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A New Twist on the Mad Cow - Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute
Discover the Normal Prion Protein May Contribute Directly to Disease
La Jolla, CA, January 29, 2004 - In a surprising twist on a timely topic,
scientists at The Scripps Research Institute are presenting evidence that mad
cow disease prions cannot kill neurons on their own and that normal, healthy
cellular prion protein may be a direct accomplice in unleashing neuronal destruction.
Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), or mad cow disease, is caused by
prions, a misfolded "scrapie" form of the normal cellular protein, which is found
on the surface of human, sheep, and cow neurons. Prion infections are also implicated
in one form of the same disease in humans, called Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease,
an incurable condition that causes neurologic abnormalities, dementia, and eventually
death.
BSE has caused widespread public concern when it has appeared
in cattle in Europe, Canada, and most recently the United States, as it is believed
that the disease is transmitted across species by the consumption of prions from
a diseased animal's central nervous system.
Unlike most infectious diseases, the infectious material of
mad cow and other prion disease is not a virus, bacteria, or some other pathogen,
but a protein. Normally, prion proteins are expressed throughout the body and
sit anchored onto the surfaces of cells in a wide variety of tissues, particularly
on cells in neuronal tissue. They are something of an enigma because scientists
do not know what they do there. But if the function of prions is mysterious,
their malfunction is notorious.
"The prion protein," says Scripps Research investigator Anthony
Williamson, Ph.D., "has a Jekyll and Hyde personality."
A New View of Normal Prions
Previously, scientists viewed the normal cellular prion protein as mere fodder
that the scrapie prions would turn into more scrapie prions until an army of
scrapies grew into a spongy mass, killing brain cells, and causing the neurological
wasting that characterizes the disease.
Now, Williamson and his colleagues in the Department of Immunology
at The Scripps Research Institute are telling another story.
In an upcoming issue of the journal Science, Williamson
and his colleagues present evidence that scrapie prions cannot kill neurons on
their own. They required normal cellular prions to be present.
Furthermore, Williamson and his colleagues discovered that
they were able to induce catastrophic neurotoxicity in vivo without any
scrapie prions at all by adding antibody molecules, which cross-linked the normal
prion protein. Thus, engaging and activating the normal prion protein triggered
the type of neurodegeneration that characterize BSE and variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob.
This suggests a possible mechanism for prion pathogenesis - that
scrapie prions cross-link normal cellular prions, killing neurons in the process.
Rather than being innocent bystanders until converted into scrapie prions, normal
cellular prions may be essential ingredients for prion diseases like BSE.
While illuminating the mechanisms of disease, the findings
also suggest caution to one possible approach to fighting prion diseases - administering
antibodies or small molecules that will bind to the normal prion protein and
prevent the scrapie prions from binding. However, it now appears that in cross-linking
the normal prion protein, such a therapy may actually promote rapid spongiosis.
The research article, "Crosslinking Cellular Prion Protein
Triggers Neuronal Apoptosis in vivo," is authored by Laura Solforosi,
Jose R. Criado, Dorian B. McGavern, Sebastian Wirz, Manuel Sánchez-Alavez,
Shuei Sugama, Lorraine A. DeGiorgio, Bruce T. Volpe, Erika Wiseman, Gil Abalos,
Eliezer Masliah, Donald Gilden, Michael B. Oldstone, Bruno Conti, and R. Anthony
Williamson and appears in Science Express on January 29, 2004. Science Express
provides rapid electronic publication of selected papers in the journal Science.
Print versions of these papers will appear in Science after several weeks.
See: http://www.sciencemag.org/sciencexpress/recent.shtml.
The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health,
the Department of Defense National Prion Research Program, and the Clark Fellowship
in Neurophysiology from the Brain Research and Treatment Center, Scripps Clinic.
About The Scripps Research Institute
The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California, is one of the world's
largest, private, non-profit biomedical research organizations. It stands at
the forefront of basic biomedical science that seeks to comprehend the most fundamental
processes of life. Scripps Research is internationally recognized for its research
into immunology, molecular and cellular biology, chemistry, neurosciences, autoimmune
diseases, cardiovascular diseases and synthetic vaccine development.
For more information contact:
Jason Bardi
10550 North Torrey Pines Road
La Jolla, California 92037
Tel: 858.784.9254
Fax: 858.784.8118
jasonb@scripps.edu
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