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Kutsch Olaf - - 2003
Reservoirs of latent HIV-1 in T cells and macrophages pose one of the major obstacles that hamper final eradication of HIV-1 from infected patients. Targeting costimulatory molecules expressed on cell types harboring latent HIV-1 to achieve reactivation may provide a new approach to overcome this problem. One such molecule is ...
Tritel Marc - - 2003
A prophylactic vaccine for HIV-1 will probably require the induction and maintenance of both humoral and cellular immunity. One current strategy to achieve such long term immune responses is a prime-boost vaccination approach using a DNA priming inoculation, followed by recombinant viral boost. In this report we use a novel ...
Cordelier Pierre - - 2003
In human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-infected individuals, virus-induced production of interferon alpha (IFN-alpha) is impaired. In order to obtain regulated expression of IFN-alpha that responds to HIV-1 infection, a recombinant SV40 vector was designed that carries the human IFN-alpha2 cDNA under the control of the HIV-1 long terminal repeat ...
Fantuzzi Laura - - 2003
Monocytes/macrophages are cells of the innate arm of the immune system and exert important regulatory effects on adaptive immune response. These cells also represent major targets of HIV infection and one of the main reservoirs. Notably, macrophage-tropic viruses are responsible for the initial infection, predominate in the asymptomatic phase, and ...
Crowe Suzanne - - 2003
Cellular viral reservoirs and anatomic sanctuary sites allow continuing HIV-1 replication in patients with suppressed plasma viremia who are receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy and prevent eradication of HIV-1 by these regimens. Cells of macrophage lineage, including monocytes subsets within the blood, play a role in HIV-1 persistence. Evidence of ...
Lee ChuHee - - 2003
Macrophages are major targets for infection by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). In addition to their role as productive viral reservoirs, inappropriate activation of infected and uninfected macrophages appears to contribute to pathogenesis. HIV-1 infection requires initial interactions between the viral envelope surface glycoprotein gp120, the cell-surface protein CD4, ...
Lapenta Caterina - - 2003
A major challenge of AIDS research is the development of therapeutic vaccine strategies capable of inducing the humoral and cellular arms of the immune responses against HIV-1. In this work, we evaluated the capability of DCs pulsed with aldrithiol-2-inactivated HIV-1 in inducing a protective antiviral human immune response in SCID ...
Swingler Simon - - 2003
All primate lentiviruses (HIV-1, HIV-2, SIV) encode Nef proteins, which are important for viral replication and pathogenicity in vivo. It is not known how Nef regulates these processes. It has been suggested that Nef protects infected cells from apoptosis and recognition by cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Other studies suggest that Nef ...
Yang Hengwen - - 2003
The expression of HIV-1 coreceptors (CXCR4 and CCR5) on monocyte surface can be regulated by the ligand of CD14 (LPS), which stimulate the susceptibility of the cells to HIV-1. To investigate whether it exists potential association between CD14 and HIV-1 coreceptor CXCR4, we tested the impact of CD14-specific monoclonal antibodies ...
Alimonti Judie B - - 2003
AIDS, caused by the retroviruses human immunodeficiency virus type 1 and type 2 (HIV-1 and HIV-2), has reached pandemic proportions. Therefore, it is critical to understand how HIV causes AIDS so that appropriate therapies can be formulated. Primarily, HIV infects and kills CD4(+) T lymphocytes, which function as regulators and ...
Eugenin E A - - 2003
Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)-associated dementia is often characterized by chronic inflammation, with infected macrophage infiltration of the CNS resulting in the production of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) products, including tat, and neurotoxins that contribute to neuronal loss. In addition to their established role in leukocyte recruitment and activation, ...
Sharma V - - 2003
The development of high-grade B-cell lymphoma in Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) patients is a relatively late manifestation induced by Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 (HIV) infection and is considered to be an AIDS-defining condition. Multiple, ongoing molecular and cytogenetic aberrations appear necessary for the development of AIDS-related lymphoma. Studying a panel of ...
Shalekoff Sharon - - 2003
In sub-Saharan Africa the coincidence of HIV-1 and Mycobacterium tuberculosis coinfection is ever-increasing, this being associated with increased progression to disease and reduced patient survival. Raised plasma levels of stromal cell-derived factor (SDF)-1alpha and interleukin (IL)-7, cytokines important in T cell development, and in the modulation of surface CXCR4 expression, ...
Zaunders John J - - 2003
We measured apoptosis of subsets of T lymphocytes by single-cell analysis of caspase activation, to confirm high turnover of chemokine receptor CCR5(+) T cells in subjects with acute, primary human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection (PHI). High levels of spontaneous apoptosis, consisting mainly of CD8(+) T lymphocytes, were closely ...
Muthumani Karuppiah - - 2003
The paradigm of HIV-1 infection includes the diminution of CD4(+) T cells, loss of immune function, and eventual progression to AIDS. However, the mechanisms that drive host T cell depletion remain elusive. One HIV protein thought to participate in this destructive cascade is the Vpr gene product. Accordingly, we review ...
Koito Atsushi - - 2003
In vivo studies for understanding viral transmission and replication, host immune responses, and pathogenesis of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection would greatly benefit from the establishment of a small-animal model. In this study, we explored the potential of American mink (Mustera vison) as a susceptible host. We found ...
Gougeon Marie-Lise - - 2003
Viruses have evolved numerous mechanisms to evade the host immune system and one of the strategies developed by HIV is to activate apoptotic programmes that destroy immune effectors. Not only does the HIV genome encode pro-apoptotic proteins, which kill both infected and uninfected lymphocytes through either members of the tumour-necrosis ...
de la Fuente Cynthia - - 2003
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) can infect quiescent cells; however, viral production is restricted to actively proliferating cells. Recent evidence has indicated that HIV-1 viral proteins, Vpr and Tat, perturb the cell cycle to optimize HIV-1 replication. Vpr arrests the cell cycle at G2 by inactivating the cyclin B/cdk1 ...
Veazey Ronald - - 2003
Sooty mangabeys are the natural host of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIVsm). When injected into rhesus macaques, SIVsm infection results in progressive declines in CD4(+) T cells, opportunistic infections, and AIDS. In contrast, SIV-infected sooty mangabeys do not develop disease and live an apparently normal life span in captivity, despite maintaining ...
Yonezawa Akihito - - 2003
Natural alpha interferon (IFN-alpha)-producing cells (IPCs) are now recognized as identical to plasmacytoid dendritic cell (DC) precursors in human blood and are thought to play an important role in antiviral immunity. In the present study, we examined the susceptibility as well as the cellular responses of IPCs to human immunodeficiency ...
Amara Ali - - 2003
The requirement of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-induced CCR5 activation for infection by R5 HIV type 1 (HIV-1) strains remains controversial. Ectopic CCR5 expression in CD4(+)-transformed cells or pharmacological inhibition of G(alpha)i proteins coupled to CCR5 left unsolved whether CCR5-dependent cell activation is necessary for the HIV life cycle. In this ...
Kedzierska Katherine - - 2003
Defective immunological function of cells of the macrophage lineage contributes considerably to the pathogenesis of HIV-1 infection. Impairment of phagocytosis of opportunistic pathogens such as Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC), Pneumocystis carinii, Toxoplasma gondii or Candida albicans by peripheral blood monocytes, tissue macrophages and monocyte-derived macrophages following in vivo and in ...
Kaufmann Daniel E - - 2003
HIV-1 infection is characterised by persistent viraemia and a progressive decline in both number and function of CD4 T-helper lymphocytes. The inability to contain viral replication presumably results from the lack of an effective HIV-1-specific immune response observed in most HIV-infected individuals. The persistent viraemia and decline in the number ...
Tussey Lynda G - - 2003
The majority of untreated human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1-infected individuals ultimately develop uncontrolled viremia and progressive disease. Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) are known to play an important role in controlling HIV-1 replication, which has led to an increasing interest in augmenting conventional antiretroviral therapy with therapeutic vaccination. The successful ...
Izmailova Elena - - 2003
Immature dendritic cells are among the first cells infected by retroviruses after mucosal exposure. We explored the effects of human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) and its Tat transactivator on these primary antigen-presenting cells using DNA microarray analysis and functional assays. We found that HIV-1 infection or Tat expression induces interferon (IFN)-responsive ...
Freedman Bruce D - - 2003
The chemokine receptors CCR5 and CXCR4 serve as the cellular receptors in conjunction with CD4 for HIV-1 entry and infection of target cells. Although the virus has subverted these molecules for its own use, their natural function is to respond to activation and migration signals delivered by extracellular chemokines. A ...
Blagoveshchenskaya Anastassia D - - 2002
The HIV-1 Nef-mediated downregulation of cell surface MHC-I molecules to the trans-Golgi network (TGN) enables HIV-1 to escape immune surveillance. However, the cellular pathway used by Nef to downregulate MHC-I is unknown. Here, we show that Nef and PACS-1 combine to usurp the ARF6 endocytic pathway by a PI3K-dependent process ...
Benito José M - - 2002
The mechanism of CD4(+) T cell depletion seen in HIV infection is largely mediated by increased apoptosis of these cells. The benefit of protease inhibitor (PI)-based antiretroviral therapy to CD4(+) T cell recovery seems to involve more than its antiviral activity, and a direct antiapoptotic effect of PIs has been ...
Asjö Birgitta - - 2002
Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) can effectively suppress HIV-1 replication but, as soon as the drugs are withdrawn, there is a rapid rebound of replicating virus. Severe metabolic toxicities and therapy failures due to the appearance of resistant virus are becoming an increasing problem that precludes long-term continuous medication. Therapeutic ...
Chattopadhya D - - 2002
The availability of a marker that could predict the course of disease progression in HIV-infected individuals would be of considerable relevance during the asymptomatic stage in order to undertake timely prophylactic measures. A prospective study was undertaken in a group of 42 children suffering from thalassemia major with HIV-1 infection ...
Persidsky Yuri - - 2002
The neuroimmune events leading to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1-associated dementia (HAD) are linked to macrophage secretory neurotoxins (cellular and viral toxins). To study such events, we developed a murine model of HIV-1 encephalitis (HIVE), the pathological equivalent of HAD. Severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mice injected with HIV-1-infected monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs) ...
Humphreys Tricia L - - 2002
Haemophilus ducreyi causes the sexually transmitted disease chancroid, which facilitates HIV-1 transmission. Skin biopsies were obtained from subjects experimentally infected with H. ducreyi to study the evolution of the immune response and immunophenotypes relevant to transmission of HIV-1. Compared with peripheral blood, there was an enrichment of T cells and ...
Nakamura Taichi - - 2002
We have found that an HIV-1 accessory gene product Vpr enhanced HIV-1 reproduction in U1 cells chiefly by the induction of TNF, a proinflammatory cytokine, which was also known to be an activator of HIV-1 reproduction. We have generated the functional HIV-1 accessory gene product Vpr in bacterial cells. Vpr ...
Appay Victor - - 2002
The reasons for the failure of the immune system to control HIV-1 infection, and the resulting immunodeficiency, remain unclear. HIV-1 persists in its host despite vigorous immune responses, including a strong, and probably functional, HIV-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocyte response. Interestingly the immunological features of HIV-1-infected individuals show many similarities to those ...
Fraternale A - - 2002
Monocyte-macrophages play a central role in HIV-1 infection because they are among the first cells to be infected and because later they are important reservoirs for the virus. Thus, newly designed therapies should take into account the protection of this cell compartment. Herein, we report the results obtained in a ...
Moses Ashlee V - - 2002
Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) is the most frequent malignancy afflicting acquired immune-deficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients. Tumor lesions are characterized by spindle cells of vascular origin and vascularization. Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpes virus (KSHV) is consistently found in all forms of KS. Infection of dermal microvascular endothelial cells (DMVEC) with KSHV recapitulates spindle ...
Leng Qibin - - 2002
Chronic immune activation is associated with impaired signal transduction. Since such activation is commonly found during HIV-1 infection, we studied cellular responses to non-specific T-cell receptor stimulation of PBMC obtained from 20 HIV-1 non-infected individuals and 23 highly or partially immune activated HIV-1 infected individuals. PBMC proliferation and ERK-1/2 phosphorylation ...
Rich Elizabeth A - - 2002
We describe the construction of a macrophage-tropic HIV-1 molecular clone, pNLAD8-EGFP, which expresses enhanced green fluorescent protein. We show that NLAD8-EGFP can infect monocyte-derived macrophages as well as alveolar macrophages. NLAD8-EGFP-infected macrophages can be easily and sensitively detected based on the visualization of intracellular green fluorescent protein.
Nie Z - - 2002
Infection of T cells with HIV-1 induces apoptosis and modulates apoptosis regulatory molecules. Similar effects occur following treatment of cells with individual HIV-1 encoded proteins. While HIV-1 protease is known to be cytotoxic, little is known of its effect on apoptosis and apoptosis regulatory molecules. The ability of HIV-1 protease ...
Lecointe Didier - - 2002
Within the brain, glial cells are target cells for human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) and HIV. We infected cultures of unstimulated human microglial cells and astrocytes of embryonic origin and of monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM) with HCMV strain AD169 and observed down-regulation of the plasma membrane expression of CCR5 in the three cell ...
Shacklett B L - - 2002
Much scientific effort has been directed towards elucidating the complexities of cell-mediated immune responses to HIV-1(reviewed in [1,2]). These studies have attempted to explain the immune system's ultimate failure to contain viral replication, leading to development of AIDS disease, and to identify immune responses that will be useful in developing ...
Ljungberg Karl - - 2002
In a multisubtype approach to HIV-1 vaccination, mice were immunized with HIV-1 envelope gp160 genes from subtypes A, B, and C. Subsequently the mice were challenged with syngeneic primary splenocytes infected with a HIV-1/MuLV pseudovirus carrying a subtype B genome. HIV-specific immune responses and protection were strongest in the group ...
Cosenza Melissa A - - 2002
Microglia are endogenous brain macrophages that show distinct phenotypes such as expression of myeloid antigens, ramified morphology, and presence within the neural parenchyma. They play significant roles in a number of human CNS diseases including AIDS dementia. Together with monocyte-derived (perivascular) macrophages, microglia represent a major target of HIV-1 infection. ...
Geiben-Lynn Ralf - - 2002
The CD8+ T-cell immune response for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is divided into a cytolytic and noncytolytic mechanism. The mechanism of cell-mediated cytotoxic immunity for the partial control of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) replication in infected individuals is well-characterized, and the direct killing of virus-infected cells by antigen-specific ...
Si Qiusheng - - 2002
Microglia are pivotal in the pathogenesis of AIDS dementia, as they serve as the major target of HIV infection in the CNS. In addition, activation of microglia correlates best with clinical dementia. Although the beta-chemokine RANTES/CCL5 is important in modulating HIV infection as well as cellular activation, no information is ...
Dumais Nancy - - 2002
Vaccines capable of protecting against sexually transmitted infections, such as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), will depend on the induction of potent long-lasting mucosal immune responses in the genital tract. We evaluated vaginal and systemic immune responses and protection from vaginal challenge elicited after intranasal immunization of mice with inactivated glycoprotien ...
Shacklett Barbara L - - 2002
Despite repeated high-risk exposure to infectious HIV-1, some individuals remain HIV-1 seronegative and apparently uninfected. The use of nonhuman primate model systems to study SIVmac transmission may help to elucidate the factors responsible for protection in exposed, seronegative (ESN) humans. In an earlier vaccination study, three control rhesus macaques that ...
Muscoli Carolina - - 2002
BACKGROUND: Oxidative stress has shown to contribute in the mechanisms underlying apoptotic cell death occurring in AIDS-dementia complex. Here we investigated the role of peroxynitrite in apoptosis occurring in astroglial cells incubated with supernatants of HIV-infected human primary macrophages (M/M). RESULTS: Flow cytometric analysis (FACS) of human cultured astrocytes shortly ...
Wang Lixin - - 2002
Bone marrow abnormalities are frequently observed in HIV-1-infected individuals. Infection of marrow mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) may abrogate their growth properties and hematopoietic supportive functions. To delineate the cell type infected, and factors responsible for the deleterious effects, human bone marrow cells were exposed to HIV-1 in vitro. By week ...
Torre Donato - - 2002
Dysfunction of neutrophils (polymorphonuclear leukocytes [PMNL]) and macrophagic cells occurs as a consequence of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection. Macrophages contribute to the resolution of early inflammation ingesting PMNL apoptotic bodies. This study investigated macrophage ability to phagocytose PMNL apoptotic bodies in patients with HIV-1 infection in comparison ...
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