Global surveillance of HIV-1 subtypes for genetic characterization is hampered by the biohazard of processing and the difficulties of shipping whole blood or cells from many developing country regions. We developed a technique for the direct automated sequencing of viral DNA from dried blood spot (DBS) specimens collected on absorbent paper, which can be mailed unrefrigerated in sturdy paper envelopes with low biohazard risk. DBS were collected nonrandomly from HIV-1-infected, mostly asymptomatic, patients in five Asian countries in 1991, and shipped via airmail or hand carried without refrigeration to Bangkok, and then transshipped to North America for processing. After more than 2 years of storage, including 6 months at ambient temperatures, proviral DNA in the DBS was amplified by nested PCR, and a 389-nucleotide segment of the C2-V3 env gene region was sequenced, from which 287 base pairs were aligned and subtyped by phylogenetic analysis with neighbor-joining and other methods. From southern India, there were 25 infections with subtype C and 2 with subtype A. From Myanmar (Burma), we identified the first subtype E infection, as well as six subtype BB, a distinct cluster within subtype B that was first discovered in Thailand and that has now appeared in China, Malaysia, and Japan. From southwest China, one BB was identified, while a "classical" B typical of North American and European strains was found in Indonesia. From Thailand, five DBS of ambiguous serotype were identified as three B, one BB, and one E. A blinded control serotype E specimen was correctly identified, but a serotype BB control was not tested. Most HIV-1 in southern India appears to be env subtype C, with rare A, as others have reported in western and northern India. The subtypes BB and E in Myanmar, and the BB in China, suggest epidemiological linkage with these subtypes in neighboring Thailand. DBS are a practical, economical technique for conducting large-scale molecular epidemiological surveillance to track the global distribution and spread of HIV-1 variants.
The Bonnet monkey model of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection may be a useful nonhuman primate model for studying RSV disease in humans because Bonnet monkeys can predictably be infected to obtain an orderly sequence of morphologic, cytologic, virologic, serologic, and inflammatory changes related to time of infection. Young feral Bonnet monkeys, Macaca radiata, were infected endotracheally with 10(6) plaque-forming units (pfu) of the Long strain of RSV. RSV was recovered from the animals' lungs at necropsy on days 3, 5, and 7 with the highest viral titer obtained on day 3 (1.1 and 5.2 x 10(3) pfu/g of tissue in the upper and lower lobes, respectively). RSV antigen and F protein mRNA were detected 3-5 days after infection in alveolar macrophages and in the epithelium of bronchi, terminal bronchioles, and alveoli. Histologic analysis of RSV-infected lungs at necropsy revealed progressive bronchiolar mucosal and submucosal inflammation, periarterial mononuclear interstitial inflammation, and focal alveolitis, with a maximal response at 7 days after infection. Cell counts in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) increased with time with neutrophils and macrophages predominating on day 3 (6.47 and 5.85 x 10(5)/mm3, respectively) and lymphocytes predominating on day 9 (4.18 x 10(5)/mm3). Serum-neutralizing antibody appeared on day 5 and IgG antibody to RSV was detected on day 9. This sequence of morphologic, cytologic, virologic, serologic, and inflammatory change following RSV infection creates a useful model in the study of experimentally induced RSV disease with a potential for testing future vaccine-induced alterations in RSV disease response.
Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) enzyme binds to arachidonic acid and releases metabolites that are used to induce pain and inflammation. COX-2 selective inhibitors such as celecoxib, rofecoxib and valdecoxib are currently used to reduce inflammatory response. However, they lack anti-thrombotic activity and hence lead to cardiovascular and renal liabilities apart from gastrointestinal irritation. Therefore, there is still a need to develop more potent COX-2 inhibitors. In this paper, we report the screening of various compounds from the ZINC database (contains 4.6 million small molecule compounds) using the eHiTS (electronic High Throughput Screening) software tool against the COX-2 protein. The strategy employed can be conveniently split into two categories, viz. screening and docking, respectively. Screening was performed using molecular constraints tool to filter compounds with physico-chemical properties similar to the 6COX bound ligand SC-558. The analysis resulted in 1042 Lipinski compliant hits which are docked and scored to identify structurally novel ligands that make similar interactions to those of known ligands or may have different interactions with other parts of the binding site. Our screening approach identified two molecules ZINC00663976 (eHITS score of -7.135 kcal/mol) and ZINC02062094 (eHITS score of -7.242 kcal/mol) from the ZINC database. Their energy scores are better than the 6COX bound co-crystallized ligand SC-558 with an eHiTS score of -6.559 kcal/mol. Both the ligands were docked within the binding pocket forming interactions with Leu352, Phe518, Met522, Val523, Ala527 and Ser353. Visual inspection suggested similar orientation and binding mode for ZINC02062094 with SC-558 ligand. The NH group of the ligand formed hydrogen bond interactions with the backbone NH of Ala527.
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infection is an important clinical concern in patients, and is often associated with significant disease burden and metastatic infections. There is an increasing evidence of heterogeneous vancomycin-intermediate S. aureus (hVISA) associated treatment failure. In this study, we aim to understand the molecular mechanism of teicoplanin resistant MRSA (TR-MRSA) and hVISA. A total of 482 MRSA isolates were investigated for these phenotypes. Of the tested isolates, 1% were identified as TR-MRSA, and 12% identified as hVISA. A highly diverse amino acid substitution was observed in tcaRAB, vraSR, and graSR genes in TR-MRSA and hVISA strains. Interestingly, 65% of hVISA strains had a D148Q mutation in the graR gene. However, none of the markers were reliable in differentiating hVISA from TR-MRSA. Significant pbp2 upregulation was noted in three TR-MRSA strains, which had teicoplanin MICs of 16 or 32 μg/ml, whilst significant pbp4 downregulation was not noted in these strains. In our study, multiple mutations were identified in the candidate genes, suggesting a complex evolutionary pathway involved in the development of TR-MRSA and hVISA strains.
Abstract:Medicinal plants used to treat hypoglycemic and hyperglycemic conditions are of considerable interest to ethno-botanical community as they are recognized to contain valuable medicinal properties in different parts of the plant. The active principles of many plant species with desired properties are isolated to cure ailments such as diabetes type-1 and type-2, respectively. Here, we describe DiaMedBase, a database containing information of medicinal plants for diabetes.
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