Abstract

Transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) occurs as sporadic outbreaks associated with ingestion of feed presumably contaminated with some type of prion disease. Mink lack a species barrier to primary oral challenge with bovine spongiform encephalopathy, whereas they have a barrier to such challenge with scrapie. We investigated whether mink have a species barrier to chronic wasting disease (CWD) by performing primary intracerebral (IC) and primary oral challenge with CWD-positive elk brain. Primary IC challenge resulted in clinical disease in two of eight mink at 31–33 months incubation. Affected mink had spongiform vacuolation and astrocytosis within the central nervous system and immunoreactivity to disease-associated prion protein (PrPd) in brain, retina and lymph node. CWD IC recipients had significantly lower brain vacuolation and PrPd deposition scores, significantly lower cerebrocortical astrocyte counts and significantly higher hippocampal astrocyte counts than TME IC recipients. Primary oral challenge with CWD-positive elk brain (n=22) or with CWD-negative elk brain given IC (n=7) or orally (n=23) did not result in clinical or microscopic abnormalities during 42 months observation. Novel prion gene polymorphisms were identified at codon 27 (arginine/tryptophan) and codon 232 (arginine/lysine). This study shows that, whilst CWD can cause disease when given IC to mink, the lesions are not characteristic of TME, transmission is inefficient compared with TME and oral challenge does not result in disease. The demonstration of a species barrier in cervid-to-mustelid prion transmission indicates that mink are unlikely to be involved in natural CWD transmission.

Highlights

  • Transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) is an uncommon form of prion disease that has occurred in sporadic outbreaks on commercial mink farms in North America, Finland, Germany and Russia (Marsh & Hadlow, 1992)

  • Brains from affected mink have hallmark lesions of transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE), including spongiform vacuolation and astrocytosis that are pronounced throughout the telencephalon, diencephalon and mesencephalon (Hadlow & Karstad, 1968; Hartsough & Burger, 1965)

  • PrPd immunoreactivity in chronic wasting disease (CWD)-positive elk-brain homogenates was confirmed by Western blot of Proteinase K (PK)-digested samples (Fig. 1a)

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Summary

Introduction

Transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) is an uncommon form of prion disease that has occurred in sporadic outbreaks on commercial mink farms in North America, Finland, Germany and Russia (Marsh & Hadlow, 1992). Brains from affected mink have hallmark lesions of transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE), including spongiform vacuolation and astrocytosis that are pronounced throughout the telencephalon, diencephalon and mesencephalon (Hadlow & Karstad, 1968; Hartsough & Burger, 1965). Investigation of TME outbreaks implicated ingestion of ruminant tissue contaminated with some type of prion as the source of disease (Hartsough & Burger, 1965). Species barriers in ruminant-to-mink prion transmission have been evaluated experimentally [for the purposes of this report, defined as inefficient primary intracerebral (IC) transmission and lack of primary oral transmission]. Primary IC or primary oral challenge with BSE readily causes a TSE in mink, indicating a lack of species barrier between cattle and mink (Robinson et al, 1994).

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