14 results on '"Marcelo Kuroda"'
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2. In vivo binding and retention of CD4-specific DARPin 57.2 in macaques.
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Pavel Pugach, Anders Krarup, Agegnehu Gettie, Marcelo Kuroda, James Blanchard, Michael Piatak, Jeffrey D Lifson, Alexandra Trkola, and Melissa Robbiani
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The recently described Designed Ankyrin Repeat Protein (DARPin) technology can produce highly selective ligands to a variety of biological targets at a low production cost.To investigate the in vivo use of DARPins for future application to novel anti-HIV strategies, we identified potent CD4-specific DARPins that recognize rhesus CD4 and followed the fate of intravenously injected CD4-specific DARPin 57.2 in rhesus macaques. The human CD4-specific DARPin 57.2 bound macaque CD4(+) cells and exhibited potent inhibitory activity against SIV infection in vitro. DARPin 57.2 or the control E3_5 DARPin was injected into rhesus macaques and the fate of cell-free and cell-bound CD4-specific DARPin was evaluated. DARPin-bound CD4(+) cells were detected in the peripheral blood as early as 30 minutes after the injection, decreasing within 6 hours and being almost undetectable within 24 hours. The amount of DARPin bound was dependent on the amount of DARPin injected. CD4-specific DARPin was also detected on CD4(+) cells in the lymph nodes within 30 minutes, which persisted with similar kinetics to blood. More extensive analysis using blood revealed that DARPin 57.2 bound to all CD4(+) cell types (T cells, monocytes, dendritic cells) in vivo and in vitro with the amount of binding directly proportional to the amount of CD4 on the cell surface. Cell-free DARPins were also detected in the plasma, but were rapidly cleared from circulation.We demonstrated that the CD4-specific DARPin can rapidly and selectively bind its target cells in vivo, warranting further studies on possible clinical use of the DARPin technology.
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- 2010
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3. 2D materials-based biosensor for detecting COVID-19 virus (Conference Presentation)
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Parvin Fathi-Hafshejani, Nurul Azam, Suman Jaiswal, Lu Wang, Marcelo Kuroda, Michael C. Hamilton, Sahar Hasim, and Masoud Mahjouri-Samani
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- 2023
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4. Nitrogen Annealing As a Sustainable Method for Interface Trap Passivation in 4H-SiC Mosfets
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Suman Das, Hengfei Gu, Lu Wang, Ayayi Ahyi, Leonard C. Feldman, Eric Garfunkel, Marcelo Kuroda, and Sarit Dhar
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Silicon Carbide (4H-SiC) has emerged as a leading wide band gap semiconductor for high-power, high-temperature applications1. 4H-SiC metal-oxide semiconductor-field-effect transistors (MOSFETs) have lower power dissipation compared to silicon, allowing for low-noise and high-efficiency all-electric vehicle drives, fast-charging stations, solar inverters, and more. While these devices provide substantial advancements for next-generation energy efficient power systems, 4H-SiC may also offer additional functionality in the form of integrated circuits (ICs) at high temperatures (>300 °C). Because of its high noise immunity and low static power consumption, lateral complementary-metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) IC technology in 4H-SiC is desirable for large-scale integration2. This technology necessitates the use of both n- and p-channel MOSFETs that can operate at high temperatures. Despite the advances of 4H-SiC MOSFETs, the high density of interface states (Dit) at the 4H-SiC/SiO2 interface prevents reaching full potential resulting in high channel resistance and low mobility. Alternatives to nitric oxide (NO) annealing, the most common method adopted to reduce Dit in 4H-SiC3,4, are actively sought due to its toxicity and relatively expensive cost. Annealing in pure nitrogen (N2)5,6 at high temperatures (1400 °C-1600 °C) has been recently demonstrated promising results for 4H-SiC MOSFET processing. In this work, we report Dit measurements consistent with [6] and attempt to correlate the nitrogen areal densities of the near interfacial regions with the Dit for high temperature N2 annealing processes compared to NO. In our study, metal oxide semiconductor capacitors were fabricated on p- and n-type 4H-SiC epitaxial layers. Gate oxides were thermally grown at 1150 °C for 10 h in dry O2 resulting in a ~ 60 nm thick oxide layer. Selected samples are then annealed in flowing N2 at high temperatures (1400 °C, 1 h; 1450 °C, 1 h; and 1500 °C, 30 minutes or 1 h) or NO (1175 °C, 2 h). X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), carried out after etching the oxide, indicates that the amount of nitrogen at the interface due to high temperature N2 annealing is ~ 4 × higher than NO annealed devices. Simultaneous high frequency (100 kHz)- low frequency CV was performed to extract interface trap densities (Dit) for each process and compared at room temperature (27 °C) with reference 1175 °C, 2 h NO annealed samples. The comparison reveals that, N2 annealing at 1500 °C for 30 minutes with a flow rate of 3 LPM results in Dit values comparable to NO annealing across the bandgap. Moreover, nitrogen annealing is more effective in reducing Dit near the valence band than NO annealing, while the opposite is true close to the conduction band-edge, consistent with previous reports [6] and observed in atomistic models of these interfaces using the density functional theory7. Nitrogen annealing also decreases the positive fixed charges at the interface of p-type 4H-SiC and SiO2, as evidenced from the flat band voltage comparison. The oxide breakdown voltage for the devices made with 1500 °C N2 annealing was similar to that of NO annealed devices. XPS analysis of the N2 annealed devices, their behavior under high temperature and bias, and their potential to substitute NO will be further discussed. The authors gratefully acknowledge the support from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory/ US Department of Energy sub-contract NREL-AHL-9-92362-01. References: 1 T. Kimoto and J.A. Cooper, Fundamentals of Silicon Carbide Technology: Growth, Characterization, Devices and Applications (John Wiley & Sons, 2014). 2 D. Liu and C. Svensson, IEEE J. Solid-State Circuits 29, 663 (1994). 3 G. Liu, B.R. Tuttle, and S. Dhar, Appl. Phys. Rev. 2, 021307 (2015). 4 S. Das, T. Isaacs-Smith, A. Ahyi, M.A. Kuroda, and S. Dhar, J. Appl. Phys. 130, 225701 (2021). 5 A. Chanthaphan, T. Hosoi, T. Shimura, and H. Watanabe, AIP Adv. 5, 097134 (2015). 6 K. Tachiki and T. Kimoto, IEEE Trans. Electron Devices 68, 638 (2021). 7 L. Wang, S. Dhar, L.C. Feldman, and M.A. Kuroda, Phys. Status Solidi B 259, 2100224 (2022). Figure 1
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- 2022
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5. (Invited, Digital Presentation) Interface Charge Trapping and Scattering in SiC MOSFET Channels
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Sarit Dhar, Suman Das, Ayayi Ahyi, and Marcelo Kuroda
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The channel conductivity of SiC MOSFETs is severely limited by charge trapping at interface states and mobility limiting scattering processes. In this talk, the status of interface state passivation for both n- and p-channel 4H-SiC MOSFETs will be presented. First, results from capacitance-based methods to extract interface state density (Dit) across the entire 4H-SiC band gap for thermally grown nitrided silicon dioxide gate dielectrics will be presented, emphasizing the critical importance of the SiO2(N)/SiC interface composition and nitrogen bonding. Next, the scattering mechanisms for channel electrons and holes in these devices will be analyzed and contrasted by Hall measurements. [1] The transport will be characterized as a function of temperature and substrate-bias within an effective transverse electric field model. The final part of the talk will focus on latest development on deposited dielectrics for 4H-SiC. Deposited dielectrics are an attractive alternative to thermal oxidation as it minimizes the release of carbon and the perturbation of surface crystal structure and opens the possibility of ‘high-k’ dielectrics with higher permittivity than SiO2. Herein, the key importance of 4H-SiC surface control prior to dielectric deposition will highlighted using results obtained for atomic layer deposition (ALD) of Aluminum Oxide (Al2O3) [2]. To this end, a systematic variation of SiC surface termination with processes involving oxygen, hydrogen and nitrogen will be presented. The composition of the deposited films and the interfacial bonding will be characterized for various deposition processes and correleated with electrical measurements . It will be demonstrated that surface nitridation followed by H2 annealing prior to ALD results in a factor of 2 higher channel mobility than typical NO annealed thermal SiO2. This is due to the formation of stable sub-nm SiON layers that passivates the surface and enables the formation of high-quality interfaces between SiC and deposited dielectric. In addition, the results indicate that clean Si-H terminated surfaces formed by hydrogen etching and annealing, prior to dielectric deposition leads to uniform nucleation of Al2O3. The reduction of Dit is also accompanied by improvements in oxide charge trapping and bias instability, but dielectric leakage current is significantly higher for Al2O3 compared to SiO2 due to bulk trap-assisted tunneling in Al2O3. The reliability is a significant challenge that need to be overcome to exploit the enhanced mobilities and make deposited dielectrics competitive with traditional nitrided SiO2. Acknowledgments: The authors acknowledge support from the US Army Research Laboratory (grant ARMY-W911NF-18-2-0160) and US Department of Energy (subcontracted to National Renewable Energy Laboratory, grant NREL-AHL-9-92632-01). The authors also acknowledge the support Dr. Leonard C. Feldman (Auburn, Rutgers) and Mr. Hengfei Gu (Rutgers) for help with XPS measurements. The authors also deeply thank Ms. T Isaacs-Smith, Ms. Lu Wang (Auburn), Dr. K. Ramadoss and Dr. D. Morisette (Purdue Univ.) for useful discussions and help with fabrication. [1] S. Das et al., J. Appl. Phys. 130, 225701, (2021). [2] I. U. Jayawardhena et al., J. Appl. Phys. 129, 75702, (2021) Figure 1
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- 2022
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6. INFLUENCE OF CUTTING FLUID TYPE ON CUTTING REGION TEMPERATURE DURING GRINDING OF BEARING STEEL
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Raphael Lima de Paiva, Rodrigo Ruzzi, Felipe dos Anjos Rodrigues Campos, Marcelo Kuroda, Rodolfo Oliveira, Washington Martins da Silva Jr., and Rosemar Batista da Silva
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- 2021
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7. High temperature characteristics of nitric oxide annealed p-channel 4H-SiC metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistors
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Sarit Dhar, Tamara Isaacs-Smith, Suman Das, Marcelo Kuroda, and Ayayi Ahyi
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General Physics and Astronomy - Published
- 2021
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8. Dysregulation of G-CSF and neutrophil production is associated with chronic inflammation in elderly rhesus macaques
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Ziyuan He, Naofumi Takahashi, Marissa Fahlberg, Nadia Slisarenko, Elizabeth Didier, and Marcelo Kuroda
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Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
Aging is characterized with a loss of hematopoietic tissue in bone marrow, systemic chronic inflammation, and higher susceptibility to infectious diseases. We previously showed the tightly regulated kinetics and massive daily production of neutrophils during homeostasis in rhesus macaques aged 3 to 19 years old. Here we extended that study to further investigate the effect of aging on kinetics and production of neutrophils in more elderly rhesus macaques. We observed a neutrophil kinetics shift and higher in-group variability in rhesus macaques above 20 years old (equivalent to 70 years or more in humans) by in vivo BrdU pulse-chase labeling. In a cross-sectional study, we also measured complete blood cell counts and plasma cytokine levels from a group of 126 outdoor-housed captive Indian-ancestry rhesus macaques between 2 to 23 years old and found that aging negatively correlated with neutrophil counts and positively correlated with plasma G-CSF levels. Hierarchical clustering analysis suggested that G-CSF was strongly associated with pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-1b and MIP-1a. In elderly rhesus macaques, neutrophils expressed less myeloperoxidase and there was a higher frequency of PMN-MDSCs compared to the young adult macaques. In summary, there appears to be a dysregulated feedback mechanism wherein increased levels of G-CSF failed to restore neutrophil production in elderly rhesus macaques that was associated with induced production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and earlier release of less mature neutrophils and PMN-MDSCs. Together, these findings may contribute to the understanding of the chronic inflammation and greater susceptibility to infectious diseases in the elderly.
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- 2019
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9. Tuberculosis boosts HIV-1 production by macrophages through IL-10/STAT3 dependent tunneling nanotube formation
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Geanncarlo Lugo, Shanti Souriant, Luciana Balboa, Maeva Dupont, Karine Pingris, Denise Kviatcovsky, Celine Cougoule, Claire Lastrucci, Aicha Bah, Roman Gasser, Renaud Poincloux, Brigitte Raynaud-Messina, Talal Al Saati, Sandra Inwentarz, Susana Poggi, Eduardo Jose Moraña, Pablo González-Montaner, Marcelo Corti, Bernard Lagane, Isabelle Vergne, Carolina Allers, Deepak Kaushal, Marcelo Kuroda, Maria del Carmen Sasiain, Olivier Neyrolles, Isabelle Maridonneau-Parini, and Christel Verollet
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Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
The tuberculosis (TB) bacillus, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) and HIV-1 are known to act synergistically, however, the mechanisms by which Mtb exacerbates HIV-1 pathogenesis are not well known. Using in vitro and ex vivo cell culture system, we show that human M(IL-10) anti-inflammatory macrophages, present in TB-associated microenvironments, produced high levels of HIV-1. In vivo, M(IL-10) macrophages were expanded in lungs of co-infected non-human primates, their number correlated with disease severity, and markers for these cells (soluble CD163 and MerTK) accumulated in the blood of co-infected patients. These M(IL-10) macrophages formed direct cell-to-cell bridges, which we identified as tunneling nanotubes (TNTs) involved in viral transfer. TNT formation required the IL-10/STAT3 signaling pathway, and targeted inhibition of TNTs substantially reduced the enhanced HIV-1 cell-to-cell transfer and overproduction in M(IL-10) macrophages. Our study reveals that TNTs facilitate viral transfer and amplification, promoting TNT formation as a mechanism to be explored in TB/AIDS potential therapeutics.
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- 2019
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10. Phenotype and Functional Characteristics of HIV-Specific Cytotoxic CD8+ T Cells in Chronically Infected Patients
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Mariola López, Vincent Soriano, José Miguel Benito, Marcelo Kuroda, Juan González-Lahoz, Sara Lozano, and Martínez P
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Adult ,Male ,Epitopes, T-Lymphocyte ,Gene Products, gag ,Gene Products, pol ,HIV Infections ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Virus Replication ,Virus ,Epitope ,Interferon-gamma ,Immunophenotyping ,Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active ,HLA-A2 Antigen ,Humans ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Longitudinal Studies ,biology ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,HIV ,T-Lymphocytes, Helper-Inducer ,T lymphocyte ,Middle Aged ,Viral Load ,Flow Cytometry ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Infectious Diseases ,HIV Antigens ,Lentivirus ,Immunology ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,Cell Division ,CD8 ,T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic - Abstract
Background: Cytotoxic CD8 + T cells (CTLs) are critical for the control of viral infections. Although these cells can be recognized in most HIV-infected individuals, they fail to successfully control HIV replication. Distinct functional defects seem to limit their efficacy in HIV infection, although they have been not fully elucidated. Patients and methods: Blood lymphocytes collected from 61 HLA-A0201 + , untreated, chronically HIV-infected individuals were examined for the presence of CTLs against epitopes from HIV Gag and Pol proteins, using tetrameric complexes. Several functional aspects of these cells were further analyzed (immunophenotype; ability to produce interferon-γ (IFN-γ) in response to the specific peptide; proliferative capacity; and cytolytic activity). Lymphoproliferative responses of these cells confronting different stimulus were also evaluated. A longitudinal analysis was carried out in a subgroup who underwent antiretroviral therapy and were followed for 6 months. Results: CD8 + T cells staining with the tetramer complexes (Tet + ) were detected in 44% of patients, with TetGag + cells being more frequently detected and at higher levels than TetPol + cells. Most Tet + cells expressed a memory phenotype, showed an impaired ability to produce IFN-γ when stimulated with the cognate peptide, and showed a very low expansion when cultured in the presence of the peptide. There was a negative correlation between the proportion of Tet + cells producing IFN-γ and plasma HIV-RNA. Although Tet + cells diminished in most individuals after beginning antiretroviral therapy, some patients showed de novo appearance of Tet + cells. Conclusions: Most Tet + cells in chronic HIV-infected individuals express a memory phenotype and show an impaired production of IFN-γ and a lower proliferative response to specific HIV antigens. Interestingly, some individuals under successful antiretroviral therapy may show de novo appearance of specific CTLs. The implications of these findings are relevant for a better understanding of virus-host interactions.
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- 2003
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11. Distinct impact of SIV infection in interstitial and alveolar lung macrophages on the pathogenesis of lung disease in rhesus macaques (VIR9P.1147)
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Marcelo Kuroda, Y Cai, C. Sugimoto, M Arainga, C. Midkiff, E Walker, E Haupt, X Alvarez, A Lackner, W. Kim, and Elizabeth Didier
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Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
Declining CD4+ T cells during HIV infection contributes to immunodeficiency, but we recently reported that increasing monocyte turnover better predicted onset of terminal disease progression to AIDS in SIV-infected rhesus macaques. Here we describe the kinetics of SIV infection on distinct lung macrophage subsets and on monocyte/macrophage turnover rates in relation to pulmonary disease progression in rhesus macaques. Monocyte and tissue macrophage turnover were monitored by in vivo BrdU injection and cell uptake. Cell-associated SIV DNA in lung tissue was quantified by qPCR and in situ hybridization. Massive SIV infection was associated with increasing death rate of shorter-lived lung interstitial macrophages (IM) with elevated monocyte turnover and progression to AIDS. Conversely, the turnover of alveolar macrophages (AM) and decreasing numbers of CD4+ T cells in lung tissue did not directly correlate with disease progression. SIV DNA levels within IM and AM of the lung increased as monocyte turnover increased, but did not change within lung CD4+ T cells regardless of the stage of disease. These data suggest that SIV infection and concurrent destruction of lung IM contribute to pulmonary pathogenesis during AIDS progression while the longer-lived AM that become infected may contribute to establishing a virus reservoir. Also, bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) specimens contain AM but not IM, so may be insufficient for fully evaluating macrophage-mediated responses in the lung.
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- 2015
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12. Pulmonary macrophage alterations associated with aging and SIV infection in rhesus macaques (VIR9P.1155)
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Elizabeth Didier, Y Cai, C. Sugimoto, D. Liu, C. Midkiff, E Walker, M Arainga, E Haupt, X Alvarez, M Fahlberg, and Marcelo Kuroda
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Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
Accelerated aging occurs in HIV-infected persons HIV, despite ART, as seen by earlier onset of chronic inflammatory diseases and HIV-associated non-AIDS (HANA) conditions than in non-HIV-infected individuals. In the rhesus macaque SIV model, we reported earlier that increasing monocyte turnover associated with tissue macrophage death predicted onset of terminal disease progression. Here, we hypothesize that macrophage dysregulation contributes to accelerated aging that occurs during SIV infection. We compared macrophage populations of the lung in older and younger uninfected and SIV-infected rhesus macaques. We observed that the ratio of alveolar macrophages (AM) to interstitial macrophages (IM) was significantly lower in chronic SIV-infected younger macaques and older uninfected monkeys compared to uninfected young macaques. The mechanisms differed, however, because the lower ratio in the older uninfected monkeys was due to lower numbers of AM while the shift during SIV infection of younger adults was due to increasing numbers of IM. Functionally, AM of older vs younger uninfected animals exhibited higher levels of pro-inflammatory cytokine secretion (TNFα, IL12) during incubation in medium yet produced lower levels of cytokines after induction with LPS ex vivo. During the acute phase of SIV infection, we observed a higher turnover of monocytes and IM in older compared to younger macaques. This suggests that AM become dysregulated during aging and SIV/HIV infection.
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- 2015
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13. Preexisting frequency of antigen-specific naive T cell dictates immunodominance of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells (43.25)
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Marcelo Kuroda, Atsuhiko Hasegawa, Huining Liu, Heather C. Vinet, and Ramu A. Subbramanian
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Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
Immunodominance is a common feature of Ag-specific CTL responses to infection or vaccines. Understanding the basis of immunodominance is crucial to understanding cellular immunity and viral evasion mechanisms and will provide a rational approach for improving vaccine design. This study was performed comparing CTLs specific for the SIV Gag p11C (dominant) and SIV Pol p68A (subdominant) epitopes that are consistently generated in Mamu-A*01+ rhesus monkeys exposed to SIV proteins. Additionally, vaccinated monkeys were used to prevent any issues of antigenic variation or dynamic changes in CTL responses by continuous Ag exposure. Analysis of the TCR repertoire revealed the usage of higher numbers of TCR clones by the dominant p11C-specific CTL population. Preferential usage of specific TCRs and the in vitro functional TCR-α and -β chain-pairing assay suggests that every peptide/MHC complex may only be recognized by a limited number of unique combinations of α and β chain pairs. The wider array of TCR clones used by the dominant p11C-specific CTL population might be explained by the higher probability of generating those specific TCR chain pairs. Our data suggest that Ag-specific naïve T cell precursor frequency may be predetermined and that this dictates immunodominance of CD8+ T cell responses. These findings will aid in understanding immunodominance and designing new approaches to modulate CTL responses.
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- 2007
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14. Proceedings of the Frontiers of Retrovirology Conference 2016
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Irena Zurnic, Sylvia Hütter, Ute Lehmann, Nicole Stanke, Juliane Reh, Tobias Kern, Fabian Lindel, Gesche Gerresheim, Martin Hamann, Erik Müllers, Paul Lesbats, Peter Cherepanov, Erik Serrao, Alan Engelman, Dirk Lindemann, Claire Da Silva Santos, Kevin Tartour, Andrea Cimarelli, Rya Burdick, Jianbo Chen, Jaya Sastri, Wei-Shau Hu, Vinay Pathak, Oliver T. Keppler, Karine Pradeau, Sylvia Eiler, Nicolas Levy, Sarah Lennon, Sarah Cianferani, Stéphane Emiliani, Marc Ruff, Vincent Parissi, Sylvie Rato, Antonio Rausell, Miguel Munoz, Amalio Telenti, Angela Ciuffi, Alexander Zhyvoloup, Anat Melamed, Ian Anderson, Delphine Planas, Janos Kriston-Vizi, Robin Ketteler, Chen- Hsuin Lee, Andy Merritt, Petronela Ancuta, Charles Bangham, Ariberto Fassati, Anthony Rodari, Benoit Van Driessche, Mathilde Galais, Nadége Delacourt, Sylvain Fauquenoy, Caroline Vanhulle, Anna Kula, Arsène Burny, Olivier Rohr, Carine Van Lint, Thijs van Montfort, Renee van der Sluis, Dave Speijer, Ben Berkhout, Bo Meng, Andrzej Rutkowski, Neil Berry, Lars Dölken, Andrew Lever, Thomas Schuster, Benedikt Asbach, Ralf Wagner, Christine Gross, Veit Wiesmann, Martina Kalmer, Thomas Wittenberg, Jan Gettemans, Andrea K. Thoma-Kress, Minghua Li, Eric O. Freed, Shan-Lu Liu, Janis Müller, Jan Münch, Xaver Sewald, Pradeep Uchil, Mark Ladinsky, Jagadish Beloor, Ruoxi Pi, Christin Herrmann, Nasim Motamedi, Thomas Murooka, Michael Brehm, Dale Greiner, Thorsten Mempel, Pamela Bjorkman, Priti Kumar, Walther Mothes, Simone Joas, Erica Parrish, Clement Wesley Gnanadurai, Edina Lump, Christina M. Stürzel, Nicholas F. Parrish, Ulrike Sauermann, Katharina Töpfer, Tina Schultheiss, Steven Bosinger, Guido Silvestri, Cristian Apetrei, Nicholas Huot, Michaela Müller-Trutwin, Daniel Sauter, Beatrice H. Hahn, Christiane Stahl-Hennig, Frank Kirchhoff, Gerald Schumann, Sabine Jung-Klawitter, Nina V. Fuchs, Kyle R. Upton, Martin Muñoz-Lopez, Ruchi Shukla, Jichang Wang, Marta Garcia-Canadas, Cesar Lopez-Ruiz, Daniel J. Gerhardt, Attila Sebe, Ivana Grabundzija, Patricia Gerdes, Sylvia Merkert, Andres Pulgarin, Anja Bock, Ulrike Held, Anett Witthuhn, Alexandra Haase, Ernst J. Wolvetang, Ulrich Martin, Zoltán Ivics, Zsuzsanna Izsvák, J. Garcia-Perez, Geoffrey J. Faulkner, Tara Hurst, Aris Katzourakis, Gkikas Magiorkinis, Kerstin Schott, Rita Derua, Janna Seifried, Andreas Reuter, Heike Schmitz, Christiane Tondera, Alberto Brandariz-Nuñez, Felipe Diaz-Griffero, Veerle Janssens, Renate König, Hanna-Mari Baldauf, Lena Stegmann, Sarah-Marie Schwarz, Maud Trotard, Margarethe Martin, Gina Lenzi, Manja Burggraf, Xiaoyu Pan, Oliver I. Fregoso, Efrem S. Lim, Libin Abraham, Elina Erikson, Laura Nguyen, Ina Ambiel, Frank Rutsch, Baek Kim, Michael Emerman, Oliver T. Fackler, Sabine Wittmann, Rayk Behrendt, Bianca Volkmann, Kristin Eissmann, Thomas Gramberg, Sebastian Bolduan, Herwig Koppensteiner, Stefanie Regensburg, Ruth Brack-Werner, Rika Draenert, Michael Schindler, Aurélie Ducroux, Shuting Xu, Aparna Ponnurangam, Sergej Franz, Angelina Malassa, Ellen Ewald, Christine Goffinet, Sin-Yee Fung, Ching-Ping Chan, Chun-Kit Yuen, Kin-Hang Kok, Chin-Ping Chan, Dong-Yan Jin, Ulf Dittmer, Dorota Kmiec, Shilpa Iyer, Christina Stürzel, Beatrice Hahn, Yasuo Ariumi, Mariko Yasuda-Inoue, Koudai Kawano, Satoshi Tateishi, Priscilla Turelli, Alex Compton, Nicolas Roy, Françoise Porrot, Anne Billet, Nicoletta Casartelli, Jacob Yount, Chen Liang, Oliver Schwartz, Carsten Magnus, Lucia Reh, Penny Moore, Therese Uhr, Jacqueline Weber, Lynn Morris, Alexandra Trkola, Rashel V. Grindberg, Erika Schlaepfer, Gideon Schreiber, Viviana Simon, Roberto F. Speck, Zeger Debyser, Lenard Vranckx, Jonas Demeulemeester, Suha Saleh, Eric Verdin, Anna Cereseto, Frauke Christ, Rik Gijsbers, Gang Wang, Na Zhao, Atze T. Das, Josef Köstler, Beatriz Perdiguero, Mariano Esteban, Bertram L. Jacobs, David C. Montefiori, Celia C. LaBranche, Nicole L. Yates, Georgia D. Tomaras, Guido Ferrari, Kathryn E. Foulds, Mario Roederer, Gary Landucci, Donald N. Forthal, Michael S. Seaman, Natalie Hawkins, Steven G. Self, Sanjay Phogat, James Tartaglia, Susan W. Barnett, Brian Burke, Anthony D. Cristillo, Song Ding, Jonathan L. Heeney, Giuseppe Pantaleo, Viktoria Stab, Armin Ensser, Bettina Tippler, Dennis Burton, Matthias Tenbusch, Klaus Überla, Galit Alter, Giuseppe Lofano, Anne-Sophie Dugast, Viraj Kulkarni, Todd Suscovich, Tatiana Opazo, Felipe Barraza, Diego Herrera, Andrea Garces, Tomas Schwenke, Diego Tapia, Jorge Cancino, Gloria Arriagada, Christina Haußner, Dominik Damm, Anette Rohrhofer, Barbara Schmidt, Jutta Eichler, Rebecca Midgley, James Wheeldon, Vincent Piguet, Priyanka Khopkar, Megha Rohamare, Smita Kulkarni, Ana Godinho-Santos, Allan Hance, Joao Goncalves, Fabrizio Mammano, Romain Gasser, Meriem Hamoudi, Martina Pellicciotta, Zhicheng Zhou, Clara Visdeloup, Philippe Colin, Martine Braibant, Bernard Lagane, Matteo Negroni, Jula Wamara, Norbert Bannert, Thibault Mesplede, Nathan Osman, Kaitlin Anstett, Jiaming Calvin Liang, Hanh Thi Pham, Mark Wainberg, Wei Shao, Jigui Shan, Mary Kearney, Xiaolin Wu, Frank Maldarelli, John Mellors, Brian Luke, John Coffin, Stephen Hughes, Thomas Fricke, Silvana Opp, Caitlin Shepard, Dmitri Ivanov, Jose Valle-Casuso, Marine Kanja, Pierre Cappy, Daniela Lener, Ekaterina Knyazhanskaya, Andrey Anisenko, Timofey Zatsepin, Marina Gottikh, Alexander Komkov, Anastasia Minervina, Gaiaz Nugmanov, Vadim Nazarov, Konstantin Khodosevich, Ilgar Mamedov, Yuri Lebedev, Marta Colomer-Lluch, Ruth Serra-Moreno, Ambra Sarracino, Lavina Gharu, Alexander Pasternak, Alessandro Marcello, Ann Marie McCartin, Anurag Kulkarni, Valentin Le Douce, Virginie Gautier, Ann Baeyens, Evelien Naessens, Anouk Van Nuffel, Karin Weening, Anne- Marie Reilly, Eva Claeys, Wim Trypsteen, Linos Vandekerckhove, Sven Eyckerman, Kris Gevaert, Bruno Verhasselt, Hoi Ping Mok, Nicholas Norton, Axel Fun, Jack Hirst, Mark Wills, Dalibor Miklik, Filip Senigl, Jiri Hejnar, Jun-ichi Sakuragi, Sayuri Sakuragi, Masaru Yokoyama, Tatsuo Shioda, Hironori Sato, Jochen Bodem, Rebecca Moschall, Sarah Denk, Steffen Erkelenz, Christian Schenk, Heiner Schaal, Norbert Donhauser, Ellen Socher, Sebastian Millen, Heinrich Sticht, Melanie Mann, Guochao Wei, Matthew J. Betts, Yang Liu, Timo Kehl, Robert B. Russell, Martin Löchelt, Oliver Hohn, Saeed Mostafa, Kirsten Hanke, Stephen Norley, Chia-Yen Chen, Masashi Shingai, Pedro Borrego, Nuno Taveira, Klaus Strebel, Chris Hellmund, Melanie Friedrich, Friedrich Hahn, Christian Setz, Pia Rauch, Kirsten Fraedrich, Alina Matthaei, Petra Henklein, Maximilian Traxdorf, Torgils Fossen, Ulrich Schubert, Aya Khwaja, Meytal Galilee, Akram Alian, Birco Schwalbe, Heiko Hauser, Michael Schreiber, Mirte Scherpenisse, Young-Keol Cho, Jungeun Kim, Daeun Jeong, Katerina Trejbalova, Martina Benesova, Dana Kucerova, Zdenka Vernerova, Rachel Amouroux, Petra Hajkova, Daniel Elleder, Tomas Hron, Helena Farkasova, Abinash Padhi, Jan Paces, Henan Zhu, Robert Gifford, Pablo Murcia, Maria Luisa Carrozza, Anna-Maria Niewiadomska, Maurizio Mazzei, Mounir Abi-Said, Joseph Hughes, Stéphane Hué, Adetayo Obasa, Graeme Jacobs, Susan Engelbrecht, Katharina Mack, Kathrin Starz, Matthias Geyer, Frederic Bibollet-Ruche, Marie Leoz, Jean Christophe Plantier, Ayele Argaw-Denboba, Emanuela Balestrieri, Annalucia Serafino, Ilaria Bucci, Chiara Cipriani, Corrado Spadafora, Paolo Sinibaldi-Vallebona, Claudia Matteucci, S. Nandi Jayashree, Ujjwal Neogi, Anil K. Chhangani, Shravan Sing Rathore, Bajrang R. J. Mathur, Adeyemi Abati, B. Taylan Koç, Tuba Çiğdem Oğuzoğlu, Takatoshi Shimauchi, Stephan Caucheteux, Jocelyn Turpin, Katja Finsterbusch, Yoshiki Tokura, Shanti Souriant, Luciana Balboa, Karine Pingris, Denise Kviatcowsky, Brigitte Raynaud-Messina, Céline Cougoule, Ingrid Mercier, Marcelo Kuroda, Pablo González-Montaner, Sandra Inwentarz, Eduardo Jose Moraña, Maria del Carmen Sasiain, Olivier Neyrolles, Isabelle Maridonneau-Parini, Geanncarlo Lugo-Villarino, Christel Vérollet, Alexandra Herrmann, Dominique Thomas, Nerea Ferreirós Bouzas, Xavier Lahaye, Anvita Bhargava, Takeshi Satoh, Matteo Gentili, Silvia Cerboni, Aymeric Silvin, Cécile Conrad, Hakim Ahmed-Belkacem, Elisa C. Rodriguez, Jean-François Guichou, Nathalie Bosquet, Matthieu Piel, Roger Le Grand, Megan King, Jean-Michel Pawlotsky, Nicolas Manel, Henning Hofmann, Benedicte Vanwalscappel, Nicolin Bloch, Nathaniel Landau, Stanislav Indik, Benedikt Hagen, José Carlos Valle-Casuso, Awatef Allouch, Annie David, Françoise Barré-Sinoussi, Monsef Benkirane, Gianfranco Pancino, Asier Saez-Cirion, Wing-Yiu Lee, Richard Sloan, Bianca Schulte, Jonas Blomberg, Luana Vargiu, Patricia Rodriguez-Tomé, Enzo Tramontano, Göran Sperber, Namita Kumari, Tatiana Ammosova, Sharmeen Diaz, Patricia Oneal, Sergei Nekhai, Audrey Fahrny, Gustavo Gers-Huber, Annette Audigé, Anitha Jayaprakash, Ravi Sachidanandam, Matt Hernandez, Marsha Dillon-White, Emmanuel Maze, Claire Ham, Neil Almond, Greg Towers, Robert Belshaw, Patrícia de Sousa-Pereira, Joana Abrantes, Massimo Pizzato, Pedro J. Esteves, Tanja Kahle, Sven Schmitt, Laura Merkel, Nina Reuter, Thomas Stamminger, Ilaria Dalla Rosa, Kate Bishop, Antonella Spinazzola, Harriet Groom, Gabrielle Vieyres, Mathias Müsken, Thomas Zillinger, Veit Hornung, Winfried Barchet, Susanne Häussler, Thomas Pietschmann, Aneela Javed, Nicole Leuchte, Gabriela Salinas, Lennart Opitz, Sieghart Sopper, Christiane Mummert, Christian Hofmann, Angela G. Hückelhoven, Silke Bergmann, Sandra M. Müller-Schmucker, Ellen G. Harrer, Jan Dörrie, Niels Schaft, Thomas Harrer, Laure Cardinaux, M.- L. Zahno, H.- R. Vogt, R. Zanoni, G. Bertoni, Maximilian Muenchhoff, Philip Goulder, Oliver Keppler, Stephanie Rebensburg, Markus Helfer, Yuwei Zhang, Huicheng Chen, Annie Bernier, Annie Gosselin, Jean- Pierre Routy, Birgitta Wöhrl, Anna Schneider, Angela Corona, Imke Spöring, Mareike Jordan, Bernd Buchholz, Elias Maccioni, Roberto Di Santo, Kristian Schweimer, Christian Schölz, Brian Weinert, Sebastian Wagner, Petra Beli, Yasuyuki Miyake, Jun Qi, Lars Jensen, Werner Streicher, Anna McCarthy, Nicholas Westwood, Sonia Lain, Jürgen Cox, Patrick Matthias, Matthias Mann, James Bradner, Chunaram Choudhary, Marcel Stern, Elena Valletta, Caterina Frezza, Francesca Marino-Merlo, Sandro Grelli, Anna Lucia Serafino, Antonio Mastino, Beatrice Macchi, Meike Kaulfuß, Sonja Windmann, Wibke Bayer, Sello Mikasi, Rebecca Heß, Michael Storcksdieck gen. Bonsmann, Carsten Kirschning, Bernd Lepenies, Anne Kolenbrander, Vladimir Temchura, Kenta Iijima, Junya Kobayashi, and Yukihito Ishizaka
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0301 basic medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,Retroviral infection ,Virology ,Pandemic ,Biology ,Meeting Abstracts - Abstract
Table of contents Oral presentations Session 1: Entry & uncoating O1 Host cell polo-like kinases (PLKs) promote early prototype foamy virus (PFV) replication Irena Zurnic, Sylvia Hütter, Ute Lehmann, Nicole Stanke, Juliane Reh, Tobias Kern, Fabian Lindel, Gesche Gerresheim, Martin Hamann, Erik Müllers, Paul Lesbats, Peter Cherepanov, Erik Serrao, Alan Engelman, Dirk Lindemann O2 A novel entry/uncoating assay reveals the presence of at least two species of viral capsids during synchronized HIV-1 infection Claire Da Silva Santos, Kevin Tartour, Andrea Cimarelli O3 Dynamics of nuclear envelope association and nuclear import of HIV-1 complexes Rya Burdick, Jianbo Chen, Jaya Sastri, Wei-Shau Hu, Vinay Pathak O4 Human papillomavirus protein E4 potently enhances the susceptibility to HIV infection Oliver T. Keppler Session 2: Reverse transcription & integration O5 Structure and function of HIV-1 integrase post translational modifications Karine Pradeau, Sylvia Eiler, Nicolas Levy, Sarah Lennon, Sarah Cianferani, Stéphane Emiliani, Marc Ruff O6 Regulation of retroviral integration by RNA polymerase II associated factors and chromatin structure Vincent Parissi Session 3: Transcription and latency O7 A novel single-cell analysis pipeline to identify specific biomarkers of HIV permissiveness Sylvie Rato, Antonio Rausell, Miguel Munoz, Amalio Telenti, Angela Ciuffi O8 A capsid-dependent integration program linking T cell activation to HIV-1 gene expression Alexander Zhyvoloup, Anat Melamed, Ian Anderson, Delphine Planas, Janos Kriston-Vizi, Robin Ketteler, Chen-Hsuin Lee, Andy Merritt, Petronela Ancuta, Charles Bangham, Ariberto Fassati O9 Characterisation of new RNA polymerase III and RNA polymerase II transcriptional promoters in the Bovine Leukemia Virus genome Anthony Rodari, Benoit Van Driessche, Mathilde Galais, Nadége Delacourt, Sylvain Fauquenoy, Caroline Vanhulle, Anna Kula, Arsène Burny, Olivier Rohr, Carine Van Lint O10 Tissue-specific dendritic cells differentially modulate latent HIV-1 reservoirs Thijs van Montfort, Renee van der Sluis, Dave Speijer, Ben Berkhout Session 4: RNA trafficking & packaging O11 A novel cis-acting element affecting HIV replication Bo Meng, Andrzej Rutkowski, Neil Berry, Lars Dölken, Andrew Lever O12 Tolerance of HIV’s late gene expression towards stepwise codon adaptation Thomas Schuster, Benedikt Asbach, Ralf Wagner Session 5: Assembly & release O13 Importance of the tax-inducible actin-bundling protein fascin for transmission of human T cell leukemia virus Type 1 (HTLV-1) Christine Gross, Veit Wiesmann, Martina Kalmer, Thomas Wittenberg, Jan Gettemans, Andrea K. Thoma-Kress O14 Lentiviral nef proteins antagonize TIM-mediated inhibition of viral release Minghua Li, Eric O. Freed, Shan-Lu Liu Session 6: Pathogenesis & evolution O15 SEVI and semen prolong the half-life of HIV-1 Janis Müller, Jan Münch O16 CD169+ macrophages mediate retrovirus trans-infection of permissive lymphocytes to establish infection in vivo Xaver Sewald, Pradeep Uchil, Mark Ladinsky, Jagadish Beloor, Ruoxi Pi, Christin Herrmann, Nasim Motamedi, Thomas Murooka, Michael Brehm, Dale Greiner, Thorsten Mempel, Pamela Bjorkman, Priti Kumar, Walther Mothes O17 Efficient replication of a vpu containing SIVagm construct in African Green Monkeys requires an HIV-1 nef gene Simone Joas, Erica Parrish, Clement Wesley Gnanadurai, Edina Lump, Christina M. Stürzel, Nicholas F. Parrish, Ulrike Sauermann, Katharina Töpfer, Tina Schultheiss, Steven Bosinger, Guido Silvestri, Cristian Apetrei, Nicholas Huot, Michaela Müller-Trutwin, Daniel Sauter, Beatrice H. Hahn, Christiane Stahl-Hennig, Frank Kirchhoff O18 Reprogramming initiates mobilization of endogenous mutagenic LINE-1, Alu and SVA retrotransposons in human induced pluripotent stem cells with consequences for host gene expression Gerald Schumann, Sabine Jung-Klawitter, Nina V. Fuchs, Kyle R. Upton, Martin Muñoz-Lopez, Ruchi Shukla, Jichang Wang, Marta Garcia-Canadas, Cesar Lopez-Ruiz, Daniel J. Gerhardt, Attila Sebe, Ivana Grabundzija, Patricia Gerdes, Sylvia Merkert, Andres Pulgarin, Anja Bock, Ulrike Held, Anett Witthuhn, Alexandra Haase, Ernst J. Wolvetang, Ulrich Martin, Zoltán Ivics, Zsuzsanna Izsvák, J. Garcia-Perez, Geoffrey J. Faulkner O19 NF-κB activation induces expression of human endogenous retrovirus and particle production Tara Hurst, Aris Katzourakis, Gkikas Magiorkinis Session 7a and b: Innate sensing & intrinsic immunity O20 Identification of the phosphatase acting on T592 in SAMHD1 during M/G1 transition Kerstin Schott, Rita Derua, Janna Seifried, Andreas Reuter, Heike Schmitz, Christiane Tondera, Alberto Brandariz-Nuñez, Felipe Diaz-Griffero, Veerle Janssens, Renate König O21 Vpx overcomes a SAMHD1-independent block to HIV reverse transcription that is specific to resting CD4 T cells Hanna-Mari Baldauf, Lena Stegmann, Sarah-Marie Schwarz, Maud Trotard, Margarethe Martin, Gina Lenzi, Manja Burggraf, Xiaoyu Pan, Oliver I. Fregoso, Efrem S. Lim, Libin Abraham, Elina Erikson, Laura Nguyen, Ina Ambiel, Frank Rutsch, Renate König, Baek Kim, Michael Emerman, Oliver T. Fackler, Oliver T. Keppler O22 The role of SAMHD1 in antiviral restriction and immune sensing in the mouse Sabine Wittmann, Rayk Behrendt, Bianca Volkmann, Kristin Eissmann, Thomas Gramberg O23 T cells expressing reduced restriction factors are preferentially infected in therapy naïve HIV-1 patients Sebastian Bolduan, Herwig Koppensteiner, Stefanie Regensburg, Ruth Brack-Werner, Rika Draenert, Michael Schindler O24 cGAS-mediated innate immunity spreads through HIV-1 env-induced membrane fusion sites from infected to uninfected primary HIV-1 target cells Aurélie Ducroux, Shuting Xu, Aparna Ponnurangam, Sergej Franz, Angelina Malassa, Ellen Ewald, Christine Goffinet O25 Perturbation of innate RNA and DNA sensing by human T cell leukemia virus type 1 oncoproteins Sin-Yee Fung, Ching-Ping Chan, Chun-Kit Yuen, Kin-Hang Kok, Chin-Ping Chan, Dong-Yan Jin O26 Induction and anti-viral activity of Interferon α subtypes in HIV-1 infection Ulf Dittmer O27 Vpu-mediated counteraction of tetherin is a major determinant of HIV-1 interferon resistance Dorota Kmiec, Shilpa Iyer, Christina Stürzel, Daniel Sauter, Beatrice Hahn, Frank Kirchhoff O28 DNA repair protein Rad18 restricts HIV-1 and LINE-1 life cycle Yasuo Ariumi, Mariko Yasuda-Inoue, Koudai Kawano, Satoshi Tateishi, Priscilla Turelli O29 Natural mutations in IFITM3 allow escape from post-translational regulation and toggle antiviral specificity Alex Compton, Nicolas Roy, Françoise Porrot, Anne Billet, Nicoletta Casartelli, Jacob Yount, Chen Liang, Oliver Schwartz Session 8: Adaptive immunity & immune evasion O30 Observing evolution in HIV-1 infection: phylogenetics and mutant selection windows to infer the influence of the autologous antibody response on the viral quasispecies Carsten Magnus, Lucia Reh, Penny Moore, Therese Uhr, Jacqueline Weber, Lynn Morris, Alexandra Trkola O31 Dose and subtype specific analyses of the anti-HIV effects of IFN-alpha family members Rashel V. Grindberg, Erika Schlaepfer, Gideon Schreiber, Viviana Simon, Roberto F. Speck Session 9: Novel antiviral strategies O32 LEDGIN-mediated inhibition of the integrase-LEDGF/p75 interaction reduces reactivation of residual latent HIV Zeger Debyser, Lenard Vranckx, Jonas Demeulemeester, Suha Saleh, Eric Verdin, Anna Cereseto, Frauke Christ, Rik Gijsbers O33 NKG2D-mediated clearance of reactivated viral reservoirs by natural killer cells O34 Inhibition of HIV reactivation in brain cells by AAV-mediated delivery of CRISPR/Cas9 O35 CRISPR-Cas9 as antiviral: potent HIV-1 inhibition, but rapid virus escape and the subsequent design of escape-proof antiviral strategies Ben Berkhout, Gang Wang, Na Zhao, Atze T. Das Session 10: Recent advances in HIV vaccine development O36 Priming with a potent HIV-1 DNA vaccine frames the quality of T cell and antibody responses prior to a poxvirus and protein boost Benedikt Asbach, Josef Köstler, Beatriz Perdiguero, Mariano Esteban, Bertram L. Jacobs, David C. Montefiori, Celia C. LaBranche, Nicole L. Yates, Georgia D. Tomaras, Guido Ferrari, Kathryn E. Foulds, Mario Roederer, Gary Landucci, Donald N. Forthal, Michael S. Seaman, Natalie Hawkins, Steven G. Self, Sanjay Phogat, James Tartaglia, Susan W. Barnett, Brian Burke, Anthony D. Cristillo, Song Ding, Jonathan L. Heeney, Giuseppe Pantaleo, Ralf Wagner O37 Passive immunisation with a neutralising antibody against HIV-1 Env prevents infection of the first cells in a mucosal challenge rhesus monkey model Christiane Stahl-Hennig, Viktoria Stab, Armin Ensser, Ulrike Sauermann, Bettina Tippler, Dennis Burton, Matthias Tenbusch, Klaus Überla O38 HIV antibody Fc-glycoforms drive B cell affinity maturation Galit Alter, Giuseppe Lofano, Anne-Sophie Dugast, Viraj Kulkarni, Todd Suscovich Poster presentations Topic 1: Entry & uncoating P1 Dynein light chain is required for murine leukemia virus infection Tatiana Opazo, Felipe Barraza, Diego Herrera, Andrea Garces, Tomas Schwenke, Diego Tapia, Jorge Cancino, Gloria Arriagada P2 Peptide paratope mimics of the broadly neutralising HIV-1 antibody b12 Christina Haußner, Dominik Damm, Anette Rohrhofer, Barbara Schmidt, Jutta Eichler P3 Investigating cellular pathways involved in the transmission of HIV-1 between dendritic cells and T cells using RNAi screening techniques Rebecca Midgley, James Wheeldon, Vincent Piguet P4 Co-receptor tropism in HIV-1, HIV-2 monotypic and dual infections Priyanka Khopkar, Megha Rohamare, Smita Kulkarni P5 Characterisation of the role of CIB1 and CIB2 as HIV-1 helper factors Ana Godinho-Santos, Allan Hance, Joao Goncalves, Fabrizio Mammano P6 Buffering deleterious polymorphisms in the highly constrained C2 region of HIV-1 envelope by the flexible V3 domain Romain Gasser, Meriem Hamoudi, Martina Pellicciotta, Zhicheng Zhou, Clara Visdeloup, Philippe Colin, Martine Braibant, Bernard Lagane, Matteo Negroni P7 Entry inhibition of HERV-K(HML-2) by an Env-IgG fusion protein Jula Wamara, Norbert Bannert Topic 2: Reverse transcription & integration P8 The R263K/H51Y resistance substitutions in HIV integrase decreases levels of integrated HIV DNA over time Thibault Mesplede, Nathan Osman, Kaitlin Anstett, Jiaming Calvin Liang, Hanh Thi Pham, Mark Wainberg P9 The Retrovirus Integration Database (RID) Wei Shao, Jigui Shan, Mary Kearney, Xiaolin Wu, Frank Maldarelli, John Mellors, Brian Luke, John Coffin, Stephen Hughes P10 The small molecule 3G11 inhibits HIV-1 reverse transcription Thomas Fricke, Silvana Opp, Caitlin Shepard, Dmitri Ivanov, Baek Kim, Jose Valle-Casuso, Felipe Diaz-Griffero P11 Dual and opposite regulation of HIV-1 integration by hRAD51: impact on therapeutical approaches using homologous DNA repair modulators Vincent Parissi P12 A flexible motif essential for integration by HIV-1 integrase Marine Kanja, Pierre Cappy, Matteo Negroni, Daniela Lener P13 Interaction between HIV-1 integrase and the host protein Ku70: identification of the binding site and study of the influence on integrase-proteasome interplay Ekaterina Knyazhanskaya, Andrey Anisenko, Timofey Zatsepin, Marina Gottikh P14 Normalisation based method for deep sequencing of somatic retroelement integrations in human genome Alexander Komkov, Anastasia Minervina, Gaiaz Nugmanov, Vadim Nazarov, Konstantin Khodosevich, Ilgar Mamedov, Yuri Lebedev Topic 3: Transcription and latency P15 BCA2/RABRING7 restricts HIV-1 transcription by preventing the nuclear translocation of NF-κB Marta Colomer-Lluch, Ruth Serra-Moreno P16 MATR3 post-transcriptional regulation of HIV-1 transcription during latency Ambra Sarracino, Anna Kula, Lavina Gharu, Alexander Pasternak, Carine Van Lint, Alessandro Marcello P17 HIV-1 tat intersects the SUMO pathway to regulate HIV-1 promoter activity Ann Marie McCartin, Anurag Kulkarni, Valentin Le Douce, Virginie Gautier P18 Conservation in HIV-1 Vpr guides tertiary gRNA folding and alternative splicing Ann Baeyens, Evelien Naessens, Anouk Van Nuffel, Karin Weening, Anne-Marie Reilly, Eva Claeys, Wim Trypsteen, Linos Vandekerckhove, Sven Eyckerman, Kris Gevaert, Bruno Verhasselt P19 The majority of reactivatable latent HIV are genetically distinct Hoi Ping Mok, Nicholas Norton, Axel Fun, Jack Hirst, Mark Wills, Andrew Lever P20 Do mutations in the tat exonic splice enhancer contribute to HIV-1 latency? Nicholas Norton, Hoi Ping Mok, Jack Hirst, Andrew Lever P21 Culture-to-Ct: A fast and direct RT-qPCR HIV gene reactivation screening method using primary T cell culture Valentin Le Douce, Ann Marie McCartin, Virginie Gautier P22 A novel approach to define populations of early silenced proviruses Dalibor Miklik, Filip Senigl, Jiri Hejnar Topic 4: RNA trafficking & packaging P23 Functional analysis of the structure and conformation of HIV-1 genome RNA DIS Jun-ichi Sakuragi, Sayuri Sakuragi, Masaru Yokoyama, Tatsuo Shioda, Hironori Sato P24 Regulation of foamy viral env splicing controls gag and pol expression Jochen Bodem, Rebecca Moschall, Sarah Denk, Steffen Erkelenz, Christian Schenk, Heiner Schaal Topic 5: Assembly & release P25 Transfer of HTLV-1 p8 to target T cells depends on VASP: a novel interaction partner of p8 Norbert Donhauser, Ellen Socher, Sebastian Millen, Heinrich Sticht, Andrea K. Thoma-Kress P26 COL4A1 and COL4A2 are novel HTLV-1 tax targets with a putative role in virus transmission Christine Gross, Sebastian Millen, Melanie Mann, Klaus Überla, Andrea K. Thoma-Kress P27 The C terminus of foamy virus gag protein is required for particle formation, and virus budding: starting assembly at the C terminus? Guochao Wei, Matthew J. Betts, Yang Liu, Timo Kehl, Robert B. Russell, Martin Löchelt P28 Generation of an antigen-capture ELISA and analysis of Rec and Staufen-1 effects on HERV-K(HML-2) virus particle production Oliver Hohn, Saeed Mostafa, Kirsten Hanke, Stephen Norley, Norbert Bannert P29 Antagonism of BST-2/tetherin is a conserved function of primary HIV-2 Env glycoproteins Chia-Yen Chen, Masashi Shingai, Pedro Borrego, Nuno Taveira, Klaus Strebel P30 Mutations in the packaging signal region of the HIV-1 genome cause a late domain mutant phenotype Chris Hellmund, Bo Meng, Andrew Lever P31 p6 regulates membrane association of HIV-1 gag Melanie Friedrich, Friedrich Hahn, Christian Setz, Pia Rauch, Kirsten Fraedrich, Alina Matthaei, Petra Henklein, Maximilian Traxdorf, Torgils Fossen, Ulrich Schubert Topic 6: Pathogenesis & evolution P32 Molecular and structural basis of protein evolution during viral adaptation Aya Khwaja, Meytal Galilee, Akram Alian P33 HIV-1 enhancement and neutralisation by soluble gp120 and its role for the selection of the R5-tropic “best fit” Birco Schwalbe, Heiko Hauser, Michael Schreiber P34 An insertion of seven amino acids in the Env cytoplasmic tail of Human Immunodeficiency Virus type 2 (HIV-2) selected during disease progression enhances viral replication François Dufrasne, Mara Lucchetti, Patrick Goubau, Jean Ruelle P35 Cell-associated HIV-1 unspliced to multiply spliced RNA ratio at 12 weeks ART correlates with markers of immune activation and apoptosis and predicts the CD4 T-cell count at 96 weeks ART Mirte Scherpenisse, Ben Berkhout, Alexander Pasternak P36 Faster progression in non-B subtype HIV-1-infected patients than Korean subclade of subtype B is accompanied by higher variation and no induction of gross deletion in non-B nef gene by Korean red ginseng treatment Young-Keol Cho, Jungeun Kim, Daeun Jeong P37 Aberrant expression of ERVWE1 endogenous retrovirus and overexpression of TET dioxygenases are characteristic features of seminoma Katerina Trejbalova, Martina Benesova, Dana Kucerova, Zdenka Vernerova, Rachel Amouroux, Petra Hajkova, Jiri Hejnar P38 Life history of the oldest lentivirus: characterisation of ELVgv integrations and the TRIM5 selection pattern in dermoptera Daniel Elleder, Tomas Hron, Helena Farkasova, Abinash Padhi, Jan Paces P39 Characterisation of a highly divergent endogenous retrovirus in the equine germ line Henan Zhu, Robert Gifford, Pablo Murcia P40 The emergence of pandemic retroviral infection in small ruminants Maria Luisa Carrozza, Anna-Maria Niewiadomska, Maurizio Mazzei, Mounir Abi-Said, Joseph Hughes, Stéphane Hué, Robert Gifford P41 Near full-length genome (NFLG) Characterisation of HIV-1 subtype B identified in South Africa Adetayo Obasa, Graeme Jacobs, Susan Engelbrecht P42 Acquisition of Vpu-mediated tetherin antagonism by an HIV-1 group O strain Katharina Mack, Kathrin Starz, Daniel Sauter, Matthias Geyer, Frederic Bibollet-Ruche, Christina Stürzel, Marie Leoz, Jean Christophe Plantier, Beatrice H. Hahn, Frank Kirchhoff P43 The human endogenous retrovirus type K is involved in cancer stem cell markers expression and in human melanoma malignancy Ayele Argaw-Denboba, Emanuela Balestrieri, Annalucia Serafino, Ilaria Bucci, Chiara Cipriani, Corrado Spadafora, Paolo Sinibaldi-Vallebona, Claudia Matteucci P44 Natural infection of Indian non-human primates by unique lentiviruses S. Nandi Jayashree, Ujjwal Neogi, Anil K. Chhangani, Shravan Sing Rathore, Bajrang R. J. Mathur P45 Free cervical cancer screening among HIV-positive women receiving antiretroviral treatment in Nigeria Adeyemi Abati P46 Molecular evolutionary status of feline immunodeficiency virus in Turkey B. Taylan Koç, Tuba Çiğdem Oğuzoğlu Topic 7: Innate sensing & intrinsic immunity P47 Cell-to-cell contact with HTLV-1-infected T cells reduces dendritic cell immune functions and contributes to infection in trans. Takatoshi Shimauchi, Stephan Caucheteux, Jocelyn Turpin, Katja Finsterbusch, Charles Bangham, Yoshiki Tokura, Vincent Piguet P48 Deciphering the mechanisms of HIV-1 exacerbation induced by Mycobacterium tuberculosis in monocytes/macrophages Shanti Souriant, Luciana Balboa, Karine Pingris, Denise Kviatcowsky, Brigitte Raynaud-Messina, Céline Cougoule, Ingrid Mercier, Marcelo Kuroda, Pablo González-Montaner, Sandra Inwentarz, Eduardo Jose Moraña, Maria del Carmen Sasiain, Olivier Neyrolles, Isabelle Maridonneau-Parini, Geanncarlo Lugo-Villarino, Christel Vérollet P49 The SAMHD1-mediated inhibition of LINE-1 retroelements is regulated by phosphorylation Alexandra Herrmann, Sabine Wittmann, Caitlin Shepard, Dominique Thomas, Nerea Ferreirós Bouzas, Baek Kim, Thomas Gramberg P50 Activities of nuclear envelope protein SUN2 in HIV infection Xavier Lahaye, Anvita Bhargava, Takeshi Satoh, Matteo Gentili, Silvia Cerboni, Aymeric Silvin, Cécile Conrad, Hakim Ahmed-Belkacem, Elisa C. Rodriguez, Jean-François Guichou, Nathalie Bosquet, Matthieu Piel, Roger Le Grand, Megan King, Jean-Michel Pawlotsky, Nicolas Manel P51 Activation of TLR7/8 with a small molecule agonist induces a novel restriction to HIV-1 infection of monocytes Henning Hofmann, Benedicte Vanwalscappel, Nicolin Bloch, Nathaniel Landau P52 Steady state between the DNA polymerase and Rnase H domain activities of reverse transcriptases determines the sensitivity of retroviruses to inhibition by APOBEC3 proteins Stanislav Indik, Benedikt Hagen P53 HIV restriction in mature dendritic cells is related to p21 induction and p21-mediated control of the dNTP pool and SAMHD1 activity. José Carlos Valle-Casuso, Awatef Allouch, Annie David, Françoise Barré-Sinoussi, Michaela Müller-Trutwin, Monsef Benkirane, Gianfranco Pancino, Asier Saez-Cirion P54 IFITM protens restrict HIV-1 protein synthesis Wing-Yiu Lee, Chen Liang, Richard Sloan P55 Characterisation and functional analysis of the novel restriction factor Serinc5 Bianca Schulte, Silvana Opp, Felipe Diaz-Griffero P56 piRNA sequences are common in Human Endogenous Retroviral Sequences (HERVs): An antiretroviral restriction mechanism? Jonas Blomberg, Luana Vargiu, Patricia Rodriguez-Tomé, Enzo Tramontano, Göran Sperber P57 Ferroportin restricts HIV-1 infection in sickle cell disease Namita Kumari, Tatiana Ammosova, Sharmeen Diaz, Patricia Oneal, Sergei Nekhai P58 APOBEC3G modulates the response to antiretroviral drugs in humanized mice Audrey Fahrny, Gustavo Gers-Huber, Annette Audigé, Roberto F. Speck, Anitha Jayaprakash, Ravi Sachidanandam, Matt Hernandez, Marsha Dillon-White, Viviana Simon P59 High-throughput epigenetic analysis of evolutionarily young endogenous retrovirus presents in the mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) genome Tomas Hron, Helena Farkasova, Daniel Elleder P60 Characterisation of the expression of novel endogenous retroviruses and immune interactions in a macaque model Neil Berry, Emmanuel Maze, Claire Ham, Neil Almond, Greg Towers, Robert Belshaw P61 HIV-1 restriction by orthologs of SERINC3 and SERINC5 Patrícia de Sousa-Pereira, Joana Abrantes, Massimo Pizzato, Pedro J. Esteves, Oliver T. Fackler, Oliver T. Keppler, Hanna-Mari Baldauf P62 TRIM19/PML restricts HIV infection in a cell type-dependent manner Bianca Volkmann, Tanja Kahle, Kristin Eissmann, Alexandra Herrmann, Sven Schmitt, Sabine Wittmann, Laura Merkel, Nina Reuter, Thomas Stamminger, Thomas Gramberg P63 Recent invasion of the mule deer genome by a retrovirus Helena Farkasova, Tomas Hron, Daniel Elleder P64 Does the antiviral protein SAMHD1 influence mitochondrial function? Ilaria Dalla Rosa, Kate Bishop, Antonella Spinazzola, Harriet Groom P65 cGAMP transfers intercellularly via HIV-1 Env-mediated cell–cell fusion sites and triggers an innate immune response in primary target cells Shuting Xu, Aurélie Ducroux, Aparna Ponnurangam, Sergej Franz, Gabrielle Vieyres, Mathias Müsken, Thomas Zillinger, Angelina Malassa, Ellen Ewald, Veit Hornung, Winfried Barchet, Susanne Häussler, Thomas Pietschmann, Christine Goffinet P66 Pre-infection transcript levels of FAM26F in PBMCS inform about overall plasma viral load in acute and postacute phase after SIV-infection Ulrike Sauermann, Aneela Javed, Nicole Leuchte, Gabriela Salinas, Lennart Opitz, Christiane Stahl-Hennig, Sieghart Sopper P67 Sequence-function analysis of three T cell receptors targeting the HIV-1 p17 epitope SLYNTVATL Christiane Mummert, Christian Hofmann, Angela G. Hückelhoven, Silke Bergmann, Sandra M. Müller-Schmucker, Ellen G. Harrer, Jan Dörrie, Niels Schaft, Thomas Harrer P68 An immunodominant region of the envelope glycoprotein of small ruminant lentiviruses may function as decoy antigen Laure Cardinaux, M.-L. Zahno, H.-R. Vogt, R. Zanoni, G. Bertoni P69 Impact of immune activation, immune exhaustion, broadly neutralising antibodies and viral reservoirs on disease progression in HIV-infected children Maximilian Muenchhoff, Philip Goulder, Oliver Keppler Topic 9: Novel antiviral strategies P70 Identification of natural compounds as new antiviral products by bioassay-guided fractionation Alexandra Herrmann, Stephanie Rebensburg, Markus Helfer, Michael Schindler, Ruth Brack-Werner P71 The PPARG antagonism disconnects the HIV replication and effector functions in Th17 cells Yuwei Zhang, Huicheng Chen, Delphine Planas, Annie Bernier, Annie Gosselin, Jean-Pierre Routy, Petronela Ancuta P72 Characterisation of a multiresistant subtype AG reverse transcriptase: AZT resistance, sensitivity to RNase H inhibitors and inhibitor binding Birgitta Wöhrl, Anna Schneider, Angela Corona, Imke Spöring, Mareike Jordan, Bernd Buchholz, Elias Maccioni, Roberto Di Santo, Jochen Bodem, Enzo Tramontano, Kristian Schweimer P73 Insigths into the acetylation pattern of HDAC inhibitors and their potential role in HIV therapy Christian Schölz, Brian Weinert, Sebastian Wagner, Petra Beli, Yasuyuki Miyake, Jun Qi, Lars Jensen, Werner Streicher, Anna McCarthy, Nicholas Westwood, Sonia Lain, Jürgen Cox, Patrick Matthias, Matthias Mann, James Bradner, Chunaram Choudhary P74 HPV-derived and seminal amyloid peptides enhance HIV-1 infection and impair the efficacy of broadly neutralising antibodies and antiretroviral drugs Marcel Stern, Oliver T. Keppler P75 D(−)lentiginosine inhibits both proliferation and virus expression in cells infected by HTLV-1 in vitro Elena Valletta, Caterina Frezza, Claudia Matteucci, Francesca Marino-Merlo, Sandro Grelli, Anna Lucia Serafino, Antonio Mastino, Beatrice Macchi P76 HIV-1 resistance analyses of the Cape Winelands districts, South Africa Sello Mikasi, Graeme Jacobs, Susan Engelbrecht Topic 10: Recent advances in HIV vaccine development P77 Induction of complex retrovirus antigen-specific immune responses by adenovirus-based vectors depends on the order of vector administration Meike Kaulfuß, Sonja Windmann, Wibke Bayer P78 Direct impact of structural properties of HIV-1 Env on the regulation of the humoral immune response Rebecca Heß, Michael Storcksdieck gen. Bonsmann, Viktoria Stab, Carsten Kirschning, Bernd Lepenies, Matthias Tenbusch, Klaus Überla P79 Lentiviral virus-like particles mediate gerenration of T-follicular helper cells in vitro Anne Kolenbrander, Klaus Überla, Vladimir Temchura P80 Recruitment of HIV-1 Vpr to DNA damage sites and protection of proviral DNA from nuclease activity Kenta Iijima, Junya Kobayashi, Yukihito Ishizaka
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