Search results for "CELL INTERACTIONS"

showing 10 items of 54 documents

Improvement in Nuclear Entry and Transgene Expression of Baculoviruses by Disintegration of Microtubules in Human Hepatocytes

2005

ABSTRACT Autographa californica multicapsid nucleopolyhedrovirus (AcMNPV), a potent virus for mammalian cell gene delivery, possesses an ability to transduce mammalian cells without viral replication. We examined the role of the cellular cytoskeleton in the cytoplasmic trafficking of viral particles toward the nucleus in human hepatic cells. Microscopic studies showed that capsids were found in the nucleus after either viral inoculation or cytoplasmic microinjection of nucleocapsids. The presence of microtubule (MT) depolymerizing agents caused the amount of nuclear capsids to increase. Overexpression of p50/dynamitin, an inhibitor of dynein-dependent endocytic trafficking from peripheral e…

EndosomeMicrotubule-associated proteinvirusesImmunologyEndocytic cycleGenetic VectorsActive Transport Cell NucleusGene ExpressionBiologyGene deliveryMicrobiologyMicrotubulesCell Linechemistry.chemical_compoundTransduction GeneticVirologyHumansNucleocapsidCytoskeletonDynactin Complexbeta-GalactosidaseMolecular biologyNucleopolyhedrovirusesRecombinant ProteinsVirus-Cell InteractionsNocodazoleMicroscopy ElectronViral replicationchemistryLac OperonCell cultureCytoplasmInsect ScienceHepatocytesMicrotubule-Associated Proteins
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Differential effects of anti-TNF-α and anti-IL-12/23 agents on human leukocyte–endothelial cell interactions

2015

AbstractEnhanced leukocyte recruitment is an inflammatory process that occurs during early phases of the vascular dysfunction that characterises atherosclerosis. We evaluated the impact of anti-TNF-α (adalimumab, infliximab and etanercept) and anti-IL-12/23 (ustekinumab) on interactions between human leukocytes and endothelial cells in a flow chamber that reproduced in vivo conditions. Clinical concentrations of anti-TNF-α were evaluated on the leukocyte recruitment induced by a variety of endothelial (TNF-α, interleukin-1β, lymphotoxin-α and angiotensin-II) and leukocyte (PAF, IL-12 and IL-23) stimuli related to inflammation and atherosclerosis. Treatment with anti-TNF-α, even before or af…

EndotheliumInflammationAnti-IL-12/23 agentsCardiovascular side effectsBiologicsInterleukin-23Rheumatic diseasesIn vivoPsoriasisHuman Umbilical Vein Endothelial CellsInterleukin 23HumansMedicineAnti-TNF-α agentsPharmacologyTumor Necrosis Factor-alphabusiness.industryCell adhesion moleculeAdalimumabEndothelial Cellsmedicine.diseaseInterleukin-12Leukocyte–endothelial cell interactionsEndothelial stem cellmedicine.anatomical_structureImmunologyLeukocytes MononuclearTumor necrosis factor alphamedicine.symptombusinessEuropean Journal of Pharmacology
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Promoter-Targeted Histone Acetylation of Chromatinized Parvoviral Genome Is Essential for the Progress of Infection

2015

ABSTRACT The association of host histones with parvoviral DNA is poorly understood. We analyzed the chromatinization and histone acetylation of canine parvovirus DNA during infection by confocal imaging and in situ proximity ligation assay combined with chromatin immunoprecipitation and high-throughput sequencing. We found that during late infection, parvovirus replication bodies were rich in histones bearing modifications characteristic of transcriptionally active chromatin, i.e., histone H3 lysine 27 acetylation (H3K27ac). H3K27ac, in particular, was located in close proximity to the viral DNA-binding protein NS1. Importantly, our results show for the first time that in the chromatinized …

Gene Expression Regulation Viral0301 basic medicineParvovirus CanineVirus IntegrationvirusesImmunologyGenome ViralMicrobiologyCell LineEpigenesis Geneticviral DNAHistonesParvoviridae Infections03 medical and health sciencesHistone H3VirologyAnimalsHistone codeNucleosomePromoter Regions GeneticEpigenomicsMicroscopy ConfocalbiologyLysinecanine parvovirushistone acetylationAcetylationHistone acetyltransferaseVirologyChromatinchromatinizationVirus-Cell Interactions3. Good healthChromatin030104 developmental biologyHistoneInsect ScienceDNA ViralCatsbiology.proteinChromatin immunoprecipitationJournal of Virology
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Role for Tumor Necrosis Factor Alpha in Murine Cytomegalovirus Transcriptional Reactivation in Latently Infected Lungs

2004

ABSTRACT Interstitial pneumonia is a major clinical manifestation of primary or recurrent cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection in immunocompromised recipients of a bone marrow transplant. In a murine model, lungs were identified as a prominent site of CMV latency and recurrence. Pulmonary latency of murine CMV is characterized by high viral genome burden and a low incidence of variegated immediate-early (IE) gene expression, reflecting a sporadic activity of the major IE promoters (MIEPs) and enhancer. The enhancer-flanking promoters MIEP1/3 and MIEP2 are switched on and off during latency in a ratio of ∼2:1. MIEP1/3 latency-associated activity generates the IE1 transcript of the ie1/3 transcrip…

Gene Expression Regulation ViralHuman cytomegalovirusMuromegalovirusTranscription GeneticImmunologyBiologyMicrobiologyImmediate early proteinImmediate-Early ProteinsMiceViral ProteinsTransactivationVirologyGene expressionVirus latencymedicineAnimalsHumansEnhancerLungBone Marrow TransplantationMice Inbred BALB CTumor Necrosis Factor-alphaAlternative splicingPromoterHerpesviridae Infectionsmedicine.diseaseVirologyVirus LatencyVirus-Cell InteractionsDisease Models AnimalTransplantation IsogeneicInsect ScienceFemaleVirus ActivationJournal of Virology
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Role for calnexin and N-linked glycosylation in the assembly and secretion of hepatitis B virus middle envelope protein particles.

1998

ABSTRACT Unlike those of the S and the L envelope proteins, the functional role of the related M protein in the life cycle of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) is less understood. We now demonstrate that a single N glycan, specific for M, is required for efficient secretion of M empty envelope particles. Moreover, this glycan mediates specific association of M with the chaperone calnexin. Conversely, the N glycan, common to all three envelope proteins, is involved neither in calnexin binding nor in subviral particle release. As proper folding and trafficking of M need the assistance of the chaperone, the glycan-dependent association of M with calnexin may thus play a crucial role in the assembly …

GlycanHepatitis B virusGlycosylationGlycosylationCalnexinImmunologyBiologymedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologychemistry.chemical_compoundCytosolN-linked glycosylationViral Envelope ProteinsVirologyCalnexinmedicineAnimalsSecretionPeptide sequenceHepatitis B virusBase SequenceCalcium-Binding ProteinsVirus-Cell Interactionscarbohydrates (lipids)BiochemistrychemistryOligodeoxyribonucleotidesInsect ScienceChaperone (protein)COS Cellsbiology.proteinMutagenesis Site-DirectedJournal of virology
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Mutations in DNA Binding and Transactivation Domains Affect the Dynamics of Parvovirus NS1 Protein

2013

ABSTRACT The multifunctional replication protein of autonomous parvoviruses, NS1, is vital for viral genome replication and for the control of viral protein production. Two DNA-interacting domains of NS1, the N-terminal and helicase domains, are necessary for these functions. In addition, the N and C termini of NS1 are required for activation of viral promoter P38. By comparison with the structural and biochemical data from other parvoviruses, we identified potential DNA-interacting amino acid residues from canine parvovirus NS1. The role of the identified amino acids in NS1 binding dynamics was studied by mutagenesis, fluorescence recovery after photobleaching, and computer simulations. Mu…

HMG-boxParvovirus CaninevirusesImmunologyDNA Mutational AnalysisMutation MissenseNS1 proteiiniViral Nonstructural ProteinsVirus ReplicationMicrobiologyNS1 proteinSingle-stranded binding proteinCell LineSeqA protein domainVirologyAnimalsDNA bindingReplication protein AbiologyTer proteinparvovirusvirus diseasesDNAn sitoutuminen [DNA]biochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionMolecular biologyCell biologyVirus-Cell InteractionsProtein Structure TertiaryDNA binding siteDNA-Binding ProteinsInsect Sciencebiology.proteinMutant ProteinsViral genome replicationBinding domainProtein Binding
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Hepatitis B Virus Large Envelope Protein Interacts with γ2-Adaptin, a Clathrin Adaptor-Related Protein

2001

ABSTRACT For the outcome of a hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, the viral L envelope protein with its pre-S domain performs pivotal functions by mediating attachment of HBV to liver cells, envelopment of viral capsids, release of (sub)viral particles, regulation of supercoiled DNA amplification, and transcriptional transactivation. To assess its multiple functions and host-protein assistance involved, we initiated a two-hybrid screen using the L-specific pre-S1 domain as bait. With this approach, we have identified γ2-adaptin, a putative member of the clathrin adaptor proteins responsible for protein sorting and trafficking, as a specific binding partner of L protein. Evidence for a physic…

Hepatitis B virusVesicle-associated membrane protein 8ImmunoprecipitationImmunologyGolgi ApparatusTransfectionmedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyClathrinChromatography AffinityCytosolViral Envelope ProteinsMutant proteinYeastsVirologyProtein targetingmedicineAnimalsBinding siteAdaptor Protein Complex gamma SubunitsBinding SitesbiologyMembrane ProteinsPrecipitin TestsClathrinTransmembrane proteinVirus-Cell InteractionsCell biologyInsect ScienceCOS CellsMutationbiology.proteinClathrin adaptor proteinsProtein BindingJournal of Virology
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Characterization of cell lines carrying self-replicating hepatitis C virus RNAs.

2001

ABSTRACT Subgenomic selectable RNAs of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) have recently been shown to self-replicate to high levels in the human hepatoma cell line Huh-7 (V. Lohmann, F. Körner, J. O. Koch, U. Herian, L. Theilmann, and R. Bartenschlager, Science 285:110–113, 1999). Taking advantage of this cell culture system that allows analyses of the interplay between HCV replication and the host cell, in this study we characterized two replicon-harboring cell lines that have been cultivated for more than 1 year. During this time, we observed no signs of cytopathogenicity such as reduction of growth rates or ultrastructural changes. High levels of HCV RNAs were preserved in cells passaged under…

Hepatitis C virusImmunoelectron microscopyImmunologyHepacivirusBiologyViral Nonstructural Proteinsmedicine.disease_causeVirus ReplicationMicrobiologyViral ProteinsVirologymedicineTumor Cells CulturedHumansRepliconPhosphorylationNS5ARNAVirologyMolecular biologyVirus-Cell InteractionsNS2-3 proteaseViral replicationCell cultureInsect ScienceRNA ViralRepliconJournal of virology
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Polo-like kinase 1 as a target for human cytomegalovirus pp65 lower matrix protein

1999

ABSTRACT Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) pp65 protein is the major constituent of viral dense bodies but is dispensable for viral growth in vitro. pp65 copurifies with a S/T kinase activity and has been implicated in phosphorylation of HCMV IE1 immediate-early protein and its escape from major histocompatibility complex 1 presentation. Furthermore, the presence of pp65 correlates with a virion-associated kinase activity. To clarify the role of pp65, yeast two-hybrid system (THS) screening was performed to identify pp65 cellular partners. A total of 18 out of 48 yeast clones harboring cDNAs for putative pp65 binding proteins encoded the Polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1) C-terminal domain. Plk1 behaved …

Human cytomegalovirusvirusesRecombinant Fusion ProteinsImmunologyCytomegalovirusCell Cycle ProteinsPolo-like kinaseBiologyProtein Serine-Threonine KinasesMicrobiologyDNA-binding proteinPLK1Cell LineViral Matrix ProteinsVirologyProto-Oncogene ProteinsmedicineAnimalsHumansKinase activityViral matrix proteinKinasevirus diseasesmedicine.diseasePhosphoproteinsMolecular biologyVirus-Cell Interactionssurgical procedures operativeInsect ScienceCOS CellsPhosphorylationProtein KinasesHeLa Cells
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Inhibition of Transfer to Secondary Receptors by Heparan Sulfate-Binding Drug or Antibody Induces Noninfectious Uptake of Human Papillomavirus

2007

ABSTRACT Infection with various human papillomaviruses (HPVs) induces cervical cancers. Cell surface heparan sulfates (HS) have been shown to serve as primary attachment receptors, and molecules with structural similarity to cell surface HS, like heparin, function as competitive inhibitors of HPV infection. Here we demonstrate that the N , N ′-bisheteryl derivative of dispirotripiperazine, DSTP27, efficiently blocks papillomavirus infection by binding to HS moieties, with 50% inhibitory doses of up to 0.4 μg/ml. In contrast to short-term inhibitory effects of heparin, pretreatment of cells with DSTP27 significantly reduced HPV infection for more than 30 h. Using DSTP27 and heparinase, we fu…

ImmunologyEndocytosisBinding CompetitiveMicrobiologyAntibodiesCell LineExtracellular matrixLamininVirologyHumansReceptorPapillomaviridaeOxadiazolesHeparinasebiologyMolecular biologyEndocytosisVirus-Cell InteractionsPyrimidinesEndocytic vesicleCell cultureInsect Sciencebiology.proteinReceptors VirusHeparan sulfate bindingHeparitin SulfateHeparan Sulfate ProteoglycansJournal of Virology
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