Biochemical Fingerprints of Prion Infection: Accumulations of Aberrant Full-Length and N-Terminally Truncated PrP Species Are Common Features in Mouse Prion Disease

  • Pan T
  • Wong P
  • Chang B
  • et al.
29Citations
Citations of this article
23Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Infection with any one of three strains of mouse scrapie prion (PrP Sc ), 139A, ME7, or 22L, results in the accumulation of two underglycosylated, full-length PrP species and an N-terminally truncated PrP species that are not detectable in uninfected animals. The levels of the N-terminally truncated PrP species vary depending on PrP Sc strain. Furthermore, 22L-infected brains consistently have the highest levels of proteinase K (PK)-resistant PrP species, followed by ME7- and 139A-infected brains. The three strains of PrP Sc are equally susceptible to PK and proteases papain and chymotrypsin. Their protease resistance patterns are also similar. In sucrose gradient velocity sedimentation, the aberrant PrP species partition with PrP Sc aggregates, indicating that they are physically associated with PrP Sc . In ME7-infected animals, one of the underglycosylated, full-length PrP species is detected much earlier than the other, before both the onset of clinical disease and the detection of PK-resistant PrP species. In contrast, the appearance of the N-terminally truncated PrP species coincides with the presence of PK-resistant species and the manifestation of clinical symptoms. Therefore, accumulation of the underglycosylated, full-length PrP species is an early biochemical fingerprint of PrP Sc infection. Accumulation of the underglycosylated, full-length PrP species and the aberrant N-terminally truncated PrP species may be important in the pathogenesis of prion disease.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Pan, T., Wong, P., Chang, B., Li, C., Li, R., Kang, S.-C., … Sy, M.-S. (2005). Biochemical Fingerprints of Prion Infection: Accumulations of Aberrant Full-Length and N-Terminally Truncated PrP Species Are Common Features in Mouse Prion Disease. Journal of Virology, 79(2), 934–943. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.79.2.934-943.2005

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free