Excretion of transmissible spongiform encephalopathy infectivity in urine |
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Authors: | Gregori Luisa Kovacs Gabor G Alexeeva Irina Budka Herbert Rohwer Robert G |
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Affiliation: | Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Baltimore, Maryland, USA (L. Gregori, I. Alexeeva, R.G. Rohwer);University of Maryland, Baltimore (L. Gregori, R.G. Rohwer);Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria (G.G. Kovacs, H. Budka) |
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Abstract: | The route of transmission of most naturally acquired transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) infections remains speculative. To investigate urine as a potential source of TSE exposure, we used a sensitive method for detection and quantitation of TSE infectivity. Pooled urine collected from 22 hamsters showing clinical signs of 263K scrapie contained 3.8 +/- 0.9 infectious doses/mL of infectivity. Titration of homogenates of kidneys and urinary bladders from the same animals gave concentrations 20,000-fold greater. Histologic and immunohistochemical examination of these same tissues showed no indications of inflammatory or other pathologic changes except for occasional deposits of disease-associated prion protein in kidneys. Although the source of TSE infectivity in urine remains unresolved, these results establish that TSE infectivity is excreted in urine and may thereby play a role in the horizontal transmission of natural TSEs. The results also indicate potential risk for TSE transmission from human urine-derived hormones and other medicines. |
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Keywords: | Prion urine TSE kidney bladder endogenous infectivity scrapie hamster limiting dilution titration pathology research |
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