Clinical Aspects of Alzheimer ’ s Disease Chapter 13 Prion Diseases

  • Whitechurch B
  • Welton J
  • Collins S
  • et al.
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Abstract

Prion diseases are a group of invariably fatal and transmissible neurodegenerative disorders that are associated with the misfolding of the normal cellular prion protein, with the misfolded conformers constituting an infectious unit referred to as a “prion”. Prions can spread within an affected organism by directly propagating this misfolding within and between cells and can transmit disease between animals of the same and different species. Prion diseases have a range of clinical phenotypes in humans and animals, with a principle determinant of this attributed to different conformations of the misfolded protein, referred to as prion strains. This chapter will describe the different clinical manifestations of prion dis- eases, the evidence that these diseases can be transmitted by an infectious protein and how the misfolding of this protein causes disease.

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Whitechurch, B. C., Welton, J. M., Collins, S. J., & Lawson, V. A. (2017). Clinical Aspects of Alzheimer ’ s Disease Chapter 13 Prion Diseases. Advances in Neurobiology, 15(July), 335–364.

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