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Focal and asymmetrical vacuolar lesions in the brains of mice infected with certain strains of scrapie
Authors:M. E. Bruce  H. Fraser
Affiliation:(1) ARC and MRC Neuropathogenesis Unit, West Mains Road, EH9 3JQ Edinburgh, Scotland
Abstract:
Summary In mice experimentally infected with most strains of scrapie, vacuolar degeneration almost always shows a bilaterally symmetrical distribution in the brain. However, asymmetrical foci of vacuolation are frequently seen with a group of six mouse-passaged isolates from diverse natural sheep sources (designated 31A, 51C, 87A, 125A, 138A and 153A). As these isolates are similar in other respects they may be independent isolations of the same strain of scrapie. The distribution of focal vacuolar lesions in C57BL mice affected with 87A scrapie was found to depend on route of infection. In mice injected intracerebrally into the left or right hemisphere, all focal asymmetrical lesions occurred on the side of injection, in some cases intense vacuolation being associated with the needle scar. following midline intracerebral injection, focal lesions were evenly distributed between the two sides and were most frequent in the medial areas of the thalamus. In one mouse injected intraocularly, intense unilateral lesions were seen contralaterally in the major retinal projection regions. Asymmetrical lesions also occurred following infection by intraperitoneal, intravenous and subcutaneous routes, but were less frequent than after intracerebral infection. The most likely explanation is that focal asymmetrical lesions result from focal replication of scrapie infectivity in the brain. As all the scrapie strains which frequently produce asymmetrical vacuolation are also those that generate mutants, it is possible that focal lesions represent foci of the new mutant strain, replicating preferentially in areas with a low background level of the parent strain.
Keywords:Scrapie  Asymmetry  Mutation
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