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Item Changes in proteinuria and albuminuria with initiation of antiretroviral therapy: data from a randomized trial comparing tenofovir disoproxil fumarate/emtricitabine versus abacavir/lamivudine(Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer) - Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2014-09-01) Wyatt, Christina M.; Kitch, Douglas; Gupta, Samir K.; Tierney, Camlin; Daar, Eric S.; Sax, Paul E.; Ha, Belinda; Melbourne, Kathleen; McComsey, Grace A.; AIDS Clinical Trials Group Study A5224s Team; Department of Medicine, IU School of MedicineBACKGROUND: Antiretroviral therapy (ART) is associated with improved kidney function; however, the nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) has been associated with decreased kidney function and proteinuria. METHODS: We examined changes in urine protein:creatinine (UPCR) and urine albumin:creatinine (UACR) ratios in 245 ART-naive participants in A5202 randomized in a substudy to blinded NRTI (abacavir/lamivudine, ABC/3TC, n = 124 or TDF/emtricitabine, TDF/FTC, n = 121) with open-label protease inhibitor (PI) atazanavir/ritonavir or nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) efavirenz. RESULTS: At baseline, 18% of participants had clinically significant proteinuria (UPCR ≥200 mg/g), and 11% had clinically significant albuminuria (UACR ≥30 mg/g). The prevalence of clinically significant proteinuria and albuminuria decreased from baseline to week 96 in all treatment groups. In intention-to-treat analyses, there was a significant effect of NRTI component on fold change in UPCR (P = 0.011) and UACR (P = 0.018) from baseline to week 96, with greater improvements in participants randomized to ABC/3TC. There was no significant effect of NNRTI/PI component on fold change in UPCR (P = 0.23) or UACR (P = 0.88), and no significant interactions between NRTI and NNRTI/PI components. CONCLUSIONS: In this prespecified secondary analysis, ART initiation was associated with improvements in proteinuria and albuminuria, with significantly greater improvements in participants randomized to ABC/3TC versus TDF/FTC. These are the first data from a randomized trial to suggest that initiation of TDF/FTC may not be associated with the same degree of improvement in proteinuria and albuminuria that have been reported with other regimens. Future studies should consider the long-term clinical significance of these findings.Item Conserved Residues in Murine Papillomavirus E2 Regulate the Viral Life Cycle(2024-12) Gonzalez, Jessica Kay; Androphy, Elliot J.; Dong, X. Charlie; Katzenellenbogen, Rachel; Robinson, ChristopherPapillomaviruses (PVs) are small, non-enveloped DNA viruses that infect the stratified epithelia. Once an infection is initiated, the virus must successfully navigate the three stages of its life cycle: establishment, maintenance, and vegetative amplification. A major mechanism of regulating this viral program is post-translational modification on the viral E2 protein, which is responsible for orchestrating viral transcription, replication, and genome partitioning. The hypothesis underscoring this work is that residues in E2 are highly conserved across PV types because they serve some structural or functional purpose for the virus. A targeted mutant library was generated in E2 from murine papillomavirus (MmuPV1) to investigate conserved residues that have been shown to be post-translationally modified in the E2 of other PVs, including BPV-1 and high-risk HPV-31. In the transactivation domain (TAD) tyrosine 102 and the lysine 112/113 motif were modified to their constitutively modified (phosphorylated and acetylated, respectively) or unmodified states, while cysteine 307 in the DNA binding and dimerization domain (DBD) was mutated to a less-reactive serine or DNA binding defective phenylalanine mutant. We characterized how mutation at each of these conserved sites alters E2 function using a battery of in vitro assays to assess for transcription and replication ability. We also studied how each mutant contributes to disease progression using an immunocompromised mouse model assessing cutaneous disease. We demonstrate that mutants which fail to replicate transiently in vitro will also fail to induce proliferative wart formation, establishing a predictive link between in vitro and in vivo experiments. Taken together, our findings suggest that modifications on conserved residues in E2 act as molecular switches that regulate E2 activity throughout the cellular and viral life cycle.Item Detection of Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Hepatitis C Patients: Biomarker Discovery by LC-MS(Elsevier, 2014-09-01) Bowers, Jeremiah; Hughes, Emma; Skill, Nicholas; Maluccio, Mary; Raftery, Daniel; Department of Surgery, IU School of MedicineHepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) accounts for most cases of liver cancer worldwide; contraction of hepatitis C (HCV) is considered a major risk factor for liver cancer even when individuals have not developed formal cirrhosis. Global, untargeted metabolic profiling methods were applied to serum samples from patients with either HCV alone or HCC (with underlying HCV). The main objective of the study was to identify metabolite based biomarkers associated with cancer risk, with the long term goal of ultimately improving early detection and prognosis. Serum global metabolite profiles from patients with HCC (n=37) and HCV (n=21) were obtained using high performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS) methods. The selection of statistically significant metabolites for partial least-squares discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) model creation based on biological and statistical significance was contrasted to that of a traditional approach utilizing p-values alone. A PLS-DA model created using the former approach resulted in a model with 92% sensitivity, 95% specificity, and an AUROC of 0.93. A series of PLS-DA models iteratively utilizing three to seven metabolites that were altered significantly (p<0.05) and sufficiently (FC≤0.7 or FC≥1.3) showed the best performance using p-values alone, the PLS-DA model was capable of generating 73% sensitivity, 95% specificity, and an AUROC of 0.92. Metabolic profiles derived from LC-MS readily distinguish patients with HCC and HCV from those with HCV only. Differences in the metabolic profiles between highrisk individuals and HCC indicate the possibility of identifying the early development of liver cancer in at risk patients. The use of biological significance as a selection process prior to PLSDA modeling may offer improved probabilities for translation of newly discovered biomarkers to clinical application.Item Incidence of World Health Organization stage 3 and 4 events, tuberculosis and mortality in untreated, HIV-infected children enrolling in care before 1 year of age: an IeDEA (International Epidemiologic Databases To Evaluate AIDS) East Africa regional analysis(Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer) - Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2014-06) Ciaranello, Andrea; Lu, Zhigang; Ayaya, Samuel; Losina, Elena; Musick, Beverly; Vreeman, Rachel; Freedberg, Kenneth A.; Abrams, Elaine J.; Dillabaugh, Lisa; Doherty, Katie; Ssali, John; Yiannoutsos, Constantin T.; Wools-Kaloustian, Kara; Department of Pediatrics, IU School of MedicineBACKGROUND: Few studies have reported CD4%- and age-stratified rates of World Health Organization Stage 3 (WHO3) events, World Health Organization Stage 4 (WHO4) events, tuberculosis (TB) and mortality in HIV-infected infants before initiation of antiretroviral therapy. METHODS: HIV-infected children enrolled before 1 year of age in the International Epidemiologic Databases to Evaluate AIDS East Africa region (October 1, 2002, to November, 2008) were included. We estimated incidence rates of earliest clinical event (WHO3, WHO4 and TB), before antiretroviral therapy initiation per local guidelines, stratified by current age (< or ≥6 months) and current CD4% (<15%, 15-24%, ≥25%). CD4%-stratified mortality rates were estimated separately for children who did not experience a clinical event ("background" mortality) and for children who experienced an event, including "acute" mortality (≤30 days post event) and "later" mortality (>30 days post event). RESULTS: Among 847 children (median enrollment age: 4.8 months; median pre-antiretroviral therapy follow up: 10.8 months; 603 (71%) with ≥1 CD4% recorded), event rates were comparable for those aged <6 and ≥6 months. Current CD4% was associated with risk of WHO4 events for children <6 months of age and with all evaluated events for children ≥6 months old (P < 0.05). "Background" mortality was 3.7-8.4/100 person-years (PY). "Acute" mortality (≤30 days post event) was 33.8/100 PY (after TB) and 41.1/100 PY (after WHO3 or WHO4). "Later" mortality (>30 days post event) ranged by CD4% from 4.7 to 29.1/100 PY. CONCLUSIONS: In treatment-naïve, HIV-infected infants, WHO3, WHO4 and TB events were common before and after 6 months of age and led to substantial increases in mortality. Early infant HIV diagnosis and treatment are critically important, regardless of CD4%.Item Spinoculation Enhances HBV Infection in NTCP-Reconstituted Hepatocytes(Public Library of Science, 2015) Yan, Ran; Zhang, Yongmei; Cai, Dawei; Liu, Yuanjie; Cuconati, Andrea; Guo, Haitao; Department of Microbiology and Immunology, IU School of MedicineHepatitis B virus (HBV) infection and its sequelae remain a major public health burden, but both HBV basic research and the development of antiviral therapeutics have been hindered by the lack of an efficient in vitro infection system. Recently, sodium taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide (NTCP) has been identified as the HBV receptor. We herein report that we established a NTCP-complemented HepG2 cell line (HepG2-NTCP12) that supports HBV infection, albeit at a low infectivity level following the reported infection procedures. In our attempts to optimize the infection conditions, we found that the centrifugation of HepG2-NTCP12 cells during HBV inoculation (termed "spinoculation") significantly enhanced the virus infectivity. Moreover, the infection level gradually increased with accelerated speed of spinoculation up to 1,000g tested. However, the enhancement of HBV infection was not significantly dependent upon the duration of centrifugation. Furthermore, covalently closed circular (ccc) DNA was detected in infected cells under optimized infection condition by conventional Southern blot, suggesting a successful establishment of HBV infection after spinoculation. Finally, the parental HepG2 cells remained uninfected under HBV spinoculation, and HBV entry inhibitors targeting NTCP blocked HBV infection when cells were spinoculated, suggesting the authentic virus entry mechanism is unaltered under centrifugal inoculation. Our data suggest that spinoculation could serve as a standard protocol for enhancing the efficiency of HBV infection in vitro.