Abstract

Neurotoxicity in all prion disorders is believed to result from the accumulation of PrP-scrapie (PrPSc), a β-sheet rich isoform of a normal cell-surface glycoprotein, the prion protein (PrPC). Limited reports suggest imbalance of brain iron homeostasis as a significant associated cause of neurotoxicity in prion-infected cell and mouse models. However, systematic studies on the generality of this phenomenon and the underlying mechanism(s) leading to iron dyshomeostasis in diseased brains are lacking. In this report, we demonstrate that prion disease–affected human, hamster, and mouse brains show increased total and redox-active Fe (II) iron, and a paradoxical increase in major iron uptake proteins transferrin (Tf) and transferrin receptor (TfR) at the end stage of disease. Furthermore, examination of scrapie-inoculated hamster brains at different timepoints following infection shows increased levels of Tf with time, suggesting increasing iron deficiency with disease progression. Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD)–affected human brains show a similar increase in total iron and a direct correlation between PrP and Tf levels, implicating PrPSc as the underlying cause of iron deficiency. Increased binding of Tf to the cerebellar Purkinje cell neurons of sCJD brains further indicates upregulation of TfR and a phenotype of neuronal iron deficiency in diseased brains despite increased iron levels. The likely cause of this phenotype is sequestration of iron in brain ferritin that becomes detergent-insoluble in PrPSc-infected cell lines and sCJD brain homogenates. These results suggest that sequestration of iron in PrPSc–ferritin complexes induces a state of iron bio-insufficiency in prion disease–affected brains, resulting in increased uptake and a state of iron dyshomeostasis. An additional unexpected observation is the resistance of Tf to digestion by proteinase-K, providing a reliable marker for iron levels in postmortem human brains. These data implicate redox-iron in prion disease–associated neurotoxicity, a novel observation with significant implications for prion disease pathogenesis.

Highlights

  • Imbalance of brain iron homeostasis is considered an important contributing factor of neurotoxicity in several neurodegenerative disorders including Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, and Huntington’s disease [1,2,3,4]

  • Cellular iron homeostasis is maintained by a set of iron regulatory proteins that respond to intracellular iron levels by regulating their expression

  • We demonstrate that prion disease– affected human, mouse, and hamster brains exhibit a state of iron deficiency in the presence of excess total brain iron, resulting in a state of iron imbalance

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Summary

Introduction

Imbalance of brain iron homeostasis is considered an important contributing factor of neurotoxicity in several neurodegenerative disorders including Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, and Huntington’s disease [1,2,3,4]. Recent evidence suggests a similar alteration of iron homeostasis in prion disorders, a group of neurodegenerative conditions affecting humans and animals [5,6,7,8,9,10]. Since prion disorders are believed to result from a change in the conformation of cellular prion protein (PrPC) from an a-helical to a b-sheet rich PrP-scrapie form (PrPSc), disturbance of brain iron homeostasis is an unexpected outcome [11,12]. Alteration of brain iron homeostasis in diseased brains is likely to induce significant neurotoxicity, an observation that has received little attention [16]

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