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Query: UMLS:C0432222 (
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)
47,337
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In an attempt to better understand the role of endothelial cells during HIV-1 infection, we report a virological and ultrastructural study on isolated endothelial cells from human adipose tissue, infected by HIV-1 in vitro. Supernatants from cultures showed the presence of
p24 antigen
and reverse transcriptase activity starting two days after HIV inoculation. A significant decrease of viral rescue was observed in cycloheximide treated cells confirming a de novo synthesis of viral products.
SEM
analysis individualized several surface slender projections and interdispersed virus-like particles in the infected cells. Furthermore, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) results showed cellular aspects of HIV phagocytosis and virus budding, suggesting that endothelial cells may represent a CD4 negative cell target of HIV-1 infection.
...
PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) infection of endothelial cells in vitro: a virological, ultrastructural and immuno-cytochemical approach. 137 12
Cell-free HIV RNA in plasma was detected and quantitated after antiviral therapy by the polymerase chain reaction. RNA was extracted from plasma, reverse transcribed to cDNA, amplified by polymerase chain reaction, and quantitated by absorbance based on an enzyme-linked affinity assay. 72 HIV antibody-positive subjects had one plasma sample taken. 39 who were not receiving antiretroviral therapy at the time had a mean plasma HIV RNA copy number of 690 +/- 360 (mean +/-
SEM
) per 200 microliters of plasma, while 33 subjects who had been receiving zidovudine therapy for a minimum of 3 mo had a mean copy number of 134 +/- 219 (P less than 0.05). 27 additional HIV antibody-positive patients had two plasma samples taken before and 1 mo after initiating dideoxynucleoside therapy. Plasma HIV RNA copy number fell from 540 +/- 175 to 77 +/- 35 (P less than 0.05). Finally, nine of these subjects had two baseline samples obtained before initiating therapy and two posttreatment samples 1 and 2 mo after therapy was begun. Mean plasma RNA copy number declined from 794 +/- 274 to less than 40 (below the lower limit of sensitivity) after 1 mo of therapy, with suppression maintained after 2 mo of therapy. These results suggest that gene amplification can be used to detect and quantitate changes in plasma HIV RNA after dideoxynucleoside therapy. Plasma HIV polymerase chain reaction may be a more sensitive marker to monitor antiviral therapy, particularly in asymptomatic patients where measurement of
p24 antigen
or quantitative plasma cultures are negative.
...
PMID:Reduction in plasma human immunodeficiency virus ribonucleic acid after dideoxynucleoside therapy as determined by the polymerase chain reaction. 168 45
We investigated the effects of recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rGM-CSF) administered by the subcutaneous route, first alone and then alternating with azidothymidine (AZT), in leukopenic patients with severe human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Ten patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) or related disorders, five of whom could not tolerate conventional doses of AZT, were administered rGM-CSF subcutaneously for 12 days. They then were administered an alternating regimen using AZT for 1 week, followed by 5 days of subcutaneous rGM-CSF and 2 days without any medication. During the initial 12 days of GM-CSF administration, there was an increase in the mean white blood cell (WBC) value. In addition, rGM-CSF stimulated circulating monocytes as evidenced by an increase in superoxide anion production and expression of surface HLA-DR antigen. However, at the same time rGM-CSF increased the serum HIV
p24 antigen
in each of the six evaluable patients from 189 x/divided by 2.02 pg/mL (geometric mean x/divided by
SEM
) at entry to 375 x/divided by 2.11 pg/mL (P less than .05). During the subsequent period of alternating AZT and rGM-CSF treatment, serum HIV
p24 antigen
fell below the day 14 value in most patients, particularly after the weeks of AZT administration. The mean T4 cell value increased in patients who had not previously received AZT, but generally did not change in those who had prior AZT exposure. Hematologic toxicity appeared to be somewhat reduced compared with continuous full-dose AZT therapy, and two patients with previous AZT hematologic toxicity tolerated this alternating regimen for 25 weeks. Additional regimens simultaneously combining these two agents are worth exploring.
...
PMID:Subcutaneous recombinant granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor used as a single agent and in an alternating regimen with azidothymidine in leukopenic patients with severe human immunodeficiency virus infection. 201 45
This report presents results concerning the potential role of negative regulators in hematopoietic suppression observed in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected long-term cultures (LTC) of human bone marrow cells. Confluent stromal cell layers established from human bone marrow cells were exposed to HIV-1ADA, a monocytotropic strain of HIV-1. A progressive increase in the concentration of HIV-1
p24 antigen
in cultures exposed to HIV-1ADA demonstrated that there was a productive infection. Cells from both noninfected and HIV-infected stromal cell layers produced factors that stimulated the proliferation of colony-forming units for granulocytes and macrophages (CFU-GM) from non-infected CD34+ cells. In contrast, when noninfected CD34+ cells were directly cocultured on intact stromal cell layers fewer CFU-GM and burst-forming units for erythroid cells (BFU-E) were detected in HIV-infected LTC than in noninfected LTC. One week after the addition of CD34+ cells, the number of CFU-GM in HIV-infected LTC in six of nine experiments was reduced compared to noninfected control LTC. In those six experiments, the number of CFU-GM was only 53 +/- 5% (
SEM
) of the number in noninfected LTC. The number of BFU-E in HIV-1-infected LTC was only 46 +/- 5% of the number in noninfected LTC (n = 5). There were fewer BFU-E in HIV-1-infected LTC, whether or not there was a reduced number of CFU-GM. Neutralizing antibody to tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) had no effect on the number of BFU-E in HIV-infected LTC. The number of BFU-E, however, was 2.1 +/- 0.2-fold greater (n = 3) in HIV-infected LTC incubated with neutralizing antibody to interferon-alpha. In HIV-infected LTC with decreased numbers of CFU-GM, the number of CFU-GM was approximately 2-fold greater after incubation of HIV-infected LTC with anti-interleukin-4 (IL-4). The effect of anti-TNF-alpha was variable, and anti-transforming growth factor-beta had no effect on the number of CFU-GM in HIV-infected LTC. After 2 weeks, the number of CFU-GM in HIV-infected LTC incubated with anti-IL-4 and anti-TNF-alpha was 2- to 4-fold greater than in untreated HIV-infected LTC. Antibody treatment did not promote an increase in the number of CFU-GM in noninfected LTC or in LTC in which CFU-GM numbers were not reduced after HIV infection.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Negative regulators may mediate some of the inhibitory effects of HIV-1 infected stromal cell layers on erythropoiesis and myelopoiesis in human bone marrow long term cultures. 754 Jun 43
The cytokines interleukin-12 (IL-12) and IL-4 play important roles in the development of Th1-like (type-1) and Th2-like (type-2) T-cell responses, respectively, and there is evidence that type-1/type-2 T helper imbalances are important in the pathogenesis of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease. With this background, we examined the effects of these cytokines on HIV replication. Neither stimulated HIV replication in fresh peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). However, in prestimulated PBMC, IL-12, and to a greater extent, IL-4 as well as IL-2, induced production of HIV
p24 antigen
over 7 days of culture (no cytokine 3,900 x/divided by 1.31 [GM x/divided by
SEM
] pg/mL; IL-12, 34,300 x/divided by 1.39 pg/mL; IL-4, 283,000 x/divided by 1.14 pg/mL; and IL-2, 328,000 x/divided by 1.31 pg/mL). Neither IL-12- nor IL-4-induced HIV replication was attributable to induction of IL-1, IL-2, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, or TNF-beta. Both IL-12- and IL-4-induced HIV replication was associated with selective loss of the CD4+ subset in stimulated cultures. IL-4 stimulated HIV replication in monocyte/macrophages, while IL-12 had little or no effect in these cells. Finally, HIV replication stimulated by IL-12 or IL-4 was inhibited by dideoxynucleosides. Thus, IL-12 and IL-4 enhance HIV replication and HIV-induced cell death in prestimulated PBMC. Through killing of the CD4+ T cells stimulated by these cytokines, this may result in inappropriate type-1/type-2 responses in HIV-infected patients and contribute to their Th1 immunodeficiency.
...
PMID:Effects of the Th1 and Th2 stimulatory cytokines interleukin-12 and interleukin-4 on human immunodeficiency virus replication. 771 82
The immune dysfunction in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is complex and cannot be explained solely on the basis of numerical depletion of T lymphocytes. Inappropriate, uncontrolled activation of the immune system may be involved. In a test of this hypothesis, five HIV-infected children were prospectively treated with prednisone and selected immunologic and virologic indices were analyzed. Subjects had marked T lymphopenia (CD4+ T lymphocytes < 500 cells/ml) and antigenemia (serum
p24 antigen
> 30 pg/ml) and were free of opportunistic infections. There was a significant drop in serum
p24 antigen
concentrations from baseline (60.2 +/- 10.1%
SEM
; P < 0.005) 4 weeks after initiation of prednisone, which returned to baseline concentrations as the prednisone was tapered. Concomitant with this decrease, there was decreased expression of cell surface activation markers (HLA-DR, CD25 (interleukin 2 receptor) and CD26 (Ta-1)) in peripheral T lymphocytes. There was no significant change in either T lymphocyte subset numbers or mitogen and antigen-specific lymphoproliferation. A regulatory dysfunction of the immune system, allowing inappropriate activation of T lymphocytes, may be involved in the pathogenesis of HIV disease, and further studies involving selective immunosuppression in HIV disease are warranted.
...
PMID:Immunologic and virologic effects of glucocorticoids on human immunodeficiency virus infection in children: a preliminary study. 790 39
Monocytes (MOs) and macrophages (MACs) are well-known targets for HIV-1 infection. Even though the virus load is contributed mainly to lymphocytes during the asymptomatic phase of infection, the expression of HIV-1 in MO/MACs seems to be important for the course of the disease. To establish a model for restricted HIV-1 expression in MACs in vitro, we cultured MO-derived MACs under different culture conditions and analyzed their susceptibility to HIV-1 infection as well as their capacity for virus replication in vitro. MACs cultured under serum-free conditions with M-CSF (M-MACs) remain viable and functionally active as assessed by the analysis of cytokine production. In addition, the levels of CD4, CD14, CCR5, and HLA-DR expression are comparable to those of serum-derived MACs (SER-MACs). However, serum-free MACs were less susceptible to HIV-1 infection, with only 9.5+/-4.5% (mean+/-
SEM
) of all cells being
p24 antigen
positive on day 22 as compared with 51+/-9% under serum conditions (p < 0.005). Reverse transcriptase (RT) activity in the culture supernatant of M-MACs was always about 100-fold lower than that of SER-MACs even when comparable amounts of cells were infected. The addition of serum to serum-free cultures increased the percentage of HIV-1
p24 antigen
-positive cells (21+/-8% positive cells on day 22) and increased the RT activity, indicating that serum factors could be important for HIV-1 replication in MACs. Therefore we also switched SER-MACs to serum-free culture conditions and found a sharp decrease in RT activity. However, the RT level could always be rescued by the addition of serum, even after a long serum-free culture period. This effect was dependent on the serum concentration added, with as little as 0.1% serum being effective in reestablishing viral production as measured by RT activity. In conclusion, we show that serum has an important role in the replication of HIV-1 in MACs. Our results suggest that besides the role of CD4 and CCR5 other microenvironmental factors, e.g., growth factors, cytokines, or hormones, which are not provided by the target cell itself, are involved in the regulation of MAC infection and of replication by HIV-1.
...
PMID:Restricted HIV type 1 replication under serum-free culture conditions in human monocyte-derived macrophages. 984 Feb 91
The current scenario of environmental pollution urges the need for an effective solution for toxic heavy metal removal from industrial wastewater. Bioremediation is the most cost effective process employed by the use of microbes especially bacteria resistant to toxic metals. In this study, Lysinibacillus sp.
BA2
, a nickel tolerant strain isolated from bauxite mine was used for the biosorption of Ni(II). Lysinibacillus sp.
BA2
biomass had isoelectric point (pI) of 3.3. The maximum negative zeta potential value (-39.45) was obtained at pH 6.0 which was highly favourable for Ni(II) biosorption. 238.04mg of Ni(II) adsorbed on one gram of dead biomass and 196.32mg adsorbed on one gram of live biomass. The adsorption of Ni(II) on biomass increased with time and attained saturation after 180min with rapid biosorption in initial 30min. The Langmuir and Freundlich isotherms could fit well for biosorption of Ni(II) by dead biomass while Langmuir isotherm provided a better fit for live biomass based on correlation coefficient values. The kinetic studies of Ni(II) removal, using dead and live biomass was well explained by second-order kinetic model. Ni(II) adsorption on live biomass was confirmed by
SEM
-EDX where cell aggregation and increasing irregularity of cell morphology was observed even though cells were in non-growing state. The FTIR analysis of biomass revealed the presence of carboxyl, hydroxyl and amino groups, which seem responsible for biosorption of Ni(II). The beads made using dead biomass of Lysinibacillus sp.
BA2
could efficiently remove Ni(II) from effluent solutions. These microbial cells can substitute expensive methods for treating nickel contaminated industrial wastewaters.
...
PMID:Biosorption of nickel by Lysinibacillus sp. BA2 native to bauxite mine. 2501 Nov 23