Purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) deficiency results in an autosomal recessive immunodeficiency disease characterized by initial involvement of cellular immunity and neurological manifestations with subsequent abnormalities of humoral immunity. The initial presentation and clinical course has varied widely in the relatively few published cases. The molecular basis has been reported in only 10 patients, precluding evaluation of phenotype-genotype relationships.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe previously identified a group of long-term pediatric survivors who had acquired HIV-1 through maternal transmission; had not received antiretroviral therapy; are now >8 years old, in good health, and with no opportunistic infections; and have not failed to thrive, although they have greatly decreased numbers of blood CD4+ T cells (<500/mm(3)). All the children have elevated total serum IgE levels (210-2475 IU/ml) and make anti-HIV-1 IgE or IgE directed against non-HIV-1 specificities (radioimmunoassay, Western blot assay); they have no detectable antigenemia. We have now studied the ability of anti-HIV-1 IgE in serum obtained from these children to regulate (1) production of HIV-1 by interleukin 2/phytohemagglutinin (IL-2/PHA)-stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) taken from HIV-1-seronegative donors and infected with a T cell-tropic clone of HIV-1, and (2) transmission of a primary HIV-1 strain from adult AIDS patients to uninfected IL-2/PHA-stimulated PBMCs (p24 core antigen production).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors report an 18-year-old girl with HIV infection who developed new-onset insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) in association with anemia. IDDM among patients with HIV infection has been infrequently reported and suggested to be caused by different etiologies. Susceptibility to autoimmune diseases, such as IDDM, has been associated functionally with two members of a newly described multigene family called PERB11.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMonoclonal antibody (MAB) BH2C6 recognizes a plasma membrane antigen, the BH2-Ag, specifically expressed by human neutrophils. While studies with peripheral blood and bone marrow from healthy adults clearly demonstrate the absence of BH2-Ag from other cellular components except neutrophils, they also indicate that the BH2-Ag is expressed more strongly by mature than immature neutrophils. The purpose of this study was to determine the expression of the BH2-Ag by peripheral blood neutrophils from premature newborns to adults.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Tuberculosis disease incidence increased sharply in New York City (NYC) in the late 1980s in children and adults. The relationship of tuberculosis disease in adults with the coincident epidemic of immunosuppression caused by HIV disease has been well-documented. This paper examines the relationship of tuberculosis and HIV in children in NYC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF