Adenovirus keratitis: a role for interleukin-8. (41/761)

PURPOSE: Adenovirus type 19 (Ad19) infection of the human cornea results in a chronic, multifocal, subepithelial keratitis. Existing evidence suggests that early subepithelial corneal infiltrates are composed of polymorphonuclear neutrophils. In this study, the capacity of Ad19-infected human corneal stromal fibroblasts (HCFs) to produce neutrophil chemotactants (chemokines) was tested. METHODS: HCFs grown from human donor corneas and passaged thrice were infected with a corneal isolate of Ad19 or mock-infected with virus-free media. Bioactivity of the cell supernatants was tested by a neutrophil chemotaxis assay. Supernatants were assayed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for the neutrophil chemotactants interleukin-8 (IL-8) and GRO-alpha. Corneal facsimiles were generated with HCFs and collagen type I, infected with Ad19, and assayed by immunohistochemistry. RESULTS: Ad19 infection of HCFs increased neutrophil chemotaxis from a baseline of 0.4+/-0.7 cells/high-powered field (hpf; mock-infected) to 21.8+/-2.3 cells/hpf (Ad19-infected). Chemotaxis was reduced by the addition of neutralizing antibodies against IL-8 and GRO-alpha. Infection of HCFs induced quantities of IL-8 protein 300- and 1000-fold over mock-infected controls at 4 and 24 hours, respectively (33 versus 11,813 pg/mL at 4 hours, and 57 versus 76,376 pg/mL at 24 hours, P< or = 0.001 for both). In contrast, GRO-alpha protein levels were only sevenfold higher at 24 hours postinfection (118 pg/mL in mock-infected controls versus 880 pg/mL in Ad19-infected cell supernatants). Neither chemokine was induced by infection of an immortalized human corneal epithelial cell line. Immunohistochemistry of infected corneal facsimiles demonstrated IL-8 in the extracellular matrix within 3 days after infection. CONCLUSIONS: Production of chemokines in infected tissues facilitates an early innate immune response to infection, and in the infected corneal stroma represents an elementary defense mechanism. Interleukin-8 may play a role in the development of subepithelial infiltrates in adenovirus keratitis.  (+info)

Successful ribavirin therapy for severe adenovirus hemorrhagic cystitis after allogeneic marrow transplant from close HLA donors rather than distant donors. (42/761)

Intravenous ribavirin was given to nine patients who had developed severe adenovirus-induced hemorrhagic cystitis (AD-HC) which was resistant to conventional therapy or where there was involvement of other organs after allogeneic BMT. Three patients recovered completely from AD-HC, two of whom had been resistant to vidarabine. All three had received sibling BMTs (2 HLA matched, 1 HLA mismatched). Five patients who received BMTs from related (2 HLA mismatched) or unrelated (1 HLA matched, 2 HLA mismatched) showed an improvement in symptoms but had recurrent AD-HC after discontinuation of ribavirin. Improvement in clinical symptoms and termination of virus excretion were well correlated. The last patient who received a mismatched unrelated BMT died during ribavirin therapy. Ribavirin was notably more effective among patients receiving BMTs from siblings in contrast to patients receiving BMTs from alternative donors (<0.05). One patient experienced severe pancytopenia during the second treatment with ribavirin after HC recurrence and recovered after ceasing ribavirin. Thus, ribavirin seems to be very effective for severe AD-HC for some recipients who receive transplants from a genetically close donor. Bone Marrow Transplantation (2000) 25, 545-548.  (+info)

Enhanced cardiac contractility after gene transfer of V2 vasopressin receptors In vivo by ultrasound-guided injection or transcoronary delivery. (43/761)

BACKGROUND: Systemic levels of arginine vasopressin (AVP) are increased in congestive heart failure, resulting in vasoconstriction and reduced cardiac contractility via V(1) vasopressin receptors. V(2) vasopressin receptors (V2Rs), which promote activation of adenylyl cyclase, are physiologically expressed only in the kidney and are absent in the myocardium. Heterologous expression of V2Rs in the myocardium could result in a positive inotropic effect by using the endogenous high concentrations of AVP in heart failure. METHODS AND RESULTS: We tested gene transfer with a recombinant adenovirus for the human V2R (Ad-V2R) to stimulate contractility of rat or rabbit myocardium in vivo. Ultrasound-guided direct injection or transcoronary delivery of adenovirus in vivo resulted in recombinant receptor expression in the myocardial target area, leading to a substantial increase in [(3)H]AVP binding. In 50% of the cardiomyocytes isolated from the directly injected area, single-cell shortening measurements detected a significant increase in contraction amplitude after exposure to AVP or the V2R-specific desmopressin (DDAVP). Echocardiography of the target myocardial area documented a marked increase in local fractional shortening after systemic administration of DDAVP in V2R-expressing animals but not in control virus-treated hearts. Simultaneous measurement of global contractility (dP/dt(max)) confirmed a positive inotropic effect of DDAVP on left ventricular function in the Ad-V2R-injected animals. CONCLUSIONS: Adenoviral gene transfer of the V2R into the myocardium increases cardiac contractility in vivo. Heterologous expression of cAMP-forming receptors in the myocardium could lead to novel strategies in the therapy of congestive heart failure by bypassing the desensitized beta-adrenergic receptor-signaling cascade.  (+info)

Nedocromil sodium inhibits canine adenovirus bronchiolitis in beagle puppies. (44/761)

Nedocromil sodium is a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug used to control asthmatic attacks. Our hypothesis is that nedocromil sodium inhibits virus-induced airway inflammation, a common trigger of asthma. We nebulized nedocromil sodium into beagle dogs (n = 10, mean +/- SEM ages: 149 +/- 13 days) before and after inoculation with canine adenovirus type 2 (CAV2). Control dogs (n = 10) received saline aerosols and were either infected with CAV2 (Sal/CAV2, n = 7, mean +/- SEM ages: 140 +/- 11 days) or were not infected (Sal/Sal, n = 3, ages: 143 +/- 0 days). All dogs were anesthetized with choralose (80 mg/kg i.v.), intubated, and mechanically ventilated. Pulmonary function tests and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) were performed using standard techniques. Pulmonary function tests revealed no significant change between the nedocromil sodium and non-nedocromil-treated groups. The percentage of infected bronchioles was quantitated as the number of inflamed airways of 40 bronchioles examined times 100 for each dog. Nedocromil-treated dogs had significantly (p < 0.05) less mucosal inflammation (mean +/- SEM, 39% +/- 5%), epithelial denudation (36% +/- 5%), and BAL neutrophilia (11 +/- 3) than did Sal/CAV2 dogs (51% +/- 6%, 57% +/- 4%, and 33% +/- 8%, respectively). We concluded that pretreatment with nedocromil sodium aerosols attenuated CAV2-induced airway inflammation in these beagle puppies.  (+info)

Peripheral infection with adenovirus causes unexpected long-term brain inflammation in animals injected intracranially with first-generation, but not with high-capacity, adenovirus vectors: toward realistic long-term neurological gene therapy for chronic diseases. (45/761)

Although adenoviral vectors provide prolonged gene expression in the brain by comparison to peripheral organs, expression is eliminated by a severe inflammatory infiltration (i.e., activated macrophages/microglia and T-lymphocytes) after peripheral infection with adenovirus. Here, we demonstrate that high-capacity adenoviral (HC-Ad) vectors succeed in maintaining long-term transgene expression in the brain, even in the presence of an active peripheral immunization with adenovirus that completely eliminates expression from first-generation vectors within 60 days. Importantly, even 60 days after the peripheral infection, brains injected with first-generation vectors exhibited evidence of a chronic infiltration of CD8(+) cells, macrophage/microglial activation, and up-regulation of brain MHC-I expression. No inflammation was observed in the brains injected with the HC-Ad vector. Thus, these results demonstrate that HC-Ad vectors will allow safe, stable, and long-term transgene expression in the brain, even in the presence of peripheral infection with adenovirus. This markedly improves the prospects for the use of adenoviral vectors for long-term gene therapy of neurological disorders.  (+info)

NK cells cause liver injury and facilitate the induction of T cell-mediated immunity to a viral liver infection. (46/761)

NK cells are a relatively rare cell population in peripheral lymphoid organs but are abundant in the liver, raising questions as to their function in immune responses to infections of this organ. To investigate this, cell-mediated immunity to viral liver infection induced by a type 5, replication-defective, adenovirus was examined. It is shown that NK cells in the absence of T cells cause hepatocyte apoptosis in virus-infected livers associated with an increase in liver enzymes in the serum. Concomitantly, NK cells induce production of IFN-gamma, inhibitable by their elimination before infection. NK cells are shown to be necessary for optimal priming of virus-specific T cells, assessed by delayed-type hypersensitivity response and CTL activity, consistent with their ability to secrete IFN-gamma. The conclusion is drawn that NK cells mediate two important functions in the liver: they induce cell death in the infected organ and concomitantly stimulate the induction of T cell-mediated immunity by release of IFN-gamma.  (+info)

Calpain inhibitor 1 activates p53-dependent apoptosis in tumor cell lines. (47/761)

Reports suggest a role of calpains in degradation of wild-type p53, which may regulate p53 induction of apoptosis. A calpain inhibitor, n-acetyl-leu-leu-norleucinal (calpain inhibitor 1), was assessed for ability to enhance p53-dependent apoptosis in human tumor cell lines with endogenous wild-type p53 and in altered p53 cell lines with the replacement of wild-type p53 by a recombinant adenovirus (rAd-p53). Calpain inhibitor 1 treatment resulted in increased levels of activated p53, increased p21 protein, and activation of caspases. Cell lines with wild-type, but not mutated or null, p53 status arrested in G0/G1 and were sensitive to calpain inhibitor-induced apoptosis. Regardless of endogenous p53 status, calpain inhibitor treatment combined with rAd-p53, but not empty vector virus, enhanced apoptosis in tumor cell lines. These results demonstrate p53-dependent apoptosis induced by a calpain inhibitor and further suggest a role for calpains in the regulation of p53 activity and induction of apoptotic pathways.  (+info)

Targeting of adenoviral vectors through a bispecific single-chain antibody. (48/761)

Recombinant adenoviral vectors are attractive in the context of cancer gene therapy because they are capable of delivering genes to a wide variety of tissues. The utility of adenoviruses is limited by their lack of specificity and by the absence of the receptor(s) for these viruses on many tumor cells. Redirecting adenoviral vectors to tissue- or tumor-specific targets can be achieved by using bispecific conjugates produced by chemical linkage of an anti-adenovirus antibody (Ab) and a ligand or Ab directed toward a specific target. To avoid the limitations of chemical conjugates, molecular conjugates of anti-fiber knob and ligand have been proposed. We present here a novel strategy that allows the production of recombinant bispecific single-chain Abs directed at cell surface molecules. A construct was made that encodes a neutralizing anti-adenovirus fiber single-chain Fv (scFv) Ab (S11) fused to a scFv Ab (425) directed against the epidermal growth factor receptor. The fusion protein markedly enhanced the infection efficiency of adenoviral vectors in epidermal growth factor receptor-expressing cell lines. The bispecific scFv could be purified and concentrated after binding of its 6His tag to a nickel column without significant loss of activity. This approach should permit the production of high quantities of active bispecific scFv for in vivo use. The universal design of the construct allows rapid screening for relevant specific scFv directed at cell surface antigens that can be incorporated into adenoviral targeting strategies.  (+info)