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1.
The main feature of prion diseases is the accumulation of infectious proteins (PrPSc). Since PrPSc results from conversion of cellular prion proteins (PrPC), differential expressed PrPC types may play an important role in the formation and conversion efficiency to specific PrPSc forms. However, little is known about the PrPC expression, regulation and differentiation. Here, we demonstrate a new type of differentiation of overlapping PrPC isoforms in brain homogenates using differential SDS solubility. Low and highly soluble PrPC were detected along with various types of protein which are present in the brain of non-infected humans, sheep and cattle. Our findings provide evidence for the existence of several overlapping PrPC proteins exhibiting distinct glycotypes. The selection of defined PrPC types offers new possibilities for identifying highly efficient converting proteins and provides the potential for disease control.  相似文献   

2.
Prion diseases are believed to propagate by the mechanism involving self-perpetuating conformational conversion of the normal form of the prion protein, PrPC, to the misfolded, pathogenic state, PrPSc. One of the most intriguing aspects of these disorders is the phenomenon of prion strains. It is believed that strain properties are fully encoded in distinct conformations of PrPSc. Strains are of practical relevance to human prion diseases as their diversity may explain the unusual heterogeneity of these disorders. The first insight into the molecular mechanisms underlying heterogeneity of human prion diseases was provided by the observation that two distinct disease phenotypes and their associated PrPSc conformers co-distribute with distinct PrP genotypes as determined by the methionine/valine polymorphism at codon 129 of the PrP gene. Subsequent studies identified six possible combinations of the three genotypes (determined by the polymorphic codon 129) and two common PrPSc conformers (named types 1 and 2) as the major determinants of the phenotype in sporadic human prion diseases. This scenario implies that each 129 genotype–PrPSc type combination would be associated with a distinct disease phenotype and prion strain. However, notable exceptions have been found. For example, two genotype–PrPSc type combinations are linked to the same phenotype, and conversely, the same combination was found to be associated with two distinct phenotypes. Furthermore, in some cases, PrPSc conformers naturally associated with distinct phenotypes appear, upon transmission, to lose their phenotype-determining strain characteristics. Currently it seems safe to assume that typical sporadic prion diseases are associated with at least six distinct prion strains. However, the intrinsic characteristics that distinguish at least four of these strains remain to be identified.  相似文献   

3.
Disease‐associated proteins are thought to propagate along neuronal processes in neurodegenerative diseases. To detect disease‐associated prion protein (PrPSc) in the vagus nerve in different forms and molecular subtypes of Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (CJD), we applied 3 different anti‐PrP antibodies. We screened the vagus nerve in 162 sporadic and 30 genetic CJD cases. Four of 31 VV‐2 type sporadic CJD and 7 of 30 genetic CJD cases showed vagal PrPSc immunodeposits with distinct morphology. Thus, PrPSc in CJD affects the vagus nerve analogously to α‐synuclein in Parkinson disease. The morphologically diverse deposition of PrPSc in genetic and sporadic CJD argues against uniform mechanisms of propagation of PrPSc. Ann Neurol 2019;85:782–787  相似文献   

4.
A fundamental step in pathophysiology of prion diseases is the conversion of the host encoded prion protein (PrPC) into a misfolded isoform (PrPSc) that accumulates mainly in neuronal but also non-neuronal tissues. Prion diseases are transmissible within and between species. In a subset of prion diseases, peripheral prion uptake and subsequent transport to the central nervous system are key to disease initiation. The involvement of retroviruses in this process has been postulated based on the findings that retroviral infections enhance the spread of prion infectivity and PrPSc from cell to cell in vitro. To study whether retroviral infection influences the phenotype of prion disease or the spread of prion infectivity and PrPSc in vivo, we developed a murine model with persistent Moloney murine leukemia retrovirus (MoMuLV) infection with and without additional prion infection. We investigated the pathophysiology of prion disease in MoMuLV and prion-infected mice, monitoring temporal kinetics of PrPSc spread and prion infectivity, as well as clinical presentation. Unexpectedly, infection of MoMuLV challenged mice with prions did not change incubation time to clinical prion disease. However, clinical presentation of prion disease was altered in mice infected with both pathogens. This was paralleled by remarkably enhanced astrogliosis and pathognomonic astrocyte morphology in the brain of these mice. Therefore, we conclude that persistent viral infection might act as a disease modifier in prion disease.  相似文献   

5.
B. A. Faucheux, E. Morain, V. Diouron, J.‐P. Brandel, D. Salomon, V. Sazdovitch, N. Privat, J.‐L. Laplanche, J.‐J. Hauw and S. Haïk (2011) Neuropathology and Applied Neurobiology 37, 500–512 Quantification of surviving cerebellar granule neurones and abnormal prion protein (PrPSc) deposition in sporadic Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease supports a pathogenic role for small PrPSc deposits common to the various molecular subtypes Aims: Neuronal death is a major neuropathological hallmark in prion diseases. The association between the accumulation of the disease‐related prion protein (PrPSc) and neuronal loss varies within the wide spectrum of prion diseases and their experimental models. In this study, we investigated the relationships between neuronal loss and PrPSc deposition in the cerebellum from cases of the six subtypes of sporadic Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (sCJD; n = 100) that can be determined according to the M129V polymorphism of the human prion protein gene (PRNP) and PrPSc molecular types. Methods: The numerical density of neurones was estimated with a computer‐assisted image analysis system and the accumulation of PrPSc deposits was scored. Results: The scores of PrPSc immunoreactive deposits of the punctate type (synaptic type) were correlated with neurone counts – the higher the score the higher the neuronal loss – in all sCJD subtypes. Large 5‐ to 50‐µm‐wide deposits (focal type) were found in sCJD‐MV2 and sCJD‐VV2 subtypes, and occasionally in a few cases of the other studied groups. By contrast, the highest scores for 5‐ to 50‐µm‐wide deposits observed in sCJD‐MV2 subtype were not associated with higher neuronal loss. In addition, these scores were inversely correlated with neuronal counts in the sCJD‐VV2 subtype. Conclusions: These results support a putative pathogenic role for small PrPSc deposits common to the various sCJD subtypes. Furthermore, the observation of a lower loss of neurones associated with PrPSc type‐2 large deposits is consistent with a possible ‘protective’ role of aggregated deposits in both sCJD‐MV2 and sCJD‐VV2 subtypes.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Human prion diseases are rare neurodegenerative disorders related to prion protein misfolding that can occur as sporadic, familial or acquired forms. In comparison to other more common neurodegenerative disorders, prion diseases show a wider range of phenotypic variation and largely transmit to experimental animals, a feature that led to the isolation and characterization of different strains of the transmissible agent or prion with distinct biological properties. Biochemically distinct PrPSc types have been demonstrated which differ in their size after proteinase cleavage, glycosylation pattern, and possibly other features related to their conformation. These PrPSc types, possibly enciphering the prion strains, together with the naturally occurring polymorphism at codon 129 in the prion protein gene have a major influence on the disease phenotype. In the sporadic form, the most common but perhaps least understood form of human prion disease, there are at least six major combinations of codon 129 genotype and prion protein isotype, which are significantly related to distinctive clinical–pathological subgroups of the disease. In this review, we provide an update on the current knowledge and classification of the disease subtypes of the sporadic human prion diseases as defined by molecular features and pathological changes. Furthermore, we discuss the molecular basis of phenotypic variability taking into account the results of recent transmission studies that shed light on the extent of prion strain variation in humans.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Prions cause scrapie and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD); these infectious pathogens are composed largely, if not entirely, of protein molecules. No prion-specific polynucleotide has been identified. Purified preparations of scrapie prions contain high titers (109.5 ID50/ml), one protein (PrP 27-30) and amyloid rods (10–20 nm in diameter ×100–200 nm in length). Considerable evidence indicates that PrP 27-30 is required for and inseparable from scrapie infectivity. PrP 27-30 is encoded by a cellular gene and is derived from a larger protein, denoted PrPSc or PrP 33-35Sc, by protease digestion. A cellular isoform, designated PrPC or PrP 33-35C, is encoded by the same gene as PrPSc and both proteins appear to be translated from the same 2.1 kb mRNA. Monoclonal antibodies to PrP 27-30, as well as antisera to PrP synthetic peptides, specifically react with both PrPC and PrPSc, establishing their relatedness. PrPC is digested by proteinase K, while PrPSc is converted to PrP 27-30 under the same conditions. Prion proteins are synthesized with signal peptides and are integrated into membranes. Detergent extraction of microsomal membranes isolated from scrapie-infected hamster brains solubilizes PrPC but induces PrPSc to polymerize into amyloid rods. This procedure allows separation of the two prion protein isoforms and the demonstration that PrPSc accumulates during scrapie infection, while the level of PrPC does not change. The prion amyloid rods generated by detergent extraction are identical morphologically, except for length, to extracellular collections of prion amyloid filaments which form plaques in scrapie- and CJD-infected brains. The prion amyloid plaques stain with antibodies to PrP 27-30 and PrP peptides. PrP 33-35C does not accumulate in the extracellular space. Prion rods composed of PrP 27-30 can be dissociated into phospholipid vesicles with full retention of scrapie infectivity. The murine PrP gene (Prn-p) is linked to thePrn-i gene which controls the length of the scrapie incubation period. Prolonged incubation times are a cardinal feature of scrapie and CJD. While the central role of PrPSc in scrapie pathogenesis is well established, the chemical as well as conformational differences between PrPC and PrPSc are unknown but probably arise from post-translational modifications.Supported by research grants from the National Institutes of Health (AG 02132 and NS 14069) and a Senator Jacob Javits Center of Excellence in Neuroscience (NS 22786) as well as by gifts from RJR-Nabisco, Inc. and Sherman Fairchild FoundationThis review is based upon a plenary lecture entitled Biology and Neuropathology of Prions presented at the Xth International Congress of Neuropathology, Stockholm, Sweden, September 11, 1986, and is dedicated to the memory of Peter Wilhelm Lampert (1929–1986)  相似文献   

9.
In transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) the prion protein (PrP) plays a central role in pathogenesis. The PrP gene (Prnp) has been described in a number of mammalian and avian species and its expression product, the cellular prion protein (PrPC), has been mapped in brains of different laboratory animals (rodent and non-human primates). However, mapping of PrPC expression in mammalian species suffering from natural (bovine and ovine) and experimental (swine) TSE or in species in which prion disease has never been reported (equine and canine) deserves further attention. Thus, localising the cellular prion protein (PrPC) distribution in brain may be noteworthy for the understanding of prion disease pathogenesis since lesions seem to be restricted to particular brain areas. In the present work, we analysed the distribution of PrPC expression among several brain structures of the above species. Our results suggest that the expression of PrPC, within the same species, differs depending on the brain structure studied, but no essential differences between the PrPC distribution patterns among the studied species could be established. Positive immunoreaction was found mainly in the neuropil and to a lesser extent in neuronal bodies which occasionally appeared strongly stained in discrete regions. Overall, the expression of PrPC in the brain was significantly higher in grey matter areas than in white matter, where accumulation of PrPSc is first observed in prion diseases. Therefore, other factors besides the level of expression of cellular PrP may account for the pathogenesis of TSEs  相似文献   

10.
The accumulation of abnormal prion protein (PrPSc) produced by the structure conversion of PrP (PrPC) in the brain induces prion disease. Although the conversion process of the protein is still not fully elucidated, it has been known that the intramolecular chemical bridging in the most fragile pocket of PrP, known as the “hot spot,” stabilizes the structure of PrPC and inhibits the conversion process. Using our original structure-based drug discovery algorithm, we identified the low molecular weight compounds that predicted binding to the hot spot. NPR-130 and NPR-162 strongly bound to recombinant PrP in vitro, and fragment molecular orbital (FMO) analysis indicated that the high affinity of those candidates to the PrP is largely dependent on nonpolar interactions, such as van der Waals interactions. Those NPRs showed not only significant reduction of the PrPSc levels but also remarkable decrease of the number of aggresomes in persistently prion-infected cells. Intriguingly, treatment with those candidate compounds significantly prolonged the survival period of prion-infected mice and suppressed prion disease-specific pathological damage, such as vacuole degeneration, PrPSc accumulation, microgliosis, and astrogliosis in the brain, suggesting their possible clinical use. Our results indicate that in silico drug discovery using NUDE/DEGIMA may be widely useful to identify candidate compounds that effectively stabilize the protein.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (10.1007/s13311-020-00903-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

11.
Six subtypes of sporadic Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease with distinctive clinico-pathological features have been identified largely based on two types of the abnormal prion protein, PrPSc, and the methionine (M)/valine (V) polymorphic codon 129 of the prion protein. The existence of affected subjects showing mixed phenotypic features and concurrent PrPSc types has been reported but with inconsistencies among studies in both results and their interpretation. The issue currently complicates diagnosis and classification of cases and also has implications for disease pathogenesis. To explore the issue in depth, we carried out a systematic regional study in a large series of 225 cases. PrPSc types 1 and 2 concurrence was detected in 35% of cases and was higher in MM than in MV or VV subjects. The deposition of either type 1 or 2, when concurrent, was not random and always characterized by the coexistence of phenotypic features previously described in the pure subtypes. PrPSc type 1 accumulation and related pathology predominated in MM and MV cases, while the type 2 phenotype prevailed in VVs. Neuropathological examination best identified the mixed types 1 and 2 features in MMs and most MVs, and also uniquely revealed the co-occurrence of pathological variants sharing PrPSc type 2. In contrast, molecular typing best detected the concurrent PrPSc types in VV subjects and MV cases with kuru plaques. The present data provide an updated disease classification and are of importance for future epidemiologic and transmission studies aimed to identify etiology and extent of strain variation in sporadic Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease.  相似文献   

12.
Prion diseases are fatal neurodegenerative disorders characterized by long incubation periods. To investigate whether concurrent diseases can modify the clinical outcome of prion‐affected subjects, we tested the effect of viral infection on the binding and internalization of PrPSc, essential steps of prion propagation. To this effect, we added scrapie brain homogenate or purified PrPSc to fibroblasts previously infected with minute virus of mice (MVM), a mouse parvovirus. We show here that the rate of incorporation of PrPSc into MVM‐infected cells was significantly higher than that observed for naïve cells. Immunostaining of cells and immunoblotting of subcellular fractions using antibodies recognizing PrP and LysoTracker, a lysosomal marker, revealed that in both control and MVM‐infected cells the incorporated PrPSc was associated mostly with lysosomes. Interestingly, floatation gradient analysis revealed that the majority of the PrPSc internalized into MVM‐infected cells shifted toward raft‐containing low‐density fractions. Concomitantly, the MVM‐infected cells demonstrated increased levels of the glycosphingolipid GM1 (an essential raft lipid component) throughout the gradient and a shift in caveolin 1 (a raft protein marker) toward lighter membrane fractions compared with noninfected cells. Our results suggest that the effect of viral infection on membrane lipid composition may promote the incorporation of exogenous PrPSc into rafts. Importantly, membrane rafts are believed to be the conversion site of PrPC to PrPSc; therefore, the association of exogenous PrPSc with such membrane microdomains may facilitate prion infection. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
Prion disease is a neurodegenerative malady, which is believed to be transmitted via a prion protein in its abnormal conformation (PrPSc). Previous studies have failed to demonstrate that prion disease could be induced in wild-type animals using recombinant prion protein (rPrP) produced in Escherichia coli. Here, we report that prion infectivity was generated in Syrian hamsters after inoculating full-length rPrP that had been converted into the cross-β-sheet amyloid form and subjected to annealing. Serial transmission gave rise to a disease phenotype with highly unique clinical and neuropathological features. Among them were the deposition of large PrPSc plaques in subpial and subependymal areas in brain and spinal cord, very minor lesioning of the hippocampus and cerebellum, and a very slow progression of disease after onset of clinical signs despite the accumulation of large amounts of PrPSc in the brain. The length of the clinical duration is more typical of human and large animal prion diseases, than those of rodents. Our studies establish that transmissible prion disease can be induced in wild-type animals by inoculation of rPrP and introduce a valuable new model of prion diseases.  相似文献   

14.
Scrapie is a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy affecting the central nervous system in sheep. The key event in such neurodegeneration is the conversion of the normal prion protein (PrPC) into the pathological isoform (PrPSc). Misfolded prion proteins are normally degraded by the proteasome. This work, analyzing models of scrapie disease, describes the in vivo relationship between the proteasome and prions. We report that the disease is associated with an increase of proteasome functionality, most likely as a means of counteracting the increased levels of oxidative stress. Here, we show that prions coprecipitate with the 20S proteasome and that they colocalize within the same neuron, thus raising the possibility that PrP interacts with the proteasome in both normal and diseased brain, affecting substrate trafficking and proteasome functionality. This interaction, inducing proteasome activation, leads to different neuronal alterations and triggers apoptosis. Furthermore, testing the effects of isolated PrPC on purified 20S proteasomes, we obtain a concentration‐ and proteasome composition‐dependent decrease in the complex activity. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
Prion diseases such as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans, scrapie in sheep, and BSE in cattle are transmissible and fatal neurodegenerative diseases. The infectious agent of these diseases has been designated as “prion”. It consists mainly and perhaps exclusively of a conformational variant of a physiological glycoprotein, the cellular prion, protein, PrPC, which is a copper-binding protein of the cell surface. In spite of the wealth of biochemical and biophysical information, the conformational transition from PrPC to PrPSc, the infectious isoform of the prion protein, is not well understood. Nerve cell loss in prion diseases may be caused by neurotoxic effects of the prion protein. Certain properties of the prion protein such as the apparent form of its glycosylation and conformational properties reflected by the preferential site of digestion with proteinase K are associated with particular phenotypes of prion disease. The appearance of a new variant of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans, which is most likely caused by the consumption of BSE-infected food in the UK, is cause for major concern particularly since there is no known effective treatment of prion diseases.  相似文献   

16.
Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) are neurodegenerative disorders caused by PrPSc, or prion, an abnormally folded form of the cellular prion protein (PrPC). The abundant expression of PrPC in the central nervous system (CNS) is a requirement for prion replication, yet despite years of intensive research the physiological function of PrPC still remains unclear. Several routes of investigation point out a potential role for PrPC in axon growth and neuronal development. Thus, we undertook a detailed analysis of the spatial and temporal expression of PrPC during mouse CNS development. Our findings show regional differences of the expression of PrP, with some specific white matter structures showing the earliest and highest expression of PrPC. Indeed, all these regions are part of the thalamolimbic neurocircuitry, suggesting a potential role of PrPC in the development and functioning of this specific brain system. J. Comp. Neurol. 518:1879–1891, 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
The scrapie isoform of the prion protein (PrPSc) induces pathological changes in the central nervous system including neurodegeneration and gliosis. A synthetic prion protein (PrP) peptide corresponding to amino acid residues 106–126 has been shown to be toxic to neurons that express PrPC, the cellular isoform of PrP. Here we show that in mixed glial cultures PrP106–126 induces astroglial proliferation that is dependent on cellular PrPc expression. In purified cultures of glial subtypes only microglia proliferated in response to PrP106–126. This effect was independent of PrP expression. Destruction of microglia in mixed glial cultures by L-leucine methyl ester (LLME) treatment abolished enhanced proliferation caused by PrP106–126. This proliferative effect can be restored by co-culturing LLME-treated astrocytes with microglia. Microglia therefore seem to mediate the proliferative effect exerted by PrP106–126 on astrocytes. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
We report a case of human prion disease of 29 months duration in a 74‐year‐old Japanese man. The disease started with progressive sleeplessness and dementia. MRI showed gradually progressive cerebral atrophy. Neuronal loss, spongiform change and gliosis were evident in the thalamus and cerebral cortex, as well as in the striatum and amygdaloid nucleus. In the cerebellar cortex, mild‐to‐moderate depletion of Pukinje cells and spongiform change were observed. Mild neuronal loss in the inferior olivary nucleus was also seen. Immunohistochemistry revealed widespread perivacuolar deposits of abnormal prion protein (PrPSc) in the cerebral cortex, thalamus, basal ganglia, and brainstem, and minimal plaque‐like deposits of PrPSc in the cerebellar cortex. In the cerebellar plaque‐like deposits, the presence of amyloid fibrils was confirmed ultrastructurally. The entire pathology appeared to lie halfway between those of CJD and fatal insomnia, and further demonstrated the relationship between spongiform degeneration and PrPSc deposits, especially in the diseased thalamus. By immunoblotting, the thalamus was shown to contain the lowest amount of PrPSC among the brain regions examined. The PrPSc of type 2, in which the ratio of the three glycoforms was compatible with that of sporadic fatal insomnia (MM2‐thalamic variant) reported previously, was also demonstrated. Analysis of the prion protein gene (PRNP) showed no mutation, and homozygosity for methionine at codon 129. In conclusion, we considered that this patient had been suffering from sporadic, pathologically atypical fatal insomnia.  相似文献   

19.
Human prion diseases are a group of rare neurodegenerative disorders characterized by the conversion of the constitutively expressed prion protein, PrPC, into an abnormally aggregated isoform, called PrPSc. While most people who develop a prion disease have no identifiable cause and a few acquire the disease through an identified source of infection, about 10–15% of patients are affected by a genetic form and carry either a point mutation or an insertion of octapeptide repeats in the prion protein gene. Prion diseases show the highest extent of phenotypic heterogeneity among neurodegenerative disorders and comprise three major disease entities with variable though overlapping phenotypic features: Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (CJD), fatal insomnia and the Gerstmann–Sträussler–Scheinker syndrome. Both CJD and fatal insomnia are fully transmissible diseases, a feature that led to the isolation and characterization of different strains of the agent or prion showing distinctive clinical and neuropathological features after transmission to syngenic animals. Here, we review the current knowledge of the effects of the pathogenic mutations linked to genetic CJD and fatal familial insomnia on the prion protein metabolism and physicochemical properties, the disease phenotype and the strain characteristics. The data derived from studies in vitro and from those using cell and animal models are compared with those obtained from the analyses of the naturally occurring disease. The extent of phenotypic variation in genetic prion disease is analyzed in comparison to that of the sporadic disease, which has recently been the topic of a systematic and detailed characterization.  相似文献   

20.
Prion encephalopathies include fatal diseases of the central nervous system of men and animals characterized by nerve cell loss, glial proliferation and deposition of amyloid fibrils into the brain. During these diseases a cellular glycoprotein (the prion protein, PrPC) is converted, through a not yet completely clear mechanism, in an altered isoform (the prion scrapie, PrPSc) that accumulates within the brain tissue by virtue of its resistance to the intracellular catabolism. PrPSc is believed to be responsible for the neuronal loss that is observed in the prion disease. The PrP 106–126, a synthetic peptide that has been obtained from the amyloidogenic portion of the prion protein, represents a suitable model for studying the pathogenic role of the PrPSc, retaining, in vitro, some characteristics of the entire protein, such as the capability to aggregate in fibrils, and the neurotoxicity. In this work we present the results we have recently obtained regarding the action of the PrP 106–126 in different cellular models. We report that the PrP 106–126 induces proliferation of cortical astrocytes, as well as degeneration of primary cultures of cortical neurons or of neuroectodermal stable cell lines (GH3 cells). In particular, these two opposite effects are mediated by the same attitude of the peptide to interact with the L-type calcium channels: in the astrocytes, the activity of these channels seems to be activated by PrP 106–126, while, in the cortical neurons and in the GH3 cells, the same treatment causes a blockade of these channels causing a toxic effect.  相似文献   

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