9 results on '"Kannangai, Rajesh"'
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2. Heterogeneity and Hierarchy of Immune Response to Primary Immunization in HIV-Infected Children on HAART and the Impact of an Additional Dose of Vaccine
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Mathew, Sonia, Alex, Diviya, Demosthenes, John Paul, Rose, Winsley, Chacko, Anila, Kompithra, Rajeev Zachariah, Ramalingam, Veena Vadhini, Prakash, John Antony Jude, Mathai, John, Fletcher, Gnanadurai John, Abraham, Priya, Verghese, Valsan Philip, and Kannangai, Rajesh
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- 2025
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3. Viral Infections in Immunocompromised Hosts
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Ramamurthy, Mageshbabu, Kannangai, Rajesh, Abraham, Asha Mary, and Sridharan, Gopalan
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- 2012
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4. Internal quality control for HIV testing of blood donors - Dried tube specimen as a cost-effective alternative.
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Dhoot, Ashish, Mammen, Joy, Mathews, Nitty, Kannangai, Rajesh, Daniel, Dolly, and Prasannakumar, S
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DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections ,BLOOD chemical analysis ,BLOOD banks ,MEDICAL screening ,BLOOD collection ,QUALITY assurance ,COST analysis ,ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
BACKGROUND: An important aspect of ensuring blood safety is the performance of mandatory serological testing for transfusion transmissible infections. The practice of internal quality control (IQC) in blood banks in India is nonuniform, especially the use of third-party materials. Cited reasons are cost, lack of access to control materials, and need for deep-freezers for storage, if prepared in-house. OBJECTIVE: Validation of dried tube specimen (DTS) from HIV-positive plasma as a low-cost, stable material for use as IQC material in blood banks. METHODS: Fresh-frozen plasma (FFP) prepared from four HIV-positive blood-donors were pooled. Equal numbers of seronegative FFPs were pooled. Twenty microlitre aliquots of plasma were made in micro-centrifuge tubes and air-dried overnight at room-temperature. These were stored in 2–8°C refrigerators and tested once weekly for 6 months on multiple platforms with different detection principles: Rapid tests, second-generation enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), fourth-generation ELISA, and fourth-generation Chemiluminescence immunoassay. The protocol was sustained over the next 6 months with decreased testing frequency to study the extended stability of DTS. RESULTS: A total of 139 positive-DTS and 139 negative-DTS were tested with 100% samples showing consistent results on all platforms over 1 year. There was mild deterioration in reaction strengths, which did not interfere in result interpretations. CONCLUSION: Plasma in form of DTS maintained stability when stored at 2–8°C for 1 year. This provides evidence that DTS can be a modality for the production of cost-effective, stable, in-house control material for resource-restricted countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. The CCR5 Gene Edited CD34+CD90+ Hematopoietic Stem Cell Population Serves as an Optimal Graft Source for HIV Gene Therapy.
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Karuppusamy, Karthik V., Demosthenes, John Paul, Venkatesan, Vigneshwaran, Christopher, Abisha Crystal, Babu, Prathibha, Azhagiri, Manojkumar K., Jacob, Annlin, Ramalingam, Veena Vadhini, Rangaraj, Sumathi, Murugesan, Mohankumar Kumarasamypet, Marepally, Srujan Kumar, Varghese, George M., Srivastava, Alok, Kannangai, Rajesh, and Thangavel, Saravanabhavan
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HEMATOPOIETIC stem cells ,GENOME editing ,GENE therapy ,CHEMOKINE receptors ,CELL populations - Abstract
Transplantation of allogenic hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) with C-C chemokine receptor type 5 (CCR5) Δ32 genotype generates HIV-1 resistant immune cells. CCR5 gene edited autologous HSPCs can be a potential alternative to hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) from HLA-matched CCR5 null donor. However, the clinical application of gene edited autologous HSPCs is critically limited by the quality of the graft, as HIV also infects the HSPCs. In this study, by using mobilized HSPCs from healthy donors, we show that the CD34
+ CD90+ hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) express 7-fold lower CD4/CCR5 HIV receptors, higher levels of SAMHD1 anti-viral restriction factor, and possess lower susceptibility to HIV infection than the CD34+ CD90- hematopoietic progenitor cells. Further, the treatment with small molecule cocktail of Resveratrol, UM729 and SR1(RUS) improved the in vivo engraftment potential of CD34+ CD90+ HSCs. To demonstrate that CD34+ CD90+ HSC population as an ideal graft for HIV gene therapy, we sort purified CD34+ CD90+ HSCs, treated with RUS and then gene edited the CCR5 with single sgRNA. On transplantation, 100,000 CD34+ CD90+ HSCs were sufficient for long-term repopulation of the entire bone marrow of NBSGW mice. Importantly, the gene editing efficiency of ~90% in the infused product was maintained in vivo , facilitating the generation of CCR5 null immune cells, resistant to HIV infection. Altogether, CCR5 gene editing of CD34+ CD90+ HSCs provide an ideal gene manipulation strategy for autologous HSCT based gene therapy for HIV infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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6. The performance of reverse transcriptase assay for the estimation of the plasma viral load in HIV-1 and HIV-2 infections.
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Padaki, Priyadarshini A., Sachithanandham, Jaiprasath, Isaac, Rita, Ramalingam, Veena V., Abraham, Ooriapadickal C., Pulimood, Susanne A., and Kannangai, Rajesh
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Viral load testing for human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) in resource-poor settings continues to be a challenge. Although antiretroviral therapy (ART) is being made available in developing countries, monitoring of viral load is not being done on a regular basis. The purpose of this study was to assess the utility of Cavidi version 3.0, which measures the plasma reverse transcriptase (RT) activity and compare its performance with molecular HIV viral load assays. In all, 125 HIV-1 and 13 HIV-2 positive samples were analyzed. The overall sensitivity of the assay was 86.8% and 94.1% for viral load >1000 copies/ml measured by Qiagen Artus HIV-1 RG RT PCR and Abbott RealTime HIV-1 PCR assays, respectively. Compared with the routine molecular viral load assays, Cavidi version 3.0 is inexpensive, user-friendly, the expenditure on infrastructure is minimal, and it can be used for monitoring of both HIV types. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2016
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7. HIV-1 with Predicted CXCR4 Genotype Identified in Clade C from India.
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Kandathil, Abraham Joseph, Kannangai, Rajesh, Abraham, Oriapadickal Cherian, Pulimood, Susanne Alexander, Jensen, Mark A., and Sridharan, Gopalan
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HIV , *HIV infections , *ANTIRETROVIRAL agents , *AMINO acids - Abstract
Background and objective: HIV-1 uses co-receptors CCR5 and CXCR4 in addition to CD4 for viral entry into cells. CCR5 is used in the early stages of HIV-1 infection, but viruses that utilize CXCR4 for viral entry emerge in the later stages. This is not common among clade Cstrains, with previous data from India showing the absence of the emergence of CXCR4-using strains. Sequence analysis has demonstrated that the V3 loop plays a very important role in determining the syncytium-inducing (SI) phenotype. The V3 region of the SI variants were observed to have positively charged amino acids at positions 11 and/or 25 and also a overall higher charge. This study looked at co-receptor usage among HIV-1 strains in India from individuals who were antiretroviral therapy (ART) naïve and those not responding to ART. Methods: Amplification and sequencing of the HIV-1 env gp120 V3 region was done on 40 ART-naïve individuals, who were selected for the study based on their CD4 counts, and eight patients who had not responded to ART. The sequences were submitted to Geno2Pheno and Web PSSM. The pol gene sequences of these strains were submitted to the REGA HIV-1 subtyping tool. Results: Forty-seven strains were identified as clade C and one strain as clade A1. Geno2Pheno identified three CXCR4-using strains, and the Web PSSM clade C matrix identified two. Conclusion: We report, for the first time, CXCR4-using strains among HIV-1 clade C strains circulating in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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8. Chemokine profile among human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) infected individuals from southern India.
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Ramalingam, Sandeep, Kannangai, Rajesh, Abraham, O. C., Subramanian, Swaminathan, Rupali, Priscilla, Pulimood, S. A., Jesudason, Mary V., and Sridharan, Gopalan
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CHEMOKINES , *HIV-positive persons , *PROTEINS , *HIV - Abstract
Background & objectives: Individuals infected with HIV-1 have higher levels of chemokine producing cells compared to uninfected individuals. It is important to know the changes in chemokine levels associated with rate of progression of disease. There is a paucity of information on the plasma chemokines in HIV-1 infected individuals from India. We therefore carried out this study to estimate the levels of three chemokines namely macrophage inflammatory protein alpha (MIP1α), MIP1β and RANTES, in relation to disease status in HIV-1 infected individuals and compared with uninfected individuals. Methods: RANTES and MIP1α were estimated using ELISA in 114 HIV-1 infected and 30 controls, whereas MIP1β was estimated in 101 HIV infected individuals only and 30 controls. The values were compared to the T cell subsets, HIV-1 viral loads and plasma cytokines (interferon gamma and interleukin-10). Results: Compared to controls the mean MIP1α and RANTES level among the HIV-1 infected individuals was higher while MIP1β level was lower in HIV infected individuals except CDC C groups. There was a significant positive correlation for MIP1á with HIV-1 viral load and IFNγ, for MIP1α with viral load and IL10. There was a significant negative correlation between MIP1 a with CD4 count and CD4: CD8 ratio and MIP1 b with CD4 count and CD8 count. There was a negative correlation between RANTES values and CD8 per cent. Interpretation & conclusions: In conclusion, our study showed a significantly higher level of b chemokines in south Indian HIV-1 infected individuals compared to controls. These b chemokines may have the inhibitory effect on HIV-1 only during the initial period and with the progression of disease this inhibitory effect wanes as shown by the positive correlation of b chemokines with HIV-1 viral load. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
9. Symptomatic HIV CNS viral escape among patients on effective cART.
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Manesh, Abi, Barnabas, Rohit, Mani, Sunithi, Karthik, Rajiv, Abraham, O.C., Chacko, Geeta, Kannangai, Rajesh, and Varghese, George M.
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TREMOR , *ENCEPHALITIS , *HIV-positive persons , *CENTRAL nervous system , *ESCAPES , *HIV , *VIRAL encephalitis - Abstract
• Symptomatic HIV CNS viral escape presents as a global cerebral syndrome in treatment experienced patients. • Atazanavir and Tenofovir may be associated with CNS viral escape due to poor CNS penetration. • CNS viral escape produces a CD8 predominant inflammation in the CNS. • Appropriate change of cART improves symptoms in most patients. The clinical syndrome in symptomatic HIV associated CNS viral escape is poorly defined. We attempted to describe the clinical syndrome, laboratory profile, radiological features and outcomes of HIV infected patients with symptomatic central nervous system (CNS) viral escape in our study. This is a retrospective study were adult patients with HIV infection on cART admitted with a diagnosis of CD8 encephalitis or CNS viral escape in a large teaching hospital in South India was identified. The mean age of the eleven patients included in the study was 37.5 years. Most patients had received almost a decade of antiretroviral treatment at diagnosis (mean: 11.18 years). All patients presented with global cerebral syndrome. Cognitive decline, tremors, and headaches were common manifestations. All patients had lymphocytic pleocytosis (mean cell count: 44.63 cells/ml; lymphocyte percentage: 94.81%) with elevated protein (mean: 125.36 mg/dl). All patients were on boosted protease inhibitors (81.8% on Atazanavir and 18.18% Lopinavir). All except one patient was on Tenofovir and lamivudine combination therapy. White matter changes and deep brain nuclei involvement were common. Most patients required a change of cART to regimens with better CNS penetration and suppression of the resistant virus in the plasma and improved. CNS viral escape should be considered as a differential among patients on Atazanavir presenting with non-focal cerebral syndrome and CSF lymphocytic pleocytosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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