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Yao Qizhi - - 2004
CD4(+) Th cells are believed to be essential for the induction of humoral and cellular immune responses. In this study we tested the effect and possible mechanisms of the major antigenic component in influenza, hemagglutinin (HA), in helping HIV Env to induce immune responses in CD4(+) T cell knockout (CD4 ...
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Mazzucchelli Renata - - 2004
It has been developed an HIV type 1 transgenic rat model (HIV-1 Tg Rat) which contains a gag-pol-deleted HIV-1 provirus regulated by the viral LTR promoter. Although it harbors a non infectious provirus, efficient viral expression occurs in different tissues and disease manifestations as well as immune-response alterations and pathologies ...
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Chinen Javier - - 2004
This review highlights some of the most significant advances in basic and clinical immunology that were published from August 2002 to December 2003, focusing on manuscripts that appeared in the Journal. Articles selected were those considered most relevant to Journal readers. With regard to basic immunology, this report includes articles ...
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Bailey Justin - - 2004
Despite the fact that HIV-1 induces vigorous antiviral immune responses, viral replication is never completely controlled in infected individuals. Recent studies have provided insight into the mechanisms by which focused immune pressure directed at particular B or T cell epitopes leads to the rapid appearance of escape mutations. Even if ...
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Templeton Alan R - - 2004
Evolution of the HIV-1 V3 loop was monitored in 15 subjects over a period of 5 years at approximately 6-month intervals. Putative recombination was detected in many of the sequences. Evolutionary trees were estimated from the nonrecombinant viral sequences found in each individual. Selection and altered demographic regimes were detected ...
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Liou Li-Ying - - 2004
The Tat protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is essential for viral replication and activates RNA polymerase II transcriptional elongation through the association with a cellular protein kinase composed of Cdk9 and cyclin T1. Tat binds to this kinase complex through a direct protein-protein interaction with cyclin T1. ...
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Markovic Ingrid - - 2004
Recent advances in our understanding of the cellular and molecular mechanisms of HIV-1 entry provide the basis for novel therapeutic strategies that prevent viral penetration of the target cell-membrane, while reducing detrimental virus and treatment effects on cells and prolonging virion exposure to immune defenses. A number of potential sites ...
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Quaranta Maria Giovanna - - 2004
The accessory HIV-1 Nef protein is a crucial determinant for viral replication and pathogenesis. During HIV infection, loss of immune control in the setting of a strong and broad HIV-specific T-lymphocyte response, leads to a lethal outcome through AIDS. Moreover, dysfunction of dendritic cells (DCs) may contribute to the immune ...
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Ramakrishna Lakshmi - - 2004
The transactivator protein, Tat, is a potential candidate for developing a vaccine against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1). Since Tat is not immunodominant, especially when delivered as a genetic vaccine, we expressed codon-optimized subtype-C Tat as a molecular conjugate of ubiquitin, to elicit antigen-specific cell-mediated immune responses. Immunization of mice with ...
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Poluektova Larisa - - 2004
HIV-1-specific cellular immunity serves to eliminate infected cells and disease. However, how this process specifically affects the CNS is poorly understood. To mirror the regulatory events that occur in human brain after HIV-1 infection, a murine model of viral encephalitis was used to study relationships, over time, among lymphocyte-mediated infected ...
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Weinberg Adriana - - 2004
To identify virological and immunological correlates of microbial-specific immune reconstitution in children with advanced human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, Candida- and tetanus-specific lymphocyte proliferation was measured in 165 children initiating a new highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) regimen. During the study, the proportions of children with immunity to Candida and ...
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Bernstein Wendy B - - 2004
We have previously shown that adoptive transfer of in vitro CD3/CD28 activated autologous CD4(+) T cells results in increased CD4 counts and CD4/CD8 ratios in HIV+ subjects. In this report, analysis of variable beta (Vbeta) chain T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire showed that CD3/CD28 stimulation was able to increase polyclonality ...
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Fischer-Smith Tracy - - 2004
This study was performed to quantitate and characterize the mononuclear phagocytes (MPs) in human immunodeficiency virus encephalopathy (HIVE) by immunohistochemistry in an effort to gain insights into potential mechanisms of central nervous system (CNS) accumulation. Single- and double-labeled studies using antibodies against CD14, CD16, CD68, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), ...
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Haorah James - - 2004
Proteasomes (proteinase complexes, PR) and immunoproteasomes (IPR) degrade damaged proteins and affect protein processing required for antigen presentation by mononuclear phagocytes. These critical immune processes are attenuated during progressive HIV-1 infection and are affected by alcohol abuse. To investigate the mechanisms underlying these functional changes, we measured PR and CYP2E1 ...
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Iordanskiy Sergey - - 2004
HIV-1 viral protein R (Vpr) shuttles between the nucleus and the cytoplasm and is believed to contribute to the process of nuclear translocation of the viral preintegration complex, thus facilitating HIV-1 replication in macrophages. In this report, we demonstrate that Hsp70, a heat-shock protein contributing to cellular stress responses, inhibits ...
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Jotwani R - - 2004
Transmission of HIV-1 through the oral cavity is considered to be a rare event. To identify factors in resistance/susceptibility to oral HIV-1 infection, we analyzed expression in human gingiva of HIV-1 receptors Langerin, DC-SIGN, MR, and GalCer, HIV-1 co-receptors CCCR5, CXCR4, and anti-microbial protein alpha-defensin-1. Our results show that healthy ...
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Holm Geoffrey H - - 2004
Apoptosis of uninfected bystander CD4(+) T cells contributes to T-cell depletion during human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) pathogenesis. The viral and host mechanisms that lead to bystander apoptosis are not well understood. To investigate properties of the viral envelope glycoproteins (Env proteins) that influence the ability of HIV-1 to ...
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Balla-Jhagjhoorsingh Sunita S - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: To determine in chimpanzees if candidate HIV-1 subunit protein vaccines were capable of eliciting long-lasting T-cell memory responses in the absence of viral infection, and to determine the specific characteristics of these responses. DESIGN: A longitudinal study of cell-mediated immune responses induced in three chimpanzees following immunization with subunit ...
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Becker Yechiel - - 2004
The possibility that the induction of T helper 2 (Th2) cytokine synthesis and the gradual increase in interleukin 4 (IL-4) and IgE levels during HIV-1 infection are an allergic response to HIV-1 proteins was raised in the author's previous article [Becker, Virus Genes 28, 1-4, 2004]. The present review extends ...
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Lazzarin A - - 2004
Different immune and virological responses to antiretroviral therapy were generally observed in a consistent part of treated patients. The immune reconstitution due to viral decay conseguent to antiretroviral therapy is principally divided in two phases (redistribution and repopulation). Several co-factors (in particular co-receptor and cytokine relationship with HIV infection) can ...
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Benetti Luca - - 2004
HIV-1 infection decreases the number of CD4(+) T-cells, and apoptosis has been suggested among the mechanisms. Proteins of the Shc family are involved in a complex network of signal transduction, differentiation, and apoptotic response to stress in many different cell types. Out of three homologous gene products (ShcA, ShcB, and ...
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Pugach Pavel - - 2004
Primary strains of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) are known to adapt to replication in cell lines in vitro by becoming sensitive to soluble CD4 (sCD4) and neutralizing antibodies (NAb). T-cell lines favor isolation of variants that use CXCR4 as a co-receptor, while primary isolates predominantly use CCR5. We ...
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Vendeville Agnès - - 2004
The HIV-1 Tat protein is secreted by infected cells. Extracellular Tat can affect bystander uninfected T cells and induce numerous biological responses such as apoptosis and cytokine secretion. Tat is likely involved in several immune disorders during AIDS. Nevertheless, it is not known whether Tat triggers cell responses directly upon ...
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Hanley Timothy M - - 2004
Vitamin A deficiency has been correlated with increased severity of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-associated disease. Moreover, vitamin A supplementation can reduce AIDS-associated morbidity and mortality. Our group and others have shown that retinoids, the bioactive metabolites of vitamin A, repress HIV-1 replication in monocytic cell lines and primary ...
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James Cleve O - - 2004
The effects of soluble Nef protein on CD4(+) T cells were examined. CD4(+)-T-cell cultures exposed to soluble Nef were analyzed for apoptosis by terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling and hallmarks of apoptosis including cytoplasmic shrinkage, nuclear fragmentation, DNA laddering, and caspase activation. We observed dose- and time-dependent inductions of ...
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Bahbouhi Bouchaib - - 2004
Using intracellular p24 staining to discriminate between bystander and HIV productively infected cells, we evaluated the properties of HIV productively infected cells in terms of cytokine expression, activation status, apoptosis, and cell proliferation. We demonstrate that HIV productively infected primary CD4(+) T cells express 12- to 47-fold higher type 1 ...
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Proteomic fingerprinting of HIV-1-infected human monocyte-derived macrophages: a preliminary report.
Carlson Kimberly A - - 2004
Mononuclear phagocytes (MP; blood monocytes, alveolar, lymph node, and brain macrophages and microglia) are vehicles for dissemination and principle target cells for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection. Notably, viral persistence in macrophages occurs despite ongoing phagocytic, intracellular killing, innate and adaptive immune responses. To assess potential pathways for ...
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Johansson C Christian - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: Cytokines seem to play a critical role in HIV infection. The cAMP/protein kinase A (PKA) type I pathway is shown to be hyper-activated and contributes to T-cell immune dysfunction in HIV infection. Here, we analysed firstly the levels of cytokine gene expression in unstimulated CD3+T cells from HIV-infected patients ...
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Segal David J - - 2004
Small molecule inhibitors of human immunodeficiency virus, type 1 (HIV-1) have been extremely successful but are associated with a myriad of undesirable effects and require lifelong daily dosing. In this study we explore an alternative approach, that of inducing intracellular immunity using designed, zinc finger-based transcription factors. Three transcriptional repression ...
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Fiala Milan - - 2004
We examined heart tissues of AIDS patients with or without HIV cardiomyopathy (HIVCM) by immunohistochemistry, in situ polymerase chain reaction, in situ riboprobe hybridization, and the TUNEL technique for apoptosis. In HIVCM tissues, only inflammatory cells, but not endothelial cells or cardiomyocytes, displayed HIV-1 DNA and RNA. However, macrophages, lymphocytes, ...
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De Milito Angelo - - 2004
HIV establishes a chronic and latent infection that is not eliminated by the host immune defences. The virus induces extensive damage to the immune system, through virus-related and indirect pathogenic mechanisms. Both the cellular and the humoral arms of the immune system are unable to control the infection, which ultimately ...
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Mills Sander G - - 2004
Historically, therapeutic benefit in the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus infection (HIV-1) infection has been best achieved by targeting viral proteins like HIV protease involved in viral replication rather than host cell proteins, like CD4, which facilitate the process of viral infection. Two discoveries in 1996 presented a novel opportunity ...
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Zhao Jianxing - - 2004
Dysfunction in mononuclear phagocyte (MP, macrophages and microglia) immunity is thought to play a significant role in the pathogenesis of HIV-1 associated dementia (HAD). In particular, elevated extracellular concentrations of the excitatory neurotransmitter glutamate, produced by MP as a consequence of viral infection and immune activation, can induce neuronal injury. ...
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Dou Huanyu - - 2004
The human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) commonly affects cognitive, behavioral and motor functions during the disease course. The neuropathogenesis of viral infection revolves around neurotoxins produced from infected and immune-activated mononuclear phagocytes (MP; perivascular macrophages and microglia). Direct infection of neurons occurs rarely, if at all. Neurologic disease arises in part ...
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Luebke Robert W - - 2004
A number of regulatory agencies in western Europe, Japan and the United States now include guidelines for evaluating the potential immunotoxicity of chemicals, including drugs, as part of routine toxicity testing. Most testing guidelines recommend observational or functional assays that, based on studies in laboratory animals, are able to detect ...
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Taruishi Midori - - 2004
About 90% of HIV-1 RNA in the lymph nodes is reported to localize in follicular dendritic cellsnetwork (FDC-NW) as early as several days after infection and as much as that in the late stage. But the mechanism remains to be fully understood. To elucidate the role of follicular dendritic cells ...
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Torti Carlo - - 2004
Correlates of immune reconstitution after highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) are not completely understood, in particular as far as viro-immunological discordant responses are concerned. HIV-positive patients on stable HAART for > or = 1 year were recruited. Viro-immunological responses were categorized according to positive or negative area under the curve ...
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Princen Katrien - - 2004
BACKGROUND: CCR5 and CXCR4 are the two main coreceptors essential for HIV entry. Therefore, these chemokine receptors have become important targets in the search for anti-HIV agents. Here, we describe the establishment of a novel CD4+ cell line, U87.CD4.CCR5.CXCR4, stably expressing both CCR5 and CXCR4 at the cell surface. RESULTS: ...
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Ahr Barbara - - 2004
Apoptosis, or programmed cell death, is a key event in biologic homeostasis but is also involved in the pathogenesis of many human diseases including human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Although multiple mechanisms contribute to the gradual T cell decline that occurs in HIV-infected patients, programmed cell death of uninfected bystander ...
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Ganesh Lakshmanan - - 2003
Although human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) infects quiescent and proliferating CD4+ lymphocytes, the virus replicates poorly in resting T cells. Factors that block viral replication in these cells might help to prolong the asymptomatic phase of HIV infection; however, the molecular mechanisms that control this process are not fully understood. Here ...
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Vázquez-Blomquist Dania - - 2003
Recombinant avipoxvirus vectors are attractive for vaccination against human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), where induction of a cytotoxic CD8(+) T cell (CTL) response seems to be an important component of protective immunity. We expressed the chimeric protein CR3, composed by CTL epitopes rich regions from, RT, Gag and Nef ...
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Lederman Howard M - - 2003
Immune function was observed for 144 weeks in 643 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected subjects who (1) had nadir CD4+ cell counts of <50 cells/mm3, followed by a sustained increase to > or =100 cells/mm3 after the initiation of HAART, and (2) were enrolled in a randomized trial of continued azithromycin ...
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Castedo Maria - - 2003
The envelope glycoprotein complex (Env), encoded by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1), kills uninfected cells expressing CD4 and/or the chemokine receptor CXCR4 or CCR5, via at least three independent mechanisms. First, the soluble Env product gp120 can induce the apoptotic cell death of lymphocytes, neurons, and myocardiocytes, via interaction with ...
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Abdelwahab Sayed F - - 2003
CD4+ T cells are required for immunity against many viral infections, including HIV-1 where a positive correlation has been observed between strong recall responses and low HIV-1 viral loads. Some HIV-1-specific CD4+ T cells are preferentially infected with HIV-1, whereas others escape infection by unknown mechanisms. One possibility is that ...
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Warby Tammra J - - 2003
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infects cells of the monocyte/macrophage lineage. While infection of macrophages by HIV-1 is generally not cytopathic, it does impair macrophage function. In this study, we examined the effect of HIV-1 infection on intracellular signaling in human monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM) stimulated with the growth factor ...
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Persidsky Yuri - - 2003
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-associated dementia is a neuroinflammatory brain disorder that is fueled by viral infection and immune activation of brain mononuclear phagocytes (MP; macrophages and microglia). MP serve as a reservoir for persistent viral infection, a vehicle for viral dissemination throughout the brain, and a major source ...
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Ezell T N - - 2003
TNF-alpha is a pro-inflammatory cytokine that plays a key role in disorders due to HIV-1 infection and replication such as Kaposi sarcoma, wasting, aphthous ulcerations and progression to AIDS. The controversial drug thalidomide is anti-inflammatory, anti-angiogenic and a selective inhibitor of TNF-alpha that is being studied as a treatment for ...
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Wang JiangFang - - 2004
The chemokine receptor, CXCR4, serves as the primary coreceptor for entry of T-cell tropic human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Binding of either the CXC-chemokine, stromal-derived factor 1 alpha (SDF-1 alpha), or a CXCR4 antagonist, AMD3100, to CXCR4 inhibits infection of CD4(+) T cells by T-tropic HIV-1, although only SDF-1 alpha triggers ...
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Dianzani Umberto - - 2003
Direct cytopathic effects cannot explain the massive CD4+ T cell depletion in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients and several indirect mechanisms may be involved. A role has been proposed for apoptosis of uninfected lymphocytes, since lymphocytes from human immunodeficiency virus-1+ (HIV-1) individuals display increased levels of spontaneous apoptosis. This process ...
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Lange Christoph G - - 2003
OBJECTIVE: To ascertain whether delaying the initiation of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) compromises functional immune reconstitution in HIV-1 infection in persons who regain 'normal' CD4 T-cell counts after suppressive antiretroviral therapies. DESIGN: Prospective open-label study carried out at two University-affiliated HIV-outpatient clinics in the USA. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Response ...
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