Abstract
Prion diseases are transmissible neurodegenerative diseases of humans and animals. The prion agent consists of a misfolded protein, PrPSc (prion protein, scrapie form), of a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored host protein, PrPC (PrP cellular form) of unknown function. During prion replication, PrPSc induces host PrPC to adopt its pathogenic conformation. Some PrPSc may aggregate to microscopically visible, extracellular prion plaques that stain for amyloid. The development of antiprion vaccines presents some challenges. While there is strong self-tolerance to an endogenous antibody response to PrPC and PrPSc, highly potent monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) have been raised in mice in which the prion protein gene has been deleted by gene targeting. These mAbs have been demonstrated to be antiprion-active in permanently scrapie-infected neuroblastoma (ScN2a) cells, primarily when bound to one of four epitopes (the octarepeat region, the region around codons 90-110, helix 1 region codons 145-160, and the extreme C-terminal codons 210-220). The mAbs directed against codon regions 90-110 or 145-160 are also antiprion-active in vivo, but only after intraperitoneal infection with prions, not intracerebral infection, suggesting their blood-brain barrier (BBB) impermeability. The challenge will be to make antibodies, or recombinant derivatives thereof, BBB permeable; this is preferably achieved by monovalent antibody fragments since divalent ones were found to be neurotoxic. Self-tolerance of wild-type animals to PrP immunizations was found to be of extrathymic origin. Even though antibodies raised in wild-type mice were found to display antiprion activity in ScN2a cells, these mice did not have significant extensions of incubation times when challenged intraperitoneally with prions. A general low affinity of these antibody responses to native surface-bound PrPC may account for this. Since wild-type mice were found to develop sufficient T-cell responses to codon regions 145-160 and 210-220, we believe that there is a theoretical chance of a successful vaccination therapy. The influence of the way the immunogen is presented has already been shown to be of major importance for the ensuing immune response, in that presentation of PrP with CpG oligodeoxynucleotides as adjuvant or viral packaging improved antibody responses. Major progress for active immunizations may therefore be expected in this field. Eradication programs will be one of the most important uses of active immunization protocols. For this purpose, vaccines will have to be inexpensive, easy to handle, and effective. In the short term, passive immunizations will likely be most promising for therapy of prion disease, including for human medical interventions. Active immunization protocols are less likely to succeed quickly, and will take years if not decades to be validated for domestic or free-ranging animals.
Published Version
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