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Introduction of a 5,6-dihydrouracil functionality in the 5-position of N-(4-fluorobenzyl)-8-hydroxy-[1,6]naphthyridine-7-carboxamide 1 led to a series of highly active HIV-1 integrase inhibitors. These compounds displayed low nanomolar activity in inhibiting both the strand transfer process of HIV-1 integrase and viral replication in cells. Compound 11 is a 150-fold more potent antiviral agent than 1, with a CIC(95) of 40 nM in the presence of human serum. It displays good pharmacokinetics when dosed in rats and dogs.  相似文献   
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Field experiments were conducted in southwestern China to estimate the distances over which cercariae of Schistosoma japonicum are transported and remain infective in village irrigation ditches and to determine the feasibility of interrupting this transport using niclosamide, the molluscicide commonly used for snail control in this environment. The number of worms recovered from bioassay mice downstream from experimentally introduced cercariae, but without niclosamide, decreased about 90% over the first 100 m of ditch and then remained essentially constant for the remaining 300 m of the ditch that was monitored. The niclosamide experiments resulted first in the finding that it was possible to achieve ditch average concentrations close to the target values of 0.25 ppm, but that concentrations at any particular location varied by a factor of up to 3. There was no correlation between water turbidity and niclosamide concentration. An average water concentration of 0.29 ppm resulted in no viable cercariae after a contact time of about 1 min and a travel distance of only 10 m. We regard these results as proof of the feasibility of chemical interruption of transport of S. japonicum cercariae although the toxicity of niclosamide to fish at the levels used here make it a questionable candidate for routine use.  相似文献   
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The formation of four Cu(II)-xylitol complexes was observed in aqueous alkaline solutions (11.0< or =pH< or =14.0, I=1.0, 20 degrees C) by means of direct current polarography and VIS spectrophotometry. Mononuclear hydroxy complexes, CuXyl(OH)- (log beta=17.7 +/- 0.5), CuXyl(OH)2(2-) (log beta=20.2 +/- 0.3) and CuXyl2(OH)2(4-) (log beta=22.4 +/- 0.3), are formed at high ligand-to-metal ratios (L:M> or =10), whereas dinuclear complex Cu2Xyl (log beta=29.2 +/- 0.3) is the predominant species at low ligand-to-metal ratio (L:M=0.5). Diffusion coefficients and molar absorptivities of the complex species were determined. pH variable 13C NMR suggested that pKa values of xylitol are rather similar and equal to 13.8 +/- 0.2, 13.9 +/- 0.1 and 13.9 +/- 0.2 for OH-groups adjacent to (C-1,C-5), (C-3) and (C-2,C-4) carbon atoms, respectively.  相似文献   
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Whirling disease, caused by the parasite Myxobolus cerebralis, has infected rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and other salmonid fish in the western United States, often with devastating results to native populations but without a discernible spatial pattern. The parasite develops in a complex 2-host system in which the aquatic oligochaete Tubifex tubifex is an obligate host. Because substantial differences in whirling disease severity in different areas of North America did not seem explainable by environmental factors or features of the parasite or its fish host, we sought to determine whether ecological or genetic variation within oligochaete host populations may be responsible. We found large differences in compatibility between the parasite and various laboratory strains of T. tubifex that were established from geographic regions with different whirling disease histories. Moreover, 2 closely related species of tubificids, Limnodrilus hoffmeisteri and Ilyodrilus templetoni, which occur naturally in mixed species assemblages with T. tubifex, were incompatible with M. cerebralis. Virulence of the parasite was directly correlated with the numbers of triactinomyxon spores that developed within each strain of T. tubifex. Thus, the level of virulence was directly related to the compatibility between the host strain and the parasite. Genetic analyses revealed relationships that were in agreement with the level of parasite production. Differences in compatibilities between oligochaetes and M. cerebralis may contribute to the spatial variance in the severity of the disease among salmonid populations.  相似文献   
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An unidentified environmental reservoir of infectivity contributes to the natural transmission of prion diseases (transmissible spongiform encephalopathies [TSEs]) in sheep, deer, and elk. Prion infectivity may enter soil environments via shedding from diseased animals and decomposition of infected carcasses. Burial of TSE-infected cattle, sheep, and deer as a means of disposal has resulted in unintentional introduction of prions into subsurface environments. We examined the potential for soil to serve as a TSE reservoir by studying the interaction of the disease-associated prion protein (PrP(Sc)) with common soil minerals. In this study, we demonstrated substantial PrP(Sc) adsorption to two clay minerals, quartz, and four whole soil samples. We quantified the PrP(Sc)-binding capacities of each mineral. Furthermore, we observed that PrP(Sc) desorbed from montmorillonite clay was cleaved at an N-terminal site and the interaction between PrP(Sc) and Mte was strong, making desorption of the protein difficult. Despite cleavage and avid binding, PrP(Sc) bound to Mte remained infectious. Results from our study suggest that PrP(Sc) released into soil environments may be preserved in a bioavailable form, perpetuating prion disease epizootics and exposing other species to the infectious agent.  相似文献   
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Transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) infectivity naturally spreads from site of entry in the periphery to the central nervous system where pathological lesions are formed. Several routes and cells within the host have been identified as important for facilitating the infectious process. Expression of the glycoprotein cellular PrP (PrPC) is considered a key factor for replication of infectivity in the central nervous system (CNS) and its transport to the brain, and it has been suggested that the infectious agent propagates from cell to cell via a domino-like effect. However, precisely how this is achieved and what involvement the different glycoforms of PrP have in these processes remain to be determined. To address this issue, we have used our unique models of gene-targeted transgenic mice expressing different glycosylated forms of PrP. Two TSE strains were inoculated intraperitoneally into these mice to assess the contribution of diglycosylated, monoglycosylated, and unglycosylated PrP in spreading of infectivity to the brain. This study demonstrates that glycosylation of host PrP has a profound effect in determining the outcome of disease. Lack of diglycosylated PrP slowed or prevented disease onset after peripheral challenge, suggesting an important role for fully glycosylated PrP in either the replication of the infectious agent in the periphery or its transport to the CNS. Moreover, mice expressing unglycosylated PrP did not develop clinical disease, and mice expressing monoglycosylated PrP showed strikingly different neuropathologic features compared to those expressing diglycosylated PrP. This demonstrates that targeting in the brain following peripheral inoculation is profoundly influenced by the glycosylation status of host PrP.Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE) or prion diseases are a group of fatal neurodegenerative diseases which include Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in humans, scrapie in sheep and goats, bovine spongiform encephalopathies (BSE) in cattle, and chronic wasting disease (CWD) in deer and elk (30). These diseases can be sporadic, familial, or acquired by infection, and the common hallmark is a distinct pathology in the central nervous system (CNS) characterized by neuronal loss, spongiform degeneration, and gliosis (38, 46).Expression of the host-encoded cellular PrP (PrPC) is fundamental for the onset of disease since PrP-deficient mice are refractory to TSE infection (11, 31). PrPC is a glycoprotein with two consensus sites for attachment of N-linked glycans (at codons 180 and 196 in the mouse) which are variably occupied, producing di-, mono-, and unglycosylated PrP (43). The diversity in glycosylation, combined with the complexity of added sugars, results in a large number of glycosylated forms of PrP (41). A central event associated with TSE infection is the conformational conversion of PrPC into an abnormal protease-resistant form, PrPSc (39). PrPSc is deposited in brain and, in some but not all cases, in peripheral organs of individuals affected by TSE (21).Although the pathology associated with TSE is found in the brain, the periphery is the most natural route of acquiring infection. Evidence suggests that oral transmission via contaminated food is linked with transmission of BSE to humans, resulting in variant CJD (vCJD) (10, 47), and blood transfusion has been identified as a probable route of human-to-human transmission of vCJD (23, 27, 36). Moreover, parenteral administration of contaminated human tissue-derived therapeutics has been shown to facilitate iatrogenic spread of these diseases (8, 46). It is therefore important to understand the mechanisms that allow the infectious agent to propagate in the periphery and be transported to the CNS prior to the onset of neurodegeneration in the brain.Many studies have been conducted to understand routes of transmission (for a review see references 1 and 29). Lymphoid tissues such as the spleen have been shown to play a fundamental role in agent replication and propagation in the very early stages of disease. Indeed, studies of splenectomized and asplenic mice have shown the lymphoreticular system (LRS) to be an important site for TSE agent replication (14, 26). The periphery also appears to have a role in processing the infectious agent following intracerebral (i.c.) inoculation as PrPSc accumulates in the spleen shortly after inoculation and before accumulation of the abnormal protein in the brain (15, 17). Within the LRS, follicular dendritic cells (FDC) have been shown to be important for the uptake of infectivity and subsequent spreading toward the CNS (7, 28, 33, 35). Several studies have also suggested the peripheral nervous systems (PNS) as a potential route of infectivity to the brain, implicating the vagus and sciatic nerves in this process (5, 20, 25, 34).Expression of PrPC in the peripheral tissues appears to be an important prerequisite for the transport of infectivity to the CNS following peripheral routes of inoculation. Indeed, it has been proposed that a continuous chain of cells expressing PrPC is fundamental for TSE neuroinvasion (6, 40), with overexpression of endogenous PrP in the PNS greatly facilitating the spread of infectivity (19). Thus, host PrP appears to have a fundamental role in the uptake, transport, and replication of the infectious agent (6). Moreover, it has been suggested that the different PrPC glycoforms may influence the timing of neuroinvasion by directly influencing the interaction with the infectious agent (19). However, the mechanism by which the different glycoforms are involved in these processes remains to be determined.In order to investigate the role of PrPC glycosylation in TSE disease after peripheral infection with different TSE strains, we have used our inbred gene-targeted transgenic mice expressing different glycosylated forms of PrP. These mice expressed PrP with no sugars at the first (designated G1/G1 in homozygous mice) or the second glycosylation site (G2/G2) or both (G3/G3) under the control of the endogenous PrP promoter (13). We have previously shown that following intracerebral inoculation, all glycotypes are susceptible to infection with at least one TSE strain and that the type of PrP glycosylation in the host influenced the incubation period but not the distribution of pathological lesions in the brain (45). Here, we examine the influence of host PrP glycosylation on the peripheral acquisition of infection and demonstrate that, unlike the intracerebral route, mice without PrP glycosylation were resistant to disease and that the different glycoforms had a profound influence on not only the timing of disease but also the type and distribution of the PrPSc deposits in the brain.  相似文献   
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