Abstract

One intriguing feature of prion diseases is their strain variation. Prion strains are differentiated by the clinical consequences they generate in the host, their biochemical properties, and their potential to infect other animal species. The selective targeting of these agents to specific brain structures have been extensively used to characterize prion strains. However, the molecular basis dictating strain-specific neurotropism are still elusive. In this study, isolated brain structures from animals infected with four hamster prion strains (HY, DY, 139H, and SSLOW) were analyzed for their content of protease-resistant PrP(Sc) Our data show that these strains have different profiles of PrP deposition along the brain. These patterns of accumulation, which were independent of regional PrP(C) production, were not reproduced by in vitro replication when different brain regions were used as substrate for the misfolding-amplification reaction. On the contrary, our results show that in vitro replication efficiency depended exclusively on the amount of PrP(C) present in each part of the brain. Our results suggest that the variable regional distribution of PrP(Sc) in distinct strains is not determined by differences on prion formation, but on other factors or cellular pathways. Our findings may contribute to understand the molecular mechanisms of prion pathogenesis and strain diversity.

Highlights

  • Prions, the causative agents in transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs),2 are composed mostly or exclusively by misfolded forms of the prion protein (PrPSc)

  • DY and 139H prions showed similar incubation periods (210.3 Ϯ 9.6 and 203.4 Ϯ 6.6, respectively) they were differentiated by their clinical signs

  • The differences in clinical manifestation of the disease produced by infection with distinct prion strains are thought to be dependent on the specific targeting of different brain regions

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Summary

Introduction

The causative agents in transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs),2 are composed mostly or exclusively by misfolded forms of the prion protein (PrPSc). We dissected and isolated different brain areas of Syrian hamsters independently infected with four prion strains, and the relative accumulation of disease-associated PrP present in each structure was measured.

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