Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P30536 (PBS)
9,886 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The molecular events involved in antisense-mediated inhibition of retroviral transcription were studied by analyzing the in vitro effect of antisense oligodeoxynucleotides on reverse transcription by Human Immunodeficiency Virus type 1 (HIV-1) reverse transcriptase (RT). Oligonucleotides have been designed to be complementary to three targets located in the 5' region of the HIV-1 RNA genome: the transactivating response element (TAR), the U5 region and a sequence contiguous to the primer binding site (PrePBS). Antisense oligodeoxynucleotides were used with their 3'-OH end either free or blocked by a dideoxynucleotide in order to avoid cDNA synthesis. Experiments with two recombinant forms of HIV RT, carrying or not RNase H activity, showed that antisense oligonucleotides can arrest reverse transcription by an RNase H-independent mechanism. The AntiTAR oligonucleotide did not affect reverse transcription. In contrast, the AntiU5 and AntiPrePBS oligonucleotides led to an efficient inhibition of both forms of HIV RT. In the case of the AntiU5, the inhibition obtained in the absence of the RNase H activity indicates that this effect can be related to features of the RNA secondary structure. The AntiPrePBS oligonucleotide did bind to its target only in the presence of PBS primer. Use of shifted oligonucleotides showed that the AntiPrePBS inhibitory effect depends on a cooperative annealing with the AntiPBS primer on the template.
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PMID:In vitro effect of antisense oligonucleotides on human immunodeficiency virus type 1 reverse transcription. 128 17

AS101 [ammonium trichloro (dioxyethylene-0-0') tellurate] is a new synthetic compound previously described by us as having immunomodulating properties and minimal toxicity. Clinical trials are currently in progress with AS101 in AIDS and cancer patients. AS101 has recently been found to have radioprotective effects on hemopoiesis in irradiated mice when administered prior to irradiation. Since the early progenitors, spleen colony-forming units (CFU-S), are the critical cells needed for the reconstitution of the hemopoietic system, the mechanisms of action of AS101 were explored in this study by examining the compound's effect on the recovery of CFU-S, its protective effect on endogenous CFU-S and its effect on self-renewal of CFU-S. We also studied the effect of AS101 on the induction of progenitor cells into the radioresistant S-phase of the cell cycle. On days 1 and 5 after irradiation, the number of CFU-S in the bone marrow and spleen of AS101-treated mice was significantly higher than that of PBS-injected mice. Nine days after sublethal doses of irradiation, the number of endogenous spleen colonies was highest in mice given AS101 every 24 hours or every other day for 1 week prior to irradiation. AS101 administered immediately after irradiation, however, also resulted in an increase in the endogenous CFU-S. The higher number of CFU-S found in each 9-day endogenous spleen colony suggests increased self-renewal of CFU-S in AS101-treated mice. Moreover, we found that AS101 induced a higher number of progenitor cells in the S-phase of the cell cycle. These findings suggest that the radioprotection conferred by AS101 results from induction of progenitor cells in DNA synthesis (S-phase) and from the enhanced stimulation of CFU-S, not only toward proliferation but also toward CFU-S self-renewal.
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PMID:Mechanism of radioprotection conferred by the immunomodulator AS101. 841 51

Healthy, adult C57BL/6Kh mice of both sexes were transfused with blood or blood products from syngeneic donors with retrovirus (LP-BM5)-induced lymphoproliferative disease. The disease produced in the recipients 8 weeks after transfusion was characterized by splenomegaly, disseminated lymphadenopathy, leukopenia with neutrophilia, abrogation of the primary immune response to SRBC, decreased in vitro proliferation of spleen cells co-stimulated with phorbol ester and IL-2 or ionomycin and abrogation of synergistic effect of the co stimulators. Quantitative analysis of the blood or blood products used for transfusion show that a single transfusion of 0.2 ml of PBS containing 0.2 mu 1 of whole blood or 2 microliters of plasma or 400 Ficoll-isolated peripheral blood mononuclear cells was sufficient for the inducing the disease. The results suggest that the retroviruses were present in preparations of peripheral blood mononuclear cells and plasma of mice with the disease. However, the latter was 10-fold less efficient in inducing the disease. Transfusion of 1.8 x 10(6) isolated erythrocytes failed to induce the disease suggesting a marginal role, if any, in transmission of the disease via transfusion of these cells. Thus, a simple, reliable and reproducible method for propagation of the murine lymphoproliferative disease in the laboratory has been elaborated. These results also point to some important differences with regard to blood transfusion between human and murine AIDS.
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PMID:Quantative aspects of transfusion-transmitted retrovirus-induced lymphoproliferative disease in mice. 892 22

Pseudomonas aeruginosa (P. aeruginosa) is an opportunistic pathogen that can be found in individuals in which the immune system has been suppressed by HIV/AIDS or chronic alcoholism. We evaluated the role of inducible nitric oxide synthase (NOS II) as a modulator of lung concentrations of P. aeruginosa in normal rats and rats given a single dose of ethanol (ETOH). Rats were pretreated with either sterile saline (PBS, 0.1 ml/kg, i.v.) or the NOS II inhibitor L-N6-iminoethyl lysine (LNIL, 10 mg/kg, i.v.) 15 min before intraperitoneal administration of either PBS (4.5 ml/kg) or ETOH (4.5 g/kg). Thirty min after administration of PBS or ETOH the rats were placed in inhalation chambers and exposed to 45 min of an aerosol containing P. aeruginosa (5 x 10(4) colony forming units, CFU). A group of rats (n = 5-6/treatment/time period) were killed immediately (0 hr) or 4 hr after inhalation of P. aeruginosa. The lungs were homogenized and the P. aeruginosa were grown in nutrient broth to determine the number of viable CFU remaining in the lung. The NOS II and TNFalpha mRNA and protein content lung alveolar macrophages (AM) and neutrophils (PMN) were measured with RT-PCR and Western blot. The concentration of nitrate and nitrite anion in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALf) and ex vivo incubates of PMN were also measured. The CFU of P. aeruginosa present in the lungs of the four groups of rats at 0 hr did not differ. The CFU of P. aeruginosa in the lung increased (p < 0.05) in rats pretreated with ETOH when compared with that obtained from rats pretreated with PBS. However, pretreatment of rats with LNIL decreased (p < 0.05) the 4 hr lung content of P. aeruginosa. Coadministration of LNIL and ETOH to rats augmented the CFU of P. aeruginosa in lungs to amounts which did not differ from that of rats pretreated with ETOH. Inhalation of P. aeruginosa increased NOS II mRNA and protein in rat AM and PMN. Pretreatment of rats with ETOH alone, or in combination with LNIL, inhibited P. aeruginosa-induced NOS II transcription and translation and AM and PMN nitrate and nitrite generation whereas pretreatment with LNIL alone only inhibited nitrate and nitrite generation. Pretreatment of rats with ETOH suppressed P. aeruginosa stimulated PMN recruitment into the lung whereas LNIL enhanced (p < 0.05) P. aeruginosa-stimulated PMN recruitment into the lung. ETOH-induced increases of the lung content of P. aeruginosa were associated with increased PKC delta isozyme in the membrane of the PMN but could not be explained by altered plasma concentrations of hydrocortisone or ETOH. The data demonstrate that selective inhibition of NOS II-derived NO by LNIL decreases the lung content of P. aeruginosa whereas ETOH inhibits the lung clearance of P. aeruginosa. Speculatively, the difference between these effects of LNIL and ETOH may result from differences in drug-induced changes in lung recruitment of PMN.
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PMID:Ethanol inhibits lung clearance of Pseudomonas aeruginosa by a neutrophil and nitric oxide-dependent mechanism, in vivo. 1023 11

The innate immunity against murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) at the early phase of infection is mediated by NK cells and macrophages. We studied the effects of hochu-ekki-to (HET), a traditional Chinese herbal medicine, on the regulation of innate immunity mediated by NK cells and macrophages. We found the oral administration of HET to increase both the number of leukocytes in the spleen and liver and the splenic NK cell cytotoxicity associated with the increased induction of serum IFN-alpha/beta after an MCMV infection but it had no effect on liver NK cells. However, no differences were found in the serum IL-12, IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha and nitric oxide (NO) production in the culture of macrophages between the HET- and PBS-treated mice on day 2 after MCMV infection. In addition, HET-treated splenic and peritoneal macrophages were found to show a higher intrinsic resistance against in vitro MCMV infection than that of PBS-treated mice. Therefore, the HET-induced effects on NK cells and macrophages selectively reduced the viral load in the spleen but not in the liver at an early phase of MCMV infection. HET may thus be useful in the treatment of human cytomegalovirus infection which commonly occurs in HIV-infected AIDS patients.
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PMID:Protective effects of hochu-ekki-to, a Chinese traditional herbal medicine against murine cytomegalovirus infection. 1042 45

The effects of HIV-1 Tat protein on mitochondria membrane permeability and apoptosis were analysed in lymphoid cells. In this report we show that stable-transfected HIV-Tat cells are primed to undergo apoptosis upon serum withdrawal. This effect was observed in both the Jhan T cell line and the K562 cells, the latter expressing the bcr-abl chimeric gene, which confers resistance to apoptosis induced by different stimuli. Using a cytofluorimetric approach we have determined that serum withdrawal induces a disruption of the transmembrane mitochondrial potential (Deltapsim) followed by an increase of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and the subsequent DNA nuclear loss in K562-Tat cells but not in the K562-pcDNA cell line. These pre-apoptotic events were associated with the cleavage of the caspase-3, while the expression of Bcl-2, Bcl-XL and Bax proteins was not affected by the presence of Tat. Regardless of the steady state of the Bax protein, we found that in both K562 and K562-Tat cells, this protein is located in the nucleus, but after serum withdrawal its localization was mainly in the cytoplasm. The activity of caspase-3 detected in K562-Tat cells after serum withdrawal paralleled with the mitochondria permeability transition. Nevertheless, in Jhan-Tat cells the inhibition of this caspase with the specific inhibitor, z-DEVD-cmk, did not affect the disruption of the mitochondria potential induced by serum withdrawal. Interestingly, we found that HIV-Tat protein accumulates at the mitochondria in the K562-Tat cells cultured under low serum conditions, and this mitochondrial localization correlated with the Deltapsim disruption detected in these cells. In addition, HIV-1 Tat protein synergies with protoporphyrin IX (PPIX), a ligand of the mitochondrial benzodiazepine receptor, in the induction of apoptosis in both Jhan and K562 cells. Thus, HIV-1 Tat protein may induce apoptosis by a mechanism that involves mitochondrial PT and may contribute to the lymphocyte depletion seen in AIDS patients.
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PMID:Susceptibility of HIV-1-TAT transfected cells to undergo apoptosis. Biochemical mechanisms. 1060 13

A nearly full-length genome sequence of a novel HIV-1 A/J recombinant with a complex structure of the pol gene has been analyzed. This virus was isolated in 1998 from a 35-year-old female from Botswana. The virus demonstrated a dual pattern for CXCR4/CCR5 coreceptor utilization. Using short-term enrichment of the donor's PBMCs, the 98BW21 isolate was long-range amplified, cloned, and sequenced. The sequence of the clone 98BW21.17 spanned 9103 bp from the PBS site to the U5 region of the 3' LTR. The phylogenetic relationship of the 98BW21.17 clone to HIV-1 sequences represented by M, N, and O groups and A-K subtypes of the M group was examined across the entire viral genome. The 98BW21.17 clone demonstrated a unique phylogenetic topology clustering within subtype A or subtype J reference sequences. However, the subtype origin of two regions within the pol gene (p51 RT and integrase) could not be identified. Recombination patterns of the 98BW21.17 clone were different from known AGJ/AGIJ-type viruses such as isolates BFP90 and 95ML84. This study demonstrated the existence and replication competence of a new dual-tropic X4/R5 recombinant form of HIV-1 on the subtype J backbone. The nucleotide sequence of the 98BW21.17 clone was submitted to GenBank under accession number AF192135.
AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2000 Jul 01
PMID:HIV type 1 A/J recombinant with a pronounced pol gene mosaicism. 1089 Mar 63

In HIV infected persons, Cryptosporidium parvum causes chronic diarrhoea, which can be life-threatening in persons with AIDS and with a low CD4+ T cell count. However, a specific and effective therapy for this opportunistic infection does not yet exist. Since the use of a combination therapy with a highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), the prevalence of C. parvum infection in persons with AIDS has been strongly reduced. This favorable outcome was usually attributed to the recovery of the host immunity, however improvements from this opportunistic infection have been demonstrated even in the absence of immunological recovery. The aim of the present study was to determine whether HIV protease inhibitors (PIs) exert an anti-C. parvum activity. We selected the indinavir (an aspartyl protease inhibitor included in HAART) for our experiments, since a resolution of cryptosporidial enteritis in a person with AIDS after treatment with this drug has been reported. Human ileocecal adenocarcinoma tumor cells (HCT-8) were used as in vitro model. To determine whether or not indinavir had an effect on the parasite attachment to, or invasion of the HCT-8 cells, indinavir was added to the cultures at the same time as the infective dose (3 oocysts/cell) at one of the following concentrations: 0.1, 0.5, 5, 10, 20, and 50 microM (maximum DMSO content 0.5% vol/vol). To determine whether or not indinavir had an effect on established C. parvum infection, HCT-8 cells were infected with excysted oocysts at a ratio of 3 oocysts/cell at day 0, and then indinavir at a concentration of 50 microM was added to the cultures every 24 h for 4 days. The infection level was evaluated at 2, 3, 4 and 5 days p.i. using a flowcytometric assay. Three-day-old Balb/c mice were used as animal model, animals were infected per os with 50 microl of PBS containing 10(5) oocysts. The infected mice were divided into two groups (Group A and Group B), both of which received per os indinavir diluted in PBS with 0.1% DMSO at a concentration of 10 microM (24 mg/kg). For Group A, which consisted of 15 mice (3 litters), indinavir was administered at the same time that experimental infection was performed and then every day until the mice were sacrificed (i.e., 5 days p.i.), to determine the effect of indinavir on the attachment/invasion of the enterocytes. For Group B, which also consisted of 15 mice (3 litters), indinavir was administered after the infection was established (i.e., 72 h p.i.) and every day until being sacrificed, to determine the effect of indinavir on established infection. The mice of Group B were sacrificed 7, 10, 11 and 13 days p.i., corresponding to 4, 7, 8, and 10 days of treatment with indinavir. In vitro, the treatment of the excystated oocysts with different concentrations of indinavir reduced the percentage of HCT-8 infected cells in a dose-dependent manner. For established infection, the treatment with 50 microM of indinavir decreased the percentage of infected cells in a time-dependent manner. Treatment for 48 h resulted in a 40.1% reduction in infected cells (from 90% to 53%). After 72 h of treatment, the percentage of infected cells did not substantially differ from that observed after 48 h. Treatment for 96 h resulted in a 57.8% reduction (from 90 to 38%). In vivo, mice treated with indinavir at the same time they were infected with the oocysts showed a 93% reduction in the number of oocysts present in the entire intestinal contents and a 91% reduction in the number of intracellular parasites in the ileum. For established infection, indinavir treatment reduced the number of oocysts in the entire intestinal content by about 50% and the number of intracellular parasites in the ileum by about 70%. These data demonstrate that PIs directly exert an inhibitory effect on C. parvum and the extent of this effect depended on the specific dose and the duration of treatment. Although there are no reports of aspartyl proteases in C. parvum, the inhibitory effect of PIs on C. parvum growth in vitro suggests that aspartyl proteases could have some important functions for this parasite. In fact, proteolytic activities have been demonstrated during peak periods of excystation in C. parvum oocysts and cysteine and serine protease classes have been functionally associated with this process. Moreover, we identified several different C. parvum sequences that showed homology with a protein family related to aspartyl proteases. In prospect, PIs could be valuable for the chemotherapy of cryptosporidiosis.
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PMID:[Highly Active AntiRetroviral Therapy and cryptosporidiosis]. 1530 95

Taxol is a marketed product for the treatment of ovarian, breast, non-small cell lung cancer and AIDS-related Kaposi's Sarcoma. It is thus far one of the most effective anticancer drugs available on the market. However, paclitaxel is only sparingly soluble in water and therefore, intravenous administration depends on the use of the non-ionic surfactant Cremophor EL (polyethoxylated castor oil) to achieve a clinically relevant concentrated solution. Unfortunately, Cremophor EL increases toxicity and leads to hypersensitivity reactions in certain individuals. We have developed a well characterized novel lyophilized liposome-based paclitaxel (LEP-ETU) formulation that is sterile, stable and easy-to-use. The mean particle size of the liposomes is about 150 nm before and after lyophilization, and the drug entrapment efficiency is greater than 90%. Stability data indicated that the lyophilized LEP-ETU was physically and chemically stable for at least 12 months at 2-8 and 25 degrees C. Moreover, the formulation can be diluted to about 0.25mg/ml without drug precipitation or change in particle size. In vitro drug release study in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS, pH 7.4) showed that less than 6% of the entrapped paclitaxel was released after 120 h, indicating that the drug is highly stable in an entrapped form at physiologic temperature.
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PMID:Development and characterization of a novel Cremophor EL free liposome-based paclitaxel (LEP-ETU) formulation. 1556 16

A total of 105 single fresh stool samples were collected from diarrhoeal patients with (80 HIV-positive and 25 HIV-negative) from the Army and the Police hospitals, Addis Ababa. The stool samples were processed by water-ether sedimentation method; they were stained with Uvitex-2B technique for microscopic detection of intestinal microsporidium. A portion of all samples were preserved in 200microl PBS containing 2% PVPP ((Polyvinylpolypyrolidone) for confirmation with PCR. 18/105(17.2%) of the cases were positive for intestinal microsporidial infection by at least one method. 8/105 (7.6%) positive both by microscopy and PCR and 10/105 (9.5%) were positive only by PCR. All microsporidia positive cases were also HIV positive. Based on PCR analysis, 15 Enterocytozoon bieneusi and 3 Encephalitozoon intestinalis were identified. This study has shown that intestinal microsporidiosis is a common cause of chronic diarrhoea in advanced AIDS patients and this is mainly attributed to Enterocytozoon bieneusi. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of intestinal microsporidiosis in Ethiopia. It has an important implication for the understanding of the aetiology of diarrhoea in HIV/AIDS patients in the country.
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PMID:Detection of intestinal microsporidiosis in diarrhoeal patients infected with the human immunideficiency virus (HIV-1) using PCR and Uvitex-2B stain. 1637 May 39


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