975 resultados para Primary bloodstream infection


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BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE Rhinoviruses (RV) replicate in both upper and lower airway epithelial cells. We evaluated the possibility of using nasal epithelial cells (NEC) as surrogate of bronchial epithelial cells (BEC) for RV pathogenesis cell culture studies. METHODS We used primary paired NEC and BEC cultures established from healthy subjects and compared the replication of RV belonging to the major (RV16) and minor (RV1B) group, and the cellular antiviral and proinflammatory cytokine responses towards these viruses. We related antiviral and pro-inflammatory responses of NEC isolated from CF and COPD patients with those of BEC. RESULTS RV16 replication and major group surface receptor (ICAM-1) expression were higher in healthy NEC compared with BEC (P < 0.05); RV1B replication and minor group surface receptor (LDLR) expression were similar. Healthy NEC and BEC produced similar levels of IFN-β and IFN-λ2/3 upon RV infection or after simulation with poly(IC). IL-8 production was similar between healthy NEC and BEC. IL-6 release at baseline (P < 0.01) and upon infection with RV16 (P < 0.05) and poly(IC) stimulation (P < 0.05) was higher in NEC. RV1B viral load in NEC was related to RV1B viral load in BEC (r = 0.49, P = 0.01). There was a good correlation of IFN levels between NEC and BEC (r = 0.66, P = 0.0004 after RV1B infection). IL-8 production in NEC was related to IL-8 production in BEC (r = 0.48, P = 0.02 after RV1B infection). CONCLUSION NEC are a suitable alternative cellular system to BEC to study the pathophysiology of RV infections and particularly to investigate IFN responses induced by RV infection.

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Peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) are an important target for gene transfer studies aimed at human gene therapy. However, no reproducibly efficient methods are currently available to transfer foreign, potentially therapeutic genes into these cells. While vectors derived from murine retroviruses have been the most widely used system, their low infection efficiency in lymphocytes has required prolonged in vitro culturing and selection after infection to obtain useful numbers of genetically modified cells. We previously reported that retroviral vectors pseudotyped with vesicular stomatitis G glycoprotein (VSV-G) envelope can infect a wide variety of cell types and can be concentrated to titers of greater than 10(9) infectious units/ml. In this present study, we examined the ability of amphotropic and pseudotyped vectors expressing a murine cell surface protein, B7-1, to infect the human T-cell line Jurkat or human blood lymphocytes. Limiting dilution analysis of transduced Jurkat cells demonstrated that the pseudotyped vector is significantly more efficient in infecting T cells than an amphotropic vector used at the same multiplicity of infection (moi). To identify the transduction efficiency on PBLs, we examined the levels of cell surface expression of the B7-1 surface marker 48 to 72 hr after infection. The transduction efficiency of PBLs with the pseudotyped vector increased linearly with increasing moi to a maximum of approximately 16-32% at an moi of 40. This relatively high efficiency of infection of a T-cell line and of blood lymphocytes with VSV-G pseudotyped virus demonstrates that such modified pseudotyped retrovirus vectors may be useful reagents for studies of gene therapy for a variety of genetic or neoplastic disorders.

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In the present study, we have determined the kinetics of constitutive expression of a panel of cytokines [interleukin (IL) 2, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, interferon gamma (IFN-gamma), and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha)] in sequential peripheral blood mononuclear cell samples from nine individuals with primary human immunodeficiency virus infection. Expression of IL-2 and IL-4 was barely detected in peripheral blood mononuclear cells. However, substantial levels of IL-2 expression were found in mononuclear cells isolated from lymph node. Expression of IL-6 was detected in only three of nine patients, and IL-6 expression was observed when transition from the acute to the chronic phase had already occurred. Expression of IL-10 and TNF-alpha was consistently observed in all patients tested, and levels of both cytokines were either stable or progressively increased over time. Similar to IL-10 and TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma expression was detected in all patients; however, in five of nine patients, IFN-gamma expression peaked very early during primary infection. The early peak in IFN-gamma expression coincided with oligoclonal expansions of CD8+ T cells in five of six patients, and CD8+ T cells mostly accounted for the expression of this cytokine. These results indicate that high levels of expression of proinflammatory cytokines are associated with primary infection and that the cytokine response during this phase of infection is strongly influenced by oligoclonal expansions of CD8+ T cells.

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The choice of model used to study human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection is extremely important. RSV is a human pathogen that is exquisitely adapted to infection of human hosts. Rodent models, such as mice and cotton rats, are semi-permissive to RSV infection and do not faithfully reproduce hallmarks of RSV disease in humans. Furthermore, immortalized airway-derived cell lines, such as HEp-2, BEAS-2B, and A549 cells, are poorly representative of the complexity of the respiratory epithelium. The development of a well-differentiated primary pediatric airway epithelial cell models (WD-PAECs) allows us to simulate several hallmarks of RSV infection of infant airways. They therefore represent important additions to RSV pathogenesis modeling in human-relevant tissues. The following protocols describe how to culture and differentiate both bronchial and nasal primary pediatric airway epithelial cells and how to use these cultures to study RSV cytopathogenesis.