27 results on '"Deena Ratner"'
Search Results
2. Effective Cytotoxic T Lymphocyte Targeting of Persistent HIV-1 during Antiretroviral Therapy Requires Priming of Naive CD8+ T Cells
- Author
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Kellie N. Smith, Robbie B. Mailliard, Paolo A. Piazza, Will Fischer, Bette T. Korber, Ronald J. Fecek, Deena Ratner, Phalguni Gupta, James I. Mullins, and Charles R. Rinaldo
- Subjects
Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Curing HIV-1 infection will require elimination of persistent cellular reservoirs that harbor latent virus in the face of combination antiretroviral therapy (cART). Proposed immunotherapeutic strategies to cure HIV-1 infection include enhancing lysis of these infected cells by cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). A major challenge in this strategy is overcoming viral immune escape variants that have evaded host immune control. Here we report that naive CD8+ T cells from chronic HIV-1-infected participants on long-term cART can be primed by dendritic cells (DC). These DC must be mature, produce high levels of interleukin 12p70 (IL-12p70), be responsive to CD40 ligand (CD40L), and be loaded with inactivated, autologous HIV-1. These DC-primed CD8+ T cell responders produced high levels of gamma interferon (IFN-γ) in response to a broad range of both conserved and variable regions of Gag and effectively killed CD4+ T cell targets that were either infected with the autologous latent reservoir-associated virus or loaded with autologous Gag peptides. In contrast, HIV-1-specific memory CD8+ T cells stimulated with autologous HIV-1-loaded DC produced IFN-γ in response to a narrow range of conserved and variable Gag peptides compared to the primed T cells and most notably, displayed significantly lower cytolytic function. Our findings highlight the need to selectively induce new HIV-1-specific CTL from naive precursors while avoiding activation of existing, dysfunctional memory T cells in potential curative immunotherapeutic strategies for HIV-1 infection. IMPORTANCE Current immunotherapeutic approaches aim to enhance antiviral immunity against the HIV-1 reservoir; however, it has yet to be shown whether T cells from persons on cART can recognize and eliminate virus-infected cells. We show that in persons on cART a personalized medicine approach using their dendritic cells to stimulate their naive T cells induces potent effector CTL in vitro that recognize and eradicate HIV-1-infected CD4+ T cells. Additionally, we show that the same stimulation of existing memory T cells results in cytokine secretion but limited effector function. Our study demonstrates that the naive T cell repertoire can recognize persistent HIV-1 during cART and supports immunotherapy strategies for an HIV-1 cure that targets naive T cells, rather than existing, dysfunctional, memory T cells.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Evaluation of cervical mucosa in transmission bottleneck during acute HIV-1 infection using a cervical tissue-based organ culture.
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Chengli Shen, Ming Ding, Deena Ratner, Ronald C Montelaro, Yue Chen, and Phalguni Gupta
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Although there are different strains of HIV-1 in a chronically infected individual, only one or limited virus strains are successfully transmitted to a new individual. The reason for this "transmission bottleneck" is as yet unknown.A human cervical explant model was used to measure HIV-1 transmission efficiency of viral strains from chronic infections, and transmitter/founder variants. We also evaluated the genetic characteristics of HIV-1 variants in the inoculums compared to those transmitted across the cervical mucosa. Eight different HIV-1 isolates were used in this study, six chronic isolates and two transmitter/founder viruses. The transmission efficiency of the chronic and transmitter/founder virus isolates and the viral diversity of chronic isolates before and after viral transmission were assessed. The results indicate that transmitter/founder viruses did not display higher transmission efficiency than chronic HIV-1 isolates. Furthermore, no evidence for a difference in diversity was found between the inoculums and transmitted virus strains. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the sequences of variants in the inoculums and those present in transmitted virus intermingled irrespective of co-receptor usage. In addition, the inoculum and transmitted variants had a similar pairwise distance distribution.There was no selection of a single or limited number of viral variants during HIV-1 transmission across the cervical mucosa in the organ culture model, indicating that the cervical mucosa alone may not produce the transmission bottleneck of HIV-1 infection observed in vivo.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The formulated microbicide RC-101 was safe and antivirally active following intravaginal application in pigtailed macaques.
- Author
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Alexander M Cole, Dorothy L Patton, Lisa C Rohan, Amy L Cole, Yvonne Cosgrove-Sweeney, Nicole A Rogers, Deena Ratner, Alexandra B Sassi, Carol Lackman-Smith, Patrick Tarwater, Bharat Ramratnam, Piotr Ruchala, Robert I Lehrer, Alan J Waring, and Phalguni Gupta
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
RC-101 is a congener of the antiretroviral peptide retrocyclin, which we and others have reported is active against clinical HIV-1 isolates from all major clades, does not hemagglutinate, and is non-toxic and non-inflammatory in cervicovaginal cell culture. Herein, film-formulated RC-101 was assessed for its antiviral activity in vitro, safety in vivo, retention in the cervix and vagina, and ability to remain active against HIV-1 and SHIV after intravaginal application in macaques.RC-101 was formulated as a quick-dissolving film (2000 µg/film), retained complete activity in vitro as compared to unformulated peptide, and was applied intravaginally in six pigtailed macaques daily for four days. At one and four days following the final application, the presence of RC-101 was assessed in peripheral blood, cervicovaginal lavage, cytobrushed cervicovaginal cells, and biopsied cervical and vaginal tissues by quantitative western blots. One day following the last film application, cervical biopsies from RC-101-exposed and placebo-controlled macaques were collected and were subjected to challenge with RT-SHIV in an ex vivo organ culture model. RC-101 peptide was detected primarily in the cytobrush and biopsied cervical and vaginal tissues, with little to no peptide detected in lavage samples, suggesting that the peptide was associated with the cervicovaginal epithelia. RC-101 remained in the tissues and cytobrush samples up to four days post-application, yet was not detected in any sera or plasma samples. RC-101, extracted from cytobrushes obtained one day post-application, remained active against HIV-1 BaL. Importantly, cervical biopsies from RC-101-treated animals reduced RT-SHIV replication in ex vivo organ culture as compared to placebo-treated animals.Formulated RC-101 was stable in vivo and was retained in the mucosa. The presence of antivirally active RC-101 after five days in vivo suggests that RC-101 would be an important molecule to develop further as a topical microbicide to prevent HIV-1 transmission.
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- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Abasic Phosphorothioate Oligomers Inhibit HIV-1 Reverse Transcription and Block Virus Transmission across Polarized Ectocervical Organ Cultures
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Isaac Zentner, Sharon H. Anderson, Carol Lackman-Smith, Beth A. Snyder, Suhman Chung, Yvonne M. Mueller, Karissa Lozenski, Aidan S Hancock, Irwin Chaiken, Stuart F. J. LeGrice, Deena Ratner, Alina C. Boesteanu, Phalguni Gupta, Marie K. Mankowski, Jennifer L. Hope, Natalie M. Jones, Joseph A. Fraietta, Brian Wigdahl, and Peter D. Katsikis
- Subjects
Male ,Receptors, CXCR4 ,Receptors, CCR5 ,Protein Data Bank (RCSB PDB) ,Gene Expression ,Phosphorothioate Oligonucleotides ,Cervix Uteri ,Biology ,Antiviral Agents ,Virus ,Mice ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Organ Culture Techniques ,Immune system ,In vivo ,Viral entry ,Animals ,Humans ,Structure–activity relationship ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Pharmacology ,Mucous Membrane ,Deoxyribose ,Epithelial Cells ,Reverse Transcription ,Virus Internalization ,Virology ,Reverse transcriptase ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Microbicides for sexually transmitted diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,Vagina ,HIV-1 ,Sperm Motility ,Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors ,Female - Abstract
In the absence of universally available antiretroviral (ARV) drugs or a vaccine against HIV-1, microbicides may offer the most immediate hope for controlling the AIDS pandemic. The most advanced and clinically effective microbicides are based on ARV agents that interfere with the earliest stages of HIV-1 replication. Our objective was to identify and characterize novel ARV-like inhibitors, as well as demonstrate their efficacy at blocking HIV-1 transmission. Abasic phosphorothioate 2′ deoxyribose backbone (PDB) oligomers were evaluated in a variety of mechanistic assays and for their ability to inhibit HIV-1 infection and virus transmission through primary human cervical mucosa. Cellular and biochemical assays were used to elucidate the antiviral mechanisms of action of PDB oligomers against both lab-adapted and primary CCR5- and CXCR4-utilizing HIV-1 strains, including a multidrug-resistant isolate. A polarized cervical organ culture was used to test the ability of PDB compounds to block HIV-1 transmission to primary immune cell populations across ectocervical tissue. The antiviral activity and mechanisms of action of PDB-based compounds were dependent on oligomer size, with smaller molecules preventing reverse transcription and larger oligomers blocking viral entry. Importantly, irrespective of molecular size, PDBs potently inhibited virus infection and transmission within genital tissue samples. Furthermore, the PDB inhibitors exhibited excellent toxicity and stability profiles and were found to be safe for vaginal application in vivo . These results, coupled with the previously reported intrinsic anti-inflammatory properties of PDBs, support further investigations in the development of PDB-based topical microbicides for preventing the global spread of HIV-1.
- Published
- 2014
6. Novel assay reveals a large, inducible, replication-competent HIV-1 reservoir in resting CD4
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Ming Ding, Jennifer M. Zerbato, Bruce K. Patterson, Nicolas Sluis-Cremer, Phalguni Gupta, Anwesha Sanyal, Amanda Chargin, Narasimhan J. Venkatachari, Nicholas S. Giacobbi, Deena Ratner, Yue Chen, Charles R. Rinaldo, and Robbie B. Mailliard
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Adult ,CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Male ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Cell ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,Viremia ,HIV Infections ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Virus ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Virus latency ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,RNA ,virus diseases ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Viral Load ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Fusion protein ,3. Good health ,Fusion Proteins, gag-pol ,Virus Latency ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunology ,DNA, Viral ,HIV-1 ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,Viral load - Abstract
Although antiretroviral therapy can suppress HIV-1 infection to undetectable levels of plasma viremia, integrated latent HIV-1 genomes that encode replication competent virus persist in resting CD4+ T cells. This latent HIV-1 reservoir represents a major barrier to a cure. Currently, there are substantial ongoing efforts to identify therapeutic approaches that will eliminate or reduce the size of this latent HIV-1 reservoir. In this regard, a sensitive assay which can accurately and rapidly quantify inducible replication competent latent HIV-1 from resting CD4+ T cells is essential for HIV-1 eradication studies. Here we describe a reporter cell-based assay to quantify inducible replication competent latent HIV-1. This assay has several advantages over existing technology in that it: (i) is sensitive; (ii) requires only a small blood volume; (iii) is faster, less labor intensive, and less expensive, and (iv) can be readily adapted to a high-throughput format. Using this assay we show that the size of the inducible latent HIV-1 reservoir in aviremic participants on therapy is approximately 70-fold larger than previous estimates.
- Published
- 2017
7. Antiviral Activity of Retrocyclin RC-101, a Candidate Microbicide Against Cell-Associated HIV-1
- Author
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Phalguni Gupta, Carol Lackman-Smith, Alexander M. Cole, Bharat Ramratnam, Dorothy L. Patton, Deena Ratner, Beth A. Snyder, and Lisa C. Rohan
- Subjects
Immunology ,Cell ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,Peptide ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Biology ,Pharmacology ,Prevention Science ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antiviral Agents ,Defensins ,Virology ,Microbicide ,medicine ,Humans ,Cells, Cultured ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,virus diseases ,Antimicrobial ,Microbicides for sexually transmitted diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,Retrocyclin ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Toxicity ,HIV-1 ,Peptides - Abstract
Microbicides have been evaluated mostly against cell-free HIV-1. Because semen contains both cell-free and cell-associated HIV-1, HIV-1 transmission could occur via either or both sources. Therefore, it is important to examine the antiviral activity of microbicides against cell-associated HIV-1. The cyclic antimicrobial peptide retrocyclin RC-101 has been shown previously to have antiviral activity against cell-free HIV-1, with no associated cellular toxicity. In this article we have examined the antiviral activity of RC-101 against cell-associated HIV-1. The results demonstrate potent antiviral activity of RC-101 against cell-cell HIV-1 transmission in both CD4-dependent and CD4-independent assays against CCR5- and CXCR4-tropic HIV-1, with no cellular toxicity. Furthermore, this antiviral activity was retained in the presence of human seminal plasma. The potent antiviral activity of RC-101 against cell-associated HIV-1 reported here, and the previously reported antiviral activity in cervical tissues, suggest that RC-101 is an excellent and promising microbicide candidate against HIV-1.
- Published
- 2013
8. Erratum for Smith et al., Effective Cytotoxic T Lymphocyte Targeting of Persistent HIV-1 during Antiretroviral Therapy Requires Priming of Naive CD8+ T Cells
- Author
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Deena Ratner, Robbie B. Mailliard, Ronald J Fecek, Kellie N. Smith, Phalguni Gupta, James I. Mullins, Charles R. Rinaldo, Bette T. Korber, Will Fischer, and Paolo Piazza
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Cytotoxicity, Immunologic ,CD40 Ligand ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,Priming (immunology) ,Gene Products, gag ,HIV Infections ,CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,medicine.disease_cause ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Interferon-gamma ,0302 clinical medicine ,Virology ,Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active ,medicine ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business.industry ,Dendritic Cells ,Antiretroviral therapy ,Interleukin-12 ,QR1-502 ,030104 developmental biology ,Immunology ,HIV-1 ,Erratum ,business ,Immunologic Memory ,T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic - Abstract
Curing HIV-1 infection will require elimination of persistent cellular reservoirs that harbor latent virus in the face of combination antiretroviral therapy (cART). Proposed immunotherapeutic strategies to cure HIV-1 infection include enhancing lysis of these infected cells by cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). A major challenge in this strategy is overcoming viral immune escape variants that have evaded host immune control. Here we report that naive CD8(+) T cells from chronic HIV-1-infected participants on long-term cART can be primed by dendritic cells (DC). These DC must be mature, produce high levels of interleukin 12p70 (IL-12p70), be responsive to CD40 ligand (CD40L), and be loaded with inactivated, autologous HIV-1. These DC-primed CD8(+) T cell responders produced high levels of gamma interferon (IFN-γ) in response to a broad range of both conserved and variable regions of Gag and effectively killed CD4(+) T cell targets that were either infected with the autologous latent reservoir-associated virus or loaded with autologous Gag peptides. In contrast, HIV-1-specific memory CD8(+) T cells stimulated with autologous HIV-1-loaded DC produced IFN-γ in response to a narrow range of conserved and variable Gag peptides compared to the primed T cells and most notably, displayed significantly lower cytolytic function. Our findings highlight the need to selectively induce new HIV-1-specific CTL from naive precursors while avoiding activation of existing, dysfunctional memory T cells in potential curative immunotherapeutic strategies for HIV-1 infection.Current immunotherapeutic approaches aim to enhance antiviral immunity against the HIV-1 reservoir; however, it has yet to be shown whether T cells from persons on cART can recognize and eliminate virus-infected cells. We show that in persons on cART a personalized medicine approach using their dendritic cells to stimulate their naive T cells induces potent effector CTL in vitro that recognize and eradicate HIV-1-infected CD4(+) T cells. Additionally, we show that the same stimulation of existing memory T cells results in cytokine secretion but limited effector function. Our study demonstrates that the naive T cell repertoire can recognize persistent HIV-1 during cART and supports immunotherapy strategies for an HIV-1 cure that targets naive T cells, rather than existing, dysfunctional, memory T cells.
- Published
- 2016
9. HIV Exposure to the Epithelia in Ectocervical and Colon Tissues Induces Inflammatory Cytokines Without Tight Junction Disruption
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Ming Ding, Phalguni Gupta, Anwesha Sanyal, Chengli Shen, Deena Ratner, Bharat Ramratnam, Yue Chen, Soni Sankapal, Donna B. Stolz, and Susan Cu-Uvin
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colon ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,HIV Core Protein p24 ,Cervix Uteri ,Biology ,Organ culture ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Epithelium ,Proinflammatory cytokine ,Tight Junctions ,Adherens junction ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Virology ,medicine ,CXCL10 ,Humans ,Transmission ,CXCL11 ,Cells, Cultured ,Microscopy, Confocal ,Tight Junction Proteins ,Tight junction ,Staining and Labeling ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Gene Expression Profiling ,virus diseases ,Molecular biology ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cytokine ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,HIV-1 ,Cytokines ,Female - Abstract
Epithelial cells in human cervical and colonic mucosa do not express HIV receptor. However, HIV transmission occurs across the unbreached epithelia by an unknown mechanism. In this study, the effect of HIV exposure on tight junction (TJ) and cytokine production in ectocervical and colon mucosal epithelia in tissue biopsies was investigated in an organ culture model. After HIV exposure, the distribution patterns and quantities of epithelial TJ and adherens proteins were evaluated by immunofluorescence staining followed by confocal microscopy. Cytokine mRNA in the mucosal epithelia was also evaluated by real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). HIV transmission was evaluated by measuring p24 production in culture supernatant. Our results showed there were no significant changes in the distribution and quantities of epithelial TJ/adherens junction (AJ) proteins after exposure to HIV. However, higher levels of CXCL10 and CXCL11 mRNA expression were detected in HIV-exposed ectocervical epithelia. In case of colon mucosa, higher levels of CXCL10 and IL-6 mRNA expression were detected in HIV-exposed colon mucosa. Our study suggests that HIV induces cytokine production in epithelial cells, which may facilitate HIV transmission by recruiting HIV target cells in the submucosal region. Furthermore, HIV transmission may not occur through epithelial TJ/AJ disruption.
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- 2016
10. Effective Cytotoxic T Lymphocyte Targeting of Persistent HIV-1 during Antiretroviral Therapy Requires Priming of Naive CD8+ T Cells
- Author
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Will Fischer, Paolo Piazza, James I. Mullins, Charles R. Rinaldo, Bette T. Korber, Deena Ratner, Phalguni Gupta, Kellie N. Smith, Ronald J Fecek, and Robbie B. Mailliard
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,CD40 ,biology ,Naive T cell ,T cell ,Priming (immunology) ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,3. Good health ,03 medical and health sciences ,Interleukin 21 ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Virology ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Interleukin 12 ,medicine ,Cytotoxic T cell ,CD8 ,030215 immunology ,Research Article - Abstract
Curing HIV-1 infection will require elimination of persistent cellular reservoirs that harbor latent virus in the face of combination antiretroviral therapy (cART). Proposed immunotherapeutic strategies to cure HIV-1 infection include enhancing lysis of these infected cells by cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). A major challenge in this strategy is overcoming viral immune escape variants that have evaded host immune control. Here we report that naive CD8+ T cells from chronic HIV-1-infected participants on long-term cART can be primed by dendritic cells (DC). These DC must be mature, produce high levels of interleukin 12p70 (IL-12p70), be responsive to CD40 ligand (CD40L), and be loaded with inactivated, autologous HIV-1. These DC-primed CD8+ T cell responders produced high levels of gamma interferon (IFN-γ) in response to a broad range of both conserved and variable regions of Gag and effectively killed CD4+ T cell targets that were either infected with the autologous latent reservoir-associated virus or loaded with autologous Gag peptides. In contrast, HIV-1-specific memory CD8+ T cells stimulated with autologous HIV-1-loaded DC produced IFN-γ in response to a narrow range of conserved and variable Gag peptides compared to the primed T cells and most notably, displayed significantly lower cytolytic function. Our findings highlight the need to selectively induce new HIV-1-specific CTL from naive precursors while avoiding activation of existing, dysfunctional memory T cells in potential curative immunotherapeutic strategies for HIV-1 infection., IMPORTANCE Current immunotherapeutic approaches aim to enhance antiviral immunity against the HIV-1 reservoir; however, it has yet to be shown whether T cells from persons on cART can recognize and eliminate virus-infected cells. We show that in persons on cART a personalized medicine approach using their dendritic cells to stimulate their naive T cells induces potent effector CTL in vitro that recognize and eradicate HIV-1-infected CD4+ T cells. Additionally, we show that the same stimulation of existing memory T cells results in cytokine secretion but limited effector function. Our study demonstrates that the naive T cell repertoire can recognize persistent HIV-1 during cART and supports immunotherapy strategies for an HIV-1 cure that targets naive T cells, rather than existing, dysfunctional, memory T cells.
- Published
- 2016
11. Study of HIV-1 Transmission across Cervical Mucosa to Tonsil Tissue Cells using an Organ Culture
- Author
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Deena Ratner, Yue Chen, Jackeline Soto-Rivera, Chengli Shen, Ashwin Tumne, Ming Ding, Bruce K. Patterson, and Phalguni Gupta
- Subjects
CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,viruses ,Palatine Tonsil ,Immunology ,HIV Core Protein p24 ,HIV Infections ,Cervix Uteri ,Biology ,Virus Replication ,Organ culture ,Article ,Virus ,Palatine tonsil ,Organ Culture Techniques ,Antigens, CD ,medicine ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Cells, Cultured ,Mucous Membrane ,Models, Immunological ,virus diseases ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Mucous membrane ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Lymphatic system ,Reproductive Medicine ,Viral replication ,Tonsil ,DNA, Viral ,HIV-1 ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,Lymph - Abstract
Problem SIV model indicates that upon traversing the cervicovaginal mucosa, SIV/SIV-infected cells migrate to regional lymph nodes where active replication occurs prior to systemic virus dissemination. The purpose of the study is to develop a model to study early HIV-1 transmission events that occur after crossing the cervical mucosa into regional lymph nodes. Methods of study We developed an organ culture model combining intact cervical tissue explants and tonsil tissue cells as the surrogate draining lymphoid tissue. Viral replication was measured by HIV-1 p24 production, quantification of viral DNA and viral RNA expression in tonsil cells. Results In this combined organ culture model, transmission of cell-free and cell-associated R5- and X4-tropic HIV-1 through the cervical mucosa to tonsilar cells was observed as determined by HIV-1 p24 in culture supernatant, and the presence of HIV-1 proviral DNA, HIV-1 p24 gag protein in CD4+, CD11c+, CD68+ cells, and expression of HIV-1 mRNA expressing CD45RO+ CD4 T cells in tonsil cells. Furthermore, co-receptor usage of HIV-1 in tonsil cells correlated with inoculating virus tropism. Conclusions Our combined cervix–tonsil organ culture could serve as an experimental model to study the earliest stages of HIV-1 transmission through cervicovaginal mucosa to its proximal lymph nodes.
- Published
- 2012
12. Noncytotoxic Suppression of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Transcription by Exosomes Secreted from CD8+T Cells
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Kunal Saha, Ming Ding, Phalguni Gupta, Simon C. Watkins, Yue Chen, Deena Ratner, Varsha Shridhar Prasad, Donna B. Stolz, and Ashwin Tumne
- Subjects
Transcription, Genetic ,Immunology ,CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Biology ,Exosomes ,Virus Replication ,Microbiology ,Cell Line ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Transcription (biology) ,Virology ,Humans ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Secretion ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Effector ,Cell Membrane ,virus diseases ,Microvesicles ,Cell biology ,STAT1 Transcription Factor ,Viral replication ,Cell culture ,Insect Science ,HIV-1 ,Pathogenesis and Immunity ,CD8 - Abstract
CD8+T cells display a noncytotoxic activity that suppresses transcription of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in an antigen-independent and major histocompatibility complex-unrestricted manner. To date, the precise cellular and molecular factors mediating this CD8+T-cell effector function remain unsolved. Despite evidence indicating the dependence of the activity on cell-cell contact, the possibility of a membrane-mediated activity that represses transcription from the viral promoter remains unexplored. We therefore investigated whether this inhibition of HIV-1 transcription might be elicited by a membrane-bound determinant. Using a CD8+T-cell line displaying potent noncytotoxic HIV-1 suppression activity, we have identified a membrane-localized HIV-1-suppressing activity that is concomitantly secreted as 30- to 100-nm endosome-derived tetraspanin-rich vesicles known as exosomes. Purified exosomes from CD8+T-cell culture supernatant noncytotoxically suppressed CCR5-tropic (R5) and CXCR4-tropic (X4) replication of HIV-1 in vitro through a protein moiety. Similar antiviral activity was also found in exosomes isolated from two HIV-1-infected subjects. The antiviral exosomes specifically inhibited HIV-1 transcription in both acute and chronic models of infection. Our results, for the first time, indicate the existence of an antiviral membrane-bound factor consistent with the hallmarks defining noncytotoxic CD8+T-cell suppression of HIV-1.
- Published
- 2009
13. Genetic and Functional Characterization of the LTR of HIV-1 Subtypes A and C Circulating in India
- Author
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Smita Kulkarni, Chengli Shen, Milka A. Rodriguez, Ramdas Chatterjee, Phalguni Gupta, Deena Ratner, and Ramesh S. Paranjape
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Genotype ,Transcription, Genetic ,Sequence analysis ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Immunology ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,India ,HIV Infections ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Genetic analysis ,Virus ,Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid ,Virology ,medicine ,Humans ,Binding site ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Phylogeny ,HIV Long Terminal Repeat ,Genetics ,Binding Sites ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,Promoter ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Infectious Diseases ,Lentivirus ,Genetic structure ,HIV-1 ,Female - Abstract
Genetic analysis of HIV-1 sequences circulating in different parts of India have shown that the predominant proportion of HIV-1 subtypes circulating in India is type C and a small fraction are subtypes A, B, E, and CRFs. We sequenced the HIV-1 LTR promoter region of seven subtype C and five subtype A isolates obtained from two major cities in India. Sequence analysis of the complete promoter and TAR regions revealed conserved subtype-specific variability in several major binding sites. Three NF-kappaB sites were present in all subtype C isolates and two isolates contained an insertion in the MFNLP. The transcriptional activity of one of these isolates may have been hindered due to this insertion. Despite the apparent variability between the LTRs we did not observe any significant difference in the transcriptional activity between subtype C and subtype A. To our knowledge, this is the first study characterizing the genetic structure and functional attributes of subtype A LTRs from India.
- Published
- 2007
14. Retrocyclin RC-101 blocks HIV-1 transmission across cervical mucosa in an organ culture
- Author
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Ming Ding, Phalguni Gupta, Todd A. Reinhart, Velpandi Ayyavoo, Lisa C. Rohan, Xioli Huang, Bharat Ramratnam, Alexander M. Cole, Dorothy L. Patton, Bruce K. Patterson, and Deena Ratner
- Subjects
Adult ,Cervix Uteri ,Pharmacology ,Biology ,Organ culture ,Article ,Proinflammatory cytokine ,Organ Culture Techniques ,Anti-Infective Agents ,Microbicide ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Cytotoxicity ,Mucous Membrane ,Mucous membrane ,Middle Aged ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Toxicity ,Immunology ,HIV-1 ,Cytokines ,Female ,Peptides ,CD8 ,Immunostaining - Abstract
Background Cervical tissue-based organ cultures have been used successfully to evaluate microbicides for toxicity and antiviral activity. The antimicrobial peptide retrocyclin RC-101 has been shown to have potent anti-HIV activity in cell culture. Objective To evaluate RC-101 in organ culture for toxicity and its ability to block HIV-1 transmission across cervical mucosa. Methods A cervical tissue-based organ culture was used to measure antiviral activity of RC-101. Cytotoxicity in tissues was determined by immunostaining of cellular proteins and by measuring inflammatory cytokines using real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and Luminex technology. Results RC-101 blocked transmission of both R5 and X4 HIV-1 across cervical mucosa in this organ culture model. Furthermore, film-formulated RC-101 exhibited potent antiviral activity in organ culture. Such antiviral activity of RC-101 was retained in the presence of semen and vaginal fluid. RC-101 showed no cytotoxicity in cervical tissue. Furthermore, RC-101 did not induce proinflammatory cytokine response in tissues. RC-101 also did not have any effect on natural killer cell activity and proliferation of CD4 and CD8 cells and did not show chemotactic activity. Conclusions Therefore, because of strong antiviral activity and low cytotoxicity in cervical tissues, RC-101 should be considered as an excellent microbicide candidate against HIV-1.
- Published
- 2012
15. Evaluation of cervical mucosa in transmission bottleneck during acute HIV-1 infection using a cervical tissue-based organ culture
- Author
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Phalguni Gupta, Chengli Shen, Yue Chen, Deena Ratner, Ming Ding, and Ronald C. Montelaro
- Subjects
Viral Diseases ,Urology ,Molecular Sequence Data ,lcsh:Medicine ,HIV Infections ,Cervix Uteri ,Organ culture ,Microbiology ,Macaque ,Virus ,03 medical and health sciences ,Organ Culture Techniques ,Phylogenetics ,Virology ,biology.animal ,medicine ,Humans ,lcsh:Science ,Biology ,Phylogeny ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Mucous Membrane ,Multidisciplinary ,Base Sequence ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Genitourinary Infections ,030306 microbiology ,Transmission (medicine) ,lcsh:R ,env Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus ,HIV ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Mucous membrane ,3. Good health ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,HIV-1 ,Medicine ,Female ,lcsh:Q ,Research Article ,Explant culture - Abstract
Background: Although there are different strains of HIV-1 in a chronically infected individual, only one or limited virus strains are successfully transmitted to a new individual. The reason for this "transmission bottleneck" is as yet unknown. Methodology/Principal Findings: A human cervical explant model was used to measure HIV-1 transmission efficiency of viral strains from chronic infections, and transmitter/founder variants. We also evaluated the genetic characteristics of HIV-1 variants in the inoculums compared to those transmitted across the cervical mucosa. Eight different HIV-1 isolates were used in this study, six chronic isolates and two transmitter/founder viruses. The transmission efficiency of the chronic and transmitter/founder virus isolates and the viral diversity of chronic isolates before and after viral transmission were assessed. The results indicate that transmitter/founder viruses did not display higher transmission efficiency than chronic HIV-1 isolates. Furthermore, no evidence for a difference in diversity was found between the inoculums and transmitted virus strains. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the sequences of variants in the inoculums and those present in transmitted virus intermingled irrespective of co-receptor usage. In addition, the inoculum and transmitted variants had a similar pairwise distance distribution. Conclusion: There was no selection of a single or limited number of viral variants during HIV-1 transmission across the cervical mucosa in the organ culture model, indicating that the cervical mucosa alone may not produce the transmission bottleneck of HIV-1 infection observed in vivo. © 2012 Shen et al.
- Published
- 2012
16. Incorporation of the HIV-1 microbicide cyanovirin-N in a food product
- Author
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Deena Ratner, Phalguni Gupta, Lisa C. Rohan, Yvonne Cosgrove-Sweeney, Patrick M. Tarwater, Dorothy L. Patton, Ming Li, Alexander M. Cole, and Bharat Ramratnam
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Anti-HIV Agents ,HIV Infections ,Biology ,Virus Replication ,Article ,Microbiology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Feces ,Bacterial Proteins ,In vivo ,Microbicide ,Animals ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Rectum ,food and beverages ,Pigtail macaque ,biology.organism_classification ,Yogurt ,Virology ,Lactic acid ,Microbicides for sexually transmitted diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,chemistry ,HIV-1 ,Female ,Food Additives ,Macaca nemestrina ,Carrier Proteins ,Viral load ,Ex vivo ,Bacteria - Abstract
An urgent need exists for HIV-1 microbicides. Here, we describe the in vivo testing of lactic acid bacteria bioengineered to secrete cyanovirin-N. We fed pigtail macaques a yogurt formulation that used bioengineered strains as a starter culture. Cyanovirin-N expression could be detected in the rectal vault during and immediately after feeding. Ex vivo viral challenge of rectal tissue biopsies revealed that peak viral burden was significantly lower in tissue obtained from experimental animals compared to control animals. Formulation of candidate compounds in lactic acid bacteria and their oral administration appears to be a feasible strategy for mucosal delivery of microbicides.
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- 2011
17. The formulated microbicide RC-101 was safe and antivirally active following intravaginal application in pigtailed macaques
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Carol Lackman-Smith, Nicole A. Rogers, Alan J. Waring, Alexander M. Cole, Yvonne Cosgrove-Sweeney, Piotr Ruchala, Alexandra B. Sassi, Dorothy L. Patton, Patrick M. Tarwater, Deena Ratner, Robert I. Lehrer, Phalguni Gupta, Lisa C. Rohan, Amy L. Cole, Bharat Ramratnam, and Stoddart, Cheryl A
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Female Urology ,Time Factors ,Simian Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,lcsh:Medicine ,Cervix Uteri ,Topical Microbicides ,lcsh:Science ,Colposcopy ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Simian immunodeficiency virus ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Animal Models ,Antivirals ,Innate Immunity ,3. Good health ,Female Genital Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Infectious Diseases ,Vagina ,Administration ,Medicine ,Infectious diseases ,HIV/AIDS ,Simian Immunodeficiency Virus ,Female ,Macaca nemestrina ,Drug ,Infection ,Macaque ,Research Article ,General Science & Technology ,Urology ,Immunology ,HIV prevention ,Viral diseases ,Biology ,Organ culture ,Microbiology ,Antiviral Agents ,Theta defensin ,Dose-Response Relationship ,03 medical and health sciences ,Model Organisms ,In vivo ,Virology ,Microbicide ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Cervix ,030304 developmental biology ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Intravaginal ,030306 microbiology ,Prevention ,lcsh:R ,Immunity ,HIV ,Administration, Intravaginal ,Hela Cells ,HIV-1 ,Clinical Immunology ,lcsh:Q ,Peptides ,Ex vivo ,HeLa Cells - Abstract
Author(s): Cole, Alexander M; Patton, Dorothy L; Rohan, Lisa C; Cole, Amy L; Cosgrove-Sweeney, Yvonne; Rogers, Nicole A; Ratner, Deena; Sassi, Alexandra B; Lackman-Smith, Carol; Tarwater, Patrick; Ramratnam, Bharat; Ruchala, Piotr; Lehrer, Robert I; Waring, Alan J; Gupta, Phalguni | Abstract: BackgroundRC-101 is a congener of the antiretroviral peptide retrocyclin, which we and others have reported is active against clinical HIV-1 isolates from all major clades, does not hemagglutinate, and is non-toxic and non-inflammatory in cervicovaginal cell culture. Herein, film-formulated RC-101 was assessed for its antiviral activity in vitro, safety in vivo, retention in the cervix and vagina, and ability to remain active against HIV-1 and SHIV after intravaginal application in macaques.Methodology/principal findingsRC-101 was formulated as a quick-dissolving film (2000 µg/film), retained complete activity in vitro as compared to unformulated peptide, and was applied intravaginally in six pigtailed macaques daily for four days. At one and four days following the final application, the presence of RC-101 was assessed in peripheral blood, cervicovaginal lavage, cytobrushed cervicovaginal cells, and biopsied cervical and vaginal tissues by quantitative western blots. One day following the last film application, cervical biopsies from RC-101-exposed and placebo-controlled macaques were collected and were subjected to challenge with RT-SHIV in an ex vivo organ culture model. RC-101 peptide was detected primarily in the cytobrush and biopsied cervical and vaginal tissues, with little to no peptide detected in lavage samples, suggesting that the peptide was associated with the cervicovaginal epithelia. RC-101 remained in the tissues and cytobrush samples up to four days post-application, yet was not detected in any sera or plasma samples. RC-101, extracted from cytobrushes obtained one day post-application, remained active against HIV-1 BaL. Importantly, cervical biopsies from RC-101-treated animals reduced RT-SHIV replication in ex vivo organ culture as compared to placebo-treated animals.Conclusions/significanceFormulated RC-101 was stable in vivo and was retained in the mucosa. The presence of antivirally active RC-101 after five days in vivo suggests that RC-101 would be an important molecule to develop further as a topical microbicide to prevent HIV-1 transmission.
- Published
- 2010
18. Multisite Comparison of Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Microbicide Activity in Explant Assays Using a Novel Endpoint Analysis ▿ †
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Patricia C. Guenthner, Jean-Charles Grivel, Phalguni Gupta, Paula Roberts, Nicola Richardson-Harman, Leonid Margolis, Robin J. Shattock, Charlene S. Dezzutti, Peter A. Anton, James E. Cummins, James W. Bremer, Patricia Reichelderfer, Swarna Mohan, Nell S. Lurain, Julie Elliott, Maureen Jones, Deena Ratner, Patricia S. Fletcher, and Carol Lackman-Smith
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,Male ,Mucous Membrane ,Palatine Tonsil ,Rectum ,Reproducibility of Results ,Cervix Uteri ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Biology ,In Vitro Techniques ,Virus Replication ,Virology ,In vitro ,Virus ,Microbicides for sexually transmitted diseases ,Viral replication ,Anti-Infective Agents ,In vivo ,Microbicide ,HIV-1 ,Humans ,Female ,Ex vivo ,Explant culture - Abstract
Microbicide candidates with promising in vitro activity are often advanced for evaluations using human primary tissue explants relevant to the in vivo mucosal transmission of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), such as tonsil, cervical, or rectal tissue. To compare virus growth or the anti-HIV-1 efficacies of candidate microbicides in tissue explants, a novel soft-endpoint method was evaluated to provide a single, objective measurement of virus growth. The applicability of the soft endpoint is shown across several different ex vivo tissue types, with the method performed in different laboratories, and for a candidate microbicide (PRO 2000). The soft-endpoint method was compared to several other endpoint methods, including (i) the growth of virus on specific days after infection, (ii) the area under the virus growth curve, and (iii) the slope of the virus growth curve. Virus growth at the assay soft endpoint was compared between laboratories, methods, and experimental conditions, using nonparametric statistical analyses. Intra-assay variability determinations using the coefficient of variation demonstrated higher variability for virus growth in rectal explants. Significant virus inhibition by PRO 2000 and significant differences in the growth of certain primary HIV-1 isolates were observed by the majority of laboratories. These studies indicate that different laboratories can provide consistent measurements of anti-HIV-1 microbicide efficacy when (i) the soft endpoint or another standardized endpoint is used, (ii) drugs and/or virus reagents are centrally sourced, and (iii) the same explant tissue type and method are used. Application of the soft-endpoint method reduces the inherent variability in comparisons of preclinical assays used for microbicide development.
- Published
- 2009
19. Estimation of the Predictive role of Plasma Viral load on CD4 decline in HIV-1-subtype C infected subjects in India
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Ramdas Chatterjee, John W. Mellors, Ming Ding, Yasuhiro Yamamura, Patrick M. Tarwater, Yue Chen, Pratima Roy, Deena Ratner, Dhruba Neogi, Milka A. Rodriguez, and Phalguni Gupta
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CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Cost effectiveness ,India ,HIV Infections ,Virus ,Article ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Immunopathology ,Medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Sida ,biology ,business.industry ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Viral Load ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,Infectious Diseases ,Real-time polymerase chain reaction ,Lentivirus ,Immunology ,HIV-1 ,RNA, Viral ,Viral disease ,business ,Viral load - Abstract
Plasma viral load has been shown to be a meaningful prognostic marker for disease progression in untreated, HIV-1 subtype B-infected subjects in United States and Western Europe and therefore used as a prognostic marker for disease progression. Because of high expenses of commercially available viral load assays, the role of viral load in disease progression has not been evaluated in HIV-1 subtype C-infected patients in India.We developed an inexpensive real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction assay to quantify viral load in plasma of HIV-1 subtype C-infected subjects from India and used it in a longitudinal analysis of viral load and CD4 cell number in HIV-infected subjects from Calcutta, India.The real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction assay can quantify plasma viral load with a linear range of detection from 10 to 10 HIV-1 RNA copies per input. Longitudinal analysis of viral load in a cohort of 39 subjects over an average period of approximately 3 years indicates that 1-log increase in HIV-1 RNA level was associated with a decline of 67 CD4 cell count. Furthermore, HIV-1 RNA level between 500 and 50,000 copies per milliliter would predict a 12.9% decrease in CD4 cell count per year, whereas HIV-1 RNA levels above 50,000 copies HIV-1 RNA per milliliter would predict a 25.3% decrease in CD4 cells per year. In addition, we estimated that the mean incubation period of disease development, as defined by the loss of CD4 below 200, is 8.2 years.Our report on the level of viral load on predicting CD4 decline in Indian subjects with HIV-1 provides an additional important tool to the physicians for treating and planning a therapeutic strategy to control HIV-1 infection in India.
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- 2009
20. High replication fitness and transmission efficiency of HIV-1 subtype C from India: Implications for subtype C predominance
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Smita Kulkarni, Ramdas Chatterjee, Phalguni Gupta, Yue Chen, Deena Ratner, Srikanth Tripathy, Milka A. Rodriguez, Patrick M. Tarwater, and Ming Ding
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,HIV-1 transmission ,Clone (cell biology) ,India ,HIV Infections ,Genome, Viral ,Biology ,Virus Replication ,Peripheral blood mononuclear cell ,Genome ,Virus ,law.invention ,Young Adult ,Organ Culture Techniques ,HIV-1 subtype C from India ,law ,Virology ,Humans ,Gene ,Genetics ,Middle Aged ,In vitro ,Transmission (mechanics) ,Recombinant DNA ,HIV-1 ,Leukocytes, Mononuclear ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,HIV-1 replication fitness - Abstract
HIV-1 subtype C has been the predominant subtype throughout the course of the HIV-1 epidemic in India regardless of the geographic region of the country. In an effort to understand the mechanism of subtype C predominance in this country, we have investigated the in vitro replication fitness and transmission efficiency of HIV-1 subtypes A and C from India. Using a dual infection growth competition assay, we found that primary HIV-1 subtype C isolates had higher overall relative fitness in PBMC than subtype A primary isolates. Moreover, in an ex vivo cervical tissue derived organ culture, subtype C isolates displayed higher transmission efficiency across cervical mucosa than subtype A isolates. We found that higher fitness of subtype C was not due to a trans effect exerted by subtype C infected PBMC. A half genome A/C recombinant clone in which the 3′ half of the viral genome of subtype A was replaced with the corresponding subtype C3′ half, had similar replicative fitness as the parental subtype A. These results suggest that the higher replication fitness and transmission efficiency of subtype C virus compared to subtype A virus from India is most probably not due to the envelope gene alone and may be due to genes present within the 5′ half of the viral genome or to a more complex interaction between the genes located within the two halves of the viral genome. These data provide a model to explain the asymmetric distribution of subtype C over other subtypes in India.
- Published
- 2008
21. Biological properties of HIV-1 subtype B' isolates from infected Chinese blood donors at different disease stages
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Xinyue Chen, Milka A. Rodriguez, Chengli Shen, Hao Wu, Phalguni Gupta, Deena Ratner, Lori Caruso, and Yue Chen
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DNA Replication ,China ,viruses ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,Blood Donors ,HIV Infections ,Disease ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Virus Replication ,CXCR4 ,Virus ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Viral Envelope Proteins ,Genes, Reporter ,Virology ,Biological property ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Survivors ,Cloning, Molecular ,Syncytium ,virus diseases ,Viral Load ,Flow Cytometry ,Phenotype ,Kinetics ,chemistry ,DNA, Viral ,Disease Progression ,HIV-1 ,DNA - Abstract
Unsanitary blood/plasma collecting activities in central China during the 1990's caused a high prevalence of blood-borne HIV-1 infection. Although the genetic characterization of the proviral DNA of HIV-1 circulating in the infected former blood donors (FBDs) has been reported, there is little information about the biological characteristics of virus isolates in these FBDs. In this study, we have examined the biologic properties of HIV-1 isolates from AIDS patients and long-term non-progressors (LTNP) of FBDs. Our results indicate that the growth properties, co-receptor usage and syncitium inducing capabilities of the HIV-1 isolates are associated with the disease status of patients. The virus isolates from LTNPs replicated slower, used the CCR5 co-receptor and were of non-syncytium inducing phenotype. In contrast, HIV-1 isolates from AIDS patients showed high replication kinetics, used both CCR5 and CXCR4 co-receptors and induced syncytium formation. A higher level of cytopathicity was also detected in syncytium inducing virus compared to non-syncytium inducing isolates irrespective of patients' disease statuses. Although there was no significant differences in the binding and penetration of the target cells between the isolates from LTNPs and those from AIDS patients, viral DNA synthesis of viral isolates from LTNPs was much slower than the DNA synthesized by the isolates from AIDS patients, indicating a restriction at a post-entry step. Analysis of deduced amino acid sequences in C2-V5 regions of these isolates has provided a molecular basis for further identification of viral phenotypes of HIV-1 subtype B'. This study has provided valuable information on the biological properties of circulating HIV-1 strains among Chinese FBDs to better understand their viral characteristics and design more appropriate vaccine candidates for FBDs.
- Published
- 2008
22. Azurin, Plasmodium falciparum malaria and HIV/AIDS: inhibition of parasitic and viral growth by Azurin
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Deena Ratner, Kasturi Haldar, Sean C. Murphy, Ananda M. Chakrabarty, Chang Soo Hong, Wonhwa Cho, Anita Chaudhari, Tohru Yamada, Phalguni Gupta, Tapas K. Das Gupta, Soumen Kahali, Arsenio M. Fialho, and Virander S. Chauhan
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Erythrocytes ,Plasmodium falciparum ,Immunoglobulins ,Receptors, Cell Surface ,Parasitemia ,Plasma protein binding ,Biology ,HIV Envelope Protein gp120 ,Epitope ,Antigen ,Azurin ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Lectins, C-Type ,Malaria, Falciparum ,Molecular Biology ,Merozoite Surface Protein 1 ,Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,Antigens, Bacterial ,Cell Biology ,Surface Plasmon Resonance ,medicine.disease ,Intercellular adhesion molecule ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Pseudomonas aeruginosa ,HIV-1 ,Immunoglobulin superfamily ,Cell Adhesion Molecules ,Neisseria ,Developmental Biology ,Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Azurin, a member of a family of copper-containing proteins involved in electron transfer called cupredoxins, demonstrates structural features similar to the variable domains of the immunoglobulin superfamily members. An azurin-like protein called Laz with an additional N-terminal 39 amino acid peptide known as H.8 epitope is present on the surface of gonnococci and meningococci. We demonstrate that azurin, Laz and H.8-azurin can bind to the C-terminal cleavage product MSP1-19 of merozoite surface protein 1 (MSP1) of the malarial parasite Plasmodium falciparum and significantly reduce parasitemia. Azurin and Laz also bound strongly to HIV-1 gp120. Interestingly, azurin could not only bind to gp120 but also to the dendritic cell-specific adhesion receptor DC-SIGN, mimicking the functionality of the intercellular adhesion molecule ICAM-3 with which it also binds avidly. Furthermore, these three proteins significantly suppressed HIV-1 growth in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and such suppression appeared to be occurring at an entry stage in the infection process. The presence of both antimalarial and antiretroviral activity in azurin, H.8-azurin and Laz makes these proteins, or peptides derived from them, potential therapeutic agents in the treatment of malaria, HIV-1 infections or coinfections with both P. falciparum and HIV-1.
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- 2006
23. Use of frozen-thawed cervical tissues in the organ culture system to measure anti-HIV activities of candidate microbicides
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Phalguni Gupta, Charles E. Isaacs, Lori Caruso, Bruce K. Patterson, Kathy Kulka, Deena Ratner, Lisa C. Rohan, Sharon L. Hillier, and Michael A. Parniak
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Glycerol ,Immunology ,HIV Infections ,Cervix Uteri ,Biology ,Organ culture ,Andrology ,Tissue culture ,Organ Culture Techniques ,Anti-Infective Agents ,Fresh Tissue ,Virology ,Microbicide ,Freezing ,Humans ,Anilides ,Frozen tissue ,Furans ,Anti hiv ,beta-Cyclodextrins ,Temperature ,Middle Aged ,Cervical tissue ,Microbicides for sexually transmitted diseases ,Thioamides ,Infectious Diseases ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,HIV-1 ,Female - Abstract
Cervical tissue-based organ culture system has been used to test the cytotoxicity and antiviral activity of microbicides. One of the problems of using current organ culture methods for routine microbicide testing is the need to continually obtain fresh tissue, which can be limited in access and supply. Use of frozen tissue, stored when available and thawed when needed, would alleviate the need for constant access to new tissue. This study was designed to explore the possibility of using frozen-thawed cervical tissue to test microbicides for their anti-HIV activity. We provided biochemical, histological, and quantitative immunohistochemical data to demonstrate the integrity of the frozen-thawed organ culture system. Significant levels of HIV-1 mucosal transmission were noted with both fresh and frozen-thawed tissue, regardless of the coreceptor usage of the virus isolate. Furthermore, candidate microbicides UC781, beta-cyclodextrin, and octylglycerol inhibited HIV-1 transmission across the mucosa of frozen-thawed tissues with a level of efficiency similar to that of fresh tissues. Therefore, frozen-thawed cervical tissue in the organ culture system provides a practical and convenient model to screen topical microbicides for their ability to block sexual transmission of HIV-1, and reduces the problems associated with procurement of the numerous tissues required for evaluation and comparison of microbicide candidates among different laboratories.
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- 2006
24. Memory CD4(+) T cells are the earliest detectable human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-infected cells in the female genital mucosal tissue during HIV-1 transmission in an organ culture system
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Kelly B. Collins, Gregory J. Naus, Deena Ratner, Bruce K. Patterson, Daniel V. Landers, Simon C. Watkins, and Phalguni Gupta
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CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Cell type ,Sexual transmission ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Biopsy ,Immunology ,Cervix Uteri ,Biology ,Organ culture ,Microbiology ,Virus ,Flow cytometry ,Immune system ,Immunophenotyping ,Organ Culture Techniques ,Virology ,medicine ,Humans ,Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Flow Cytometry ,Insect Science ,HIV-1 ,Pathogenesis and Immunity ,Female ,Immunologic Memory ,Fluorescence in situ hybridization - Abstract
The virologic and cellular factors that are involved in transmission of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) across the female genital tissue are poorly understood. We have recently developed a human cervical tissue-derived organ culture model to study heterosexual transmission of HIV-1 that mimics the in vivo situation. Using this model we investigated the role of phenotypic characteristics of HIV-1 and identified the cell types that are first infected during transmission. Our data indicate that the cell-free R5 HIV-1 was more efficiently transmitted than cell-free X4 HIV-1. Cell-free and cell-associated HIV-1 had comparable transmission efficiency regardless of whether the virus was of R5 or X4 type. We have demonstrated that memory CD4 + T cells and not Langerhans cells were the first HIV-1 RNA-positive cells detected at the epithelial-submucosal junction 6 h after virus exposure. Multicolor laser confocal microscopy demonstrated a globular distribution of HIV-1 gag-pol mRNA in the cytoplasm, and the distribution of CD4 and the CD45RO isoform was irregular on the cellular membrane. At 96 h postinoculation, in addition to memory CD4 + T cells, HIV-1 RNA-positive Langerhans cells and macrophages were also detected. The identification of CD4 + T cells in the tissue at 6 h was confirmed by flow cytometric simultaneous immunophenotyping and ultrasensitive fluorescence in situ hybridization assay on immune cells isolated from disaggregated tissue. Furthermore, PMPA {9-[2-(phosphonomethoxy)propyl] adenine}, an antiretroviral compound, and UC781, a microbicide, inhibited HIV-1 transmission across the mucosa, indicating the utility of the organ culture to screen topical microbicides for their ability to block sexual transmission of HIV-1.
- Published
- 2002
25. Anti-HIV, anti-inflammatory and safety profile of the PDB microbicide candidate (HUM8P.342)
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Yvonne Mueller, Joseph Fraietta, Deena Ratner, Alina Boesteanu, Phalguni Gupta, and Peter Katsikis
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Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
Topical microbicides (vaginal gels) are one mechanism to prevent sexual transmission of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). We show here that a new class of microbicides, abasic phosphorothioate 2’ deoxyribose backbone (PDB) oligomers, has significant anti-HIV-1 activities in human PBMC cell cultures when either the virus or cells are pre-incubated with the compound. HIV infection is also inhibited in an explant model of human cervical tissue. A second function of PDB other than its anti-HIV activity is its capacity to inhibit HIV-triggered TLR7/9 activation. PDB suppresses the release of HIV-induced pro-inflammatory cytokines/chemokines in cultures of human PBMC and ectocervical tissues. We also demonstrated that PDB is safe and non-toxic in in vitro cell cultures and in an in vivo murine vaginal toxicity model. The effect of PDB is stable as this compound retains activity at pH 4.4 and after transition to a neutral pH, following incubation with biological fluids (seminal plasma, vaginal fluids) and a normal vaginal flora Lactobacillus strain. PDB does not affect the growth of Lactobacillus strains. Phosphorothioate 2’ deoxyribose oligomers are novel microbicide candidates with dual-acting anti-HIV and anti-inflammatory activities and an excellent safety and stability profile.
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- 2014
26. Construction and characterization of an infectious molecular clone of HIV-1 subtype A of Indian origin
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Ramdas Chatterjee, Phalguni Gupta, Yue Chen, Dhruba Neogi, Masashi Tatsumi, Jodi K. Craigo, Pratima Roy, Milka A. Rodriguez, and Deena Ratner
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Adult ,Male ,Glycosylation ,Adolescent ,Indian origin ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,India ,HIV Infections ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Cell Line ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Molecular clone ,Virology ,medicine ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Cloning, Molecular ,Gene ,Basic amino acids ,Phylogeny ,Dominance (genetics) ,Genetics ,Phylogenetic tree ,Gene Products, env ,virus diseases ,Middle Aged ,Subtype A ,DNA binding site ,chemistry ,HIV-1 ,Female - Abstract
India has the second highest number of HIV-1 infected people next to South Africa. The predominant proportion of HIV-1 circulating in India is of subtype C origin, with a small fraction made up of subtypes A and B. In this report, we describe the construction and characterization of the first full-length infectious molecular clone p1579A-1 HIV-1, from an HIV-1 subtype A infected person from India, using long PCR and successive ligation of the amplimers. Phylogenetic analysis of the sequence of the entire proviral DNA and LTR confirmed p1579A-1 to be an HIV-1 subtype A. Analysis of the env gene of p1579A-1 showed a conserved GPGQ motif and the absence of basic amino acids at positions 11 and 25 suggesting CCR5 coreceptor usage. Analysis of env N-linked glycosylation sites revealed fewer sites in the V1 region of envelope compared to other subtype A. Transcription factor binding site analysis of the LTR sequences identified conserved as well as unique transcription factor binding sites (TFBS) in p1579A-1. This infectious clone of HIV-1 can be useful to study the molecular mechanism of dominance of subtype C in India.
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27. Corrigendum to 'Construction and characterization of an infectious molecular clone of HIV-1 subtype A of Indian origin' [Virology 345 (2006) 328–336]
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Masashi Tatsumi, Ramdas Chatterjee, Milka A. Rodriguez, Yue Chen, Jodi K. Craigo, Pratima Roy, Deena Ratner, Phalguni Gupta, and Dhruba Neogi
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Indian origin ,Public health ,Virology ,viruses ,education ,Tropical medicine ,medicine ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,humanities - Abstract
a Department of Infectious Diseases and Microbiology, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, 426 Parran Hall, 130 DeSoto Street, PA 15261, USA b Department of Molecular Genetics and Biochemistry, School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA c Department of Virology, Chittaranjan Cancer Research Institute, Calcutta, India d Department of Veterinary Science, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Toyama, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo 162-8640, Japan e Department of Virology, School of Tropical Medicine, Calcutta, India
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