthesis rate were significantly lower in the AIDS patients; (2) glucose cycling was markedly lower in the AIDS patients, and most of this effect was due to a decrease in Ra2-d; there was no difference in the endogenous glucose production rate, Ra6,6d; and (3) the plasma aminogram showed decreased total amino acids and a reduced ratio of essential to nonessential amino acids in the AIDS group. We concluded that the AIDS patients showed a
starvation
-type response. While the depressed protein synthesis and energy substrate cycling are not likely to be the primary cause of
immunodeficiency
, they may represent an important facilitating factors contributing to the decreased ability of the patient to respond effectively to opportunistic infections.
...
PMID:Protein and energy substrate metabolism in AIDS patients. 237 82
To date, the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) has been identified in over 50 children in the US, including those with associated hemophilia, high-risk environmental factors (Haitian background, parental intravenous drug abuse, or prostitution), and blood transfusions. The evaluation of an infant or young child in whom AIDS is suspected requires exclusion of congenital disorders of immune function. A specific test is not currently available, but inclusion criteria for childhood AIDS have been developed. The diseases accepted as indicative of underlying cellular
immunodeficiency
children are the same as those used in defining AIDS in adults, with the exclusion of congenital infections such as toxoplasmosis or herpes simplex virus infection in the 1st month of life or cytomegalovirus infection in the 1st 6 months of life. Specific conditions that must be excluded in children are primary
immunodeficiency
diseases (e.g., DiGeorge syndrome, Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, ataxia-telangiectasia, neutrophil function abnormality) and secondary immuno-deficiency associated with immunosuppressive therapy, lymphoreticular malignancy, or
starvation
. Almost all young children with AIDS have hepatosplenomegaly, interstitial pneumonitis, and poor growth. The average age of 36 US child AIDS victims studied in detail was 5 months at presentation with findings suggestive of severe
immunodeficiency
. Mucocutaneous candidiasis was present in 75% of these 36 children, and Pneumocystis carinii and cytomegalovirus were each isolated from 30% of cases. Normal T4:T8 ratios occur in about 15% of pediatric AIDS cases. Laboratory evidence of polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia generally supports the AIDS diagnosis. Recurrent infection and malnutrition are major problems in the clinical management of child AIDS patients.
...
PMID:Acquired immune deficiency syndrome in childhood. 298 8
The effects of short-term acute nutritional deprivation and refeeding on immune function was investigated in rats. Animals previously sensitized to keyhole-limpet hemocyanin were starved for 72 hours and refed for 7 days. Recall skin testing with keyhole-limpet hemocyanin and immunization with tetanus toxoid (TT) were used to assess delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) and humoral immune responses. DTH was maximally depressed late, after refeeding had begun. Anti-TT responses were depressed early during
starvation
. Neither DTH nor anti-TT responses had returned to normal after a period of refeeding sufficient to restore weight. The data indicate that short-term acute nutritional deprivation may contribute to acquired
immunodeficiency
in patients undergoing surgery.
...
PMID:Malnutrition and humoral immunity: short-term acute nutritional deprivation. 404 48
Immunomodulating properties of the bioginseng preparations (Panax ginseng), isolated from the cell culture of ginseng calluses, were studied in model experiments of acquired
immunodeficiency
developed as a result of long-term protein
starvation
or after vinblastin administration. The following preparations were studied: 1) preparation obtained by means of the cell culture cryoconcentration, 2) ethanol extract of the cell culture, 3) high-molecular protein containing fraction of the bioginseng I. Under conditions of acquired
immunodeficiency
all the preparations studied were shown to increase the content of antibody producing cells developed in response to sheep erythrocytes administration, while the highest effect exhibited the bioginseng preparation III. These data suggest that proteins are of great importance in the immunomodulating effects of bioginseng preparations.
...
PMID:[The role of proteins in the immunomodulating effect of bioginseng products]. 777 Oct 86
Rat pheochromocytoma PC12 cells were permanently transfected with a plasmid vector, containing the tat gene of human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1). Various clones were obtained showing the production of different levels of bioactive Tat protein (Tat) after transient cotransfection with an HIV-1 long terminal repeat-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter plasmid. Under conditions of serum
starvation
, tat-positive PC12 clones expressing high levels of Tat showed a significantly (P < 0.05) higher proliferation rate with respect to both mock-transfected PC12 cells and tat-positive PC12 cells expressing lower levels of Tat. Moreover, all tat-positive PC12 cell clones showed a partial morphological differentiation into sympathetic-like neurons, when seeded in low density (5 x 10(3) cells/cm2) cultures. On the other hand, mock-transfected PC12 cells showed the round shaped morphology typical of untreated PC12 cells and displayed signs of neuronal differentiation only after treatment with 100 ng/ml of nerve growth factor. The addition of 5 micrograms/ml of anti-Tat monoclonal antibody to the culture medium of tat-positive PC12 cell clones almost completely blocked their increased proliferation rate (P < 0.05), but did not affect neuronal differentiation. A significant (P < 0.05) increase in cell proliferation was consistently observed in PC12 cells supplemented with low concentrations of Tat (5 to 25 ng/ml), whereas neuronal differentiation was hardly affected by exogenous Tat. Our data strongly suggest that Tat exerts a complex influence on the proliferation and differentiation of PC12 cells, and this might help in increasing understanding of the pathogenesis of the frequent neurological disorders observed in AIDS patients.
...
PMID:Influence of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Tat protein on the proliferation and differentiation of PC12 rat pheochromocytoma cells. 827 65
We test the hypothesis that human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV)-related weight loss is accompanied by inappropriately large losses of fat-free mass (FFM). Our secondary aims were to examine whether FFM increases during weight gain and to compare several techniques for measuring FFM change. FFM was measured at intervals averaging 5 months in 21 AIDS patients by means of skinfold thickness (SF), dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA), total body water (TBW), and bioelectrical impedance using the equation of the manufacturer of the equipment (BIA(EZComp)) and a published prediction equation (BIA(Segal)). The FFM content of weight loss was similar for SF (57%), DEXA (60%), TBW (55%) and BIA(EZComp) (65%), but the result from BIA(Segal) (78%) was higher. The results were close to predicted
starvation
values apart from the results with BIA(Segal), which were significantly higher than predicted values. Weight gain was also composed of a large proportion of FFM. There were large intermethod differences in measurements of absolute FFM, but for measuring changes in FFM, the bias between SF, DEXA, and TBW was minimal. The results of BIA vary with the prediction equation used. In this group of patients with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), weight loss was composed of a large proportion of FFM, but in general this is compatible with undernutrition as the underlying cause and does not support the hypothesis of excessive FFM catabolism in HIV disease. SF, DEXA, TBW, and BIA(Segal) show reasonable agreement for measuring body composition changes. This information should be considered in the design of future intervention studies for HIV-related wasting.
...
PMID:Longitudinal changes in body composition measured with a variety of methods in patients with AIDS. 905 20
Wasting is a debilitating complication of the human
immunodeficiency
virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS) and is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. The etiology of wasting in HIV/AIDS is complex and its origins are multifactorial. Both patterns of simple
starvation
and the more complex metabolic and endocrine alterations associated with stress and trauma have been described in patients with the AIDS wasting syndrome. Observations suggest that the pathophysiology of the wasting in individual patients with HIV/AIDS may vary according to the primary cause of wasting and underlying disease activity. Optimal treatment of the AIDS wasting syndrome will depend on a thorough evaluation of all possible contributing factors. This review addresses the pathophysiologic basis of weight loss in HIV/AIDS, based on the current literature.
...
PMID:The etiology of wasting in the human immunodeficiency virus and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 962 88
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