Porcine Prion Protein as a Paradigm of Limited Susceptibility to Prion Strain Propagation

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Abstract

Although experimental transmission of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) to pigs and transgenic mice expressing pig cellular prion protein (PrPC) (porcine PrP [PoPrP]-Tg001) has been described, no natural cases of prion diseases in pig were reported. This study analyzed pig-PrPC susceptibility to different prion strains using PoPrP-Tg001 mice either as animal bioassay or as substrate for protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA). A panel of isolates representatives of different prion strains was selected, including classic and atypical/Nor98 scrapie, atypical-BSE, rodent scrapie, human Creutzfeldt-Jakob-disease and classic BSE from different species. Bioassay proved that PoPrP-Tg001-mice were susceptible only to the classic BSE agent, and PMCA results indicate that only classic BSE can convert pig-PrPC into scrapie-type PrP (PrPSc), independently of the species origin. Therefore, conformational flexibility constraints associated with pig-PrP would limit the number of permissible PrPSc conformations compatible with pig-PrPC, thus suggesting that pig-PrPC may constitute a paradigm of low conformational flexibility that could confer high resistance to the diversity of prion strains.

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Espinosa, J. C., MarÃ-N-Moreno, A., Aguilar-Calvo, P., Benestad, S. L., Andreoletti, O., & Torres, J. M. (2021). Porcine Prion Protein as a Paradigm of Limited Susceptibility to Prion Strain Propagation. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 223(6), 1103–1112. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiz646

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