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Featured researches published by Kristin Gebhard.


Science | 1996

Quantitative Image Analysis of HIV-1 Infection in Lymphoid Tissue

Ashley T. Haase; Keith Henry; Mary Zupancic; Gerald Sedgewick; Russell A. Faust; Holly Melroe; Winston Cavert; Kristin Gebhard; Katherine Staskus; Zhi Qiang Zhang; Peter J. Dailey; Henry H. Balfour; Alejo Erice; Alan S. Perelson

Tracking human immunodeficiency virus-type 1 (HIV-1) infection at the cellular level in tissue reservoirs provides opportunities to better understand the pathogenesis of infection and to rationally design and monitor therapy. A quantitative technique was developed to determine viral burden in two important cellular compartments in lymphoid tissues. Image analysis and in situ hybridization were combined to show that in the presymptomatic stages of infection there is a large, relatively stable pool of virions on the surfaces of follicular dendritic cells and a smaller pool of productively infected cells. Despite evidence of constraints on HIV-1 replication in the infected cell population in lymphoid tissues, estimates of the numbers of these cells and the virus they could produce are consistent with the quantities of virus that have been detected in the bloodstream. The cellular sources of virus production and storage in lymphoid tissues can now be studied with this approach over the course of infection and treatment.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2001

Productive Infection of T Cells in Lymphoid Tissues during Primary and Early Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection

Timothy W. Schacker; Susan J. Little; Elizabeth Connick; Kristin Gebhard; Zhi Qiang Zhang; John N. Krieger; Jon L. Pryor; Diane V. Havlir; Joseph K. Wong; Robert T. Schooley; Douglas D. Richman; Lawrence Corey; Ashley T. Haase

Current models suggest that during human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) transmission virions are selected that use the CCR5 chemokine receptor on macrophages and/or dendritic cells. A gradual evolution to CXCR4 chemokine receptor use causes a shift in the proportion of productively infected cells to the CD4 cell population. Productively infected cells during acute and early infection in lymphoid tissue were assessed, as well as the impact of productive infection on the T cell population in 21 persons who had biopsies performed on days 2-280 after symptoms of acute HIV-1 seroconversion. Even in the earliest stages of infection, most productively infected cells were T lymphocytes. There were sufficient infected cells in lymphoid tissue (LT) to account for virus production and virus load in plasma. Despite the relatively high frequency of productively infected cells in LT, the impact on the size of the T cell population in LT at this stage was minor.


Retrovirology | 2008

Oral keratinocytes support non-replicative infection and transfer of harbored HIV-1 to permissive cells

Anjalee Vacharaksa; Anil C. Asrani; Kristin Gebhard; Claudine E. Fasching; Rodrigo A. Giacaman; Edward N. Janoff; Karen F. Ross; Mark C. Herzberg

BackgroundOral keratinocytes on the mucosal surface are frequently exposed to HIV-1 through contact with infected sexual partners or nursing mothers. To determine the plausibility that oral keratinocytes are primary targets of HIV-1, we tested the hypothesis that HIV-1 infects oral keratinocytes in a restricted manner.ResultsTo study the fate of HIV-1, immortalized oral keratinocytes (OKF6/TERT-2; TERT-2 cells) were characterized for the fate of HIV-specific RNA and DNA. At 6 h post inoculation with X4 or R5-tropic HIV-1, HIV-1gag RNA was detected maximally within TERT-2 cells. Reverse transcriptase activity in TERT-2 cells was confirmed by VSV-G-mediated infection with HIV-NL4-3Δenv-EGFP. AZT inhibited EGFP expression in a dose-dependent manner, suggesting that viral replication can be supported if receptors are bypassed. Within 3 h post inoculation, integrated HIV-1 DNA was detected in TERT-2 cell nuclei and persisted after subculture. Multiply spliced and unspliced HIV-1 mRNAs were not detectable up to 72 h post inoculation, suggesting that HIV replication may abort and that infection is non-productive. Within 48 h post inoculation, however, virus harbored by CD4 negative TERT-2 cells trans infected co-cultured peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) or MOLT4 cells (CD4+ CCR5+) by direct cell-to-cell transfer or by releasing low levels of infectious virions. Primary tonsil epithelial cells also trans infected HIV-1 to permissive cells in a donor-specific manner.ConclusionOral keratinocytes appear, therefore, to support stable non-replicative integration, while harboring and transmitting infectious X4- or R5-tropic HIV-1 to permissive cells for up to 48 h.


Retrovirology | 2008

Porphyromonas gingivalis induces CCR5-dependent transfer of infectious HIV-1 from oral keratinocytes to permissive cells

Rodrigo A. Giacaman; Anil C. Asrani; Kristin Gebhard; Elizabeth A. Dietrich; Anjalee Vacharaksa; Karen F. Ross; Mark C. Herzberg

BackgroundSystemic infection with HIV occurs infrequently through the oral route. The frequency of occurrence may be increased by concomitant bacterial infection of the oral tissues, since co-infection and inflammation of some cell types increases HIV-1 replication. A putative periodontal pathogen, Porphyromonas gingivalis selectively up-regulates expression of the HIV-1 coreceptor CCR5 on oral keratinocytes. We, therefore, hypothesized that P. gingivalis modulates the outcome of HIV infection in oral epithelial cells.ResultsOral and tonsil epithelial cells were pre-incubated with P. gingivalis, and inoculated with either an X4- or R5-type HIV-1. Between 6 and 48 hours post-inoculation, P. gingivalis selectively increased the infectivity of R5-tropic HIV-1 from oral and tonsil keratinocytes; infectivity of X4-tropic HIV-1 remained unchanged. Oral keratinocytes appeared to harbor infectious HIV-1, with no evidence of productive infection. HIV-1 was harbored at highest levels during the first 6 hours after HIV exposure and decreased to barely detectable levels at 48 hours. HIV did not appear to co-localize with P. gingivalis, which increased selective R5-tropic HIV-1 trans infection from keratinocytes to permissive cells. When CCR5 was selectively blocked, HIV-1 trans infection was reduced.ConclusionP. gingivalis up-regulation of CCR5 increases trans infection of harbored R5-tropic HIV-1 from oral keratinocytes to permissive cells. Oral infections such as periodontitis may, therefore, increase risk for oral infection and dissemination of R5-tropic HIV-1.


Advances in Dental Research | 2011

Plausibility of HIV-1 Infection of Oral Mucosal Epithelial Cells

Mark C. Herzberg; A. Vacharaksa; Kristin Gebhard; Rodrigo A. Giacaman; Karen F. Ross

The AIDS pandemic continues. Little is understood about how HIV gains access to permissive cells across mucosal surfaces, yet such knowledge is crucial to the development of successful topical anti-HIV-1 agents and mucosal vaccines. HIV-1 rapidly internalizes and integrates into the mucosal keratinocyte genome, and integrated copies of HIV-1 persist upon cell passage. The virus does not appear to replicate, and the infection may become latent. Interactions between HIV-1 and oral keratinocytes have been modeled in the context of key environmental factors, including putative copathogens and saliva. In keratinocytes, HIV-1 internalizes within minutes; in saliva, an infectious fraction escapes inactivation and is harbored and transferable to permissive target cells for up to 48 hours. When incubated with the common oral pathogen Porphyromonas gingivalis, CCR5− oral keratinocytes signal through protease-activated receptors and Toll-like receptors to induce expression of CCR5, which increases selective uptake of infectious R5-tropic HIV-1 into oral keratinocytes and transfer to permissive cells. Hence, oral keratinocytes—like squamous keratinocytes of other tissues—may be targets for low-level HIV-1 internalization and subsequent dissemination by transfer to permissive cells.


Archives of Virology | 1999

Proviral load and expression of avian leukosis viruses of subgroup C in long-term persistently infected heterologous hosts (ducks)

Kateřina Trejbalová; Kristin Gebhard; Z. Vernerová; Ladislav Dušek; Josef Geryk; Jiří Hejnar; Ashley T. Haase; Jan Svoboda

Summary.Proviral DNA load and expression of avian leukosis viruses of subgroup C (ALV-C) in ducks infected in mid embryogenesis were studied using quantitative PCR, RT-PCR, in situ hybridization employing ALV-specific riboprobe, and immunohistochemistry. A group of long-term surviving, non-reviremic ducks was selected for the study and compared to control reviremic animals in order to obtain information about persisting retroviruses in different duck tissues. A widespread distribution of proviruses in the tested tissues was found, but the proviral load was significantly lower in non-reviremic in comparison to reviremic animals. The only exception were brain and blood cells, in which no significant difference in the quantity of integrated proviruses was found between both categories of ducks, thus indicating an exceptional position of the brain and blood cells among all tested tissues. Contrary to reviremic, the proviruses were not transcribed in non-reviremic ducks, with the exception of brain and thymus. In the majority of non-reviremic ducks viral RNA was revealed in the brain, but no infectious virus could be recovered from this tissue. The opposite situation was observed in the thymus, where infectious virus was recovered but viral RNA remained below the detection limit of the assay. As revealed by in situ analysis, infected cells were either disseminated or focally distributed in tissues. From the long-term follow up of ALV-C in intraembryonally infected ducks we conclude that this model is suitable for the study of retrovirus persistence accompained both by the presence and absence of reviremias. The possible consequences of transmission and long-term persistence of retroviruses in the heterologous host for retroviral evolution are discussed.


Journal of Virology | 1997

Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus gene expression in endothelial (spindle) tumor cells.

Katherine Staskus; Weidong Zhong; Kristin Gebhard; Brian Herndier; Hao Wang; Rolf Renne; Janet Beneke; Jeffrey Pudney; Deborah J. Anderson; Don Ganem; Andashley T. Haase


Science | 1997

Kinetics of response in lymphoid tissues to antiretroviral therapy of HIV-1 infection

Winston Cavert; Daan W. Notermans; Katherine Staskus; Stephen W. Wietgrefe; Mary Zupancic; Kristin Gebhard; Keith Henry; Zhi Qiang Zhang; Roger Mills; Hugh McDade; Jaap Goudsmit; Sven A. Danner; Ashley T. Haase


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998

Kinetics of CD4+ T cell repopulation of lymphoid tissues after treatment of HIV-1 infection

Zhi Qiang Zhang; Daan W. Notermans; Gerald Sedgewick; Winston Cavert; Stephen W. Wietgrefe; Mary Zupancic; Kristin Gebhard; Keith Henry; Lawrence R. Boies; Zongming Chen; Marc K. Jenkins; Roger Mills; Hugh McDade; Carolyn Goodwin; Caspar M. Schuwirth; Sven A. Danner; Ashley T. Haase


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1999

Reversibility of the pathological changes in the follicular dendritic cell network with treatment of HIV-1 infection

Zhi Qiang Zhang; Troy Schuler; Winston Cavert; Daan W. Notermans; Kristin Gebhard; Keith Henry; Diane V. Havlir; Huldrych F. Günthard; Joseph K. Wong; Susan J. Little; Mark B. Feinberg; Michael A. Polis; Lewis K. Schrager; Timothy W. Schacker; Douglas D. Richman; Lawrence Corey; Sven A. Danner; Ashley T. Haase

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Keith Henry

Hennepin County Medical Center

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