S. B. Prusiner proposed that the infectious agent of scrapie, the prion, is PrP(Sc), a modified form of the normal host protein PrP(C). Prn-p0/0 mice devoid of PrP(C) showed normal development and behavior. When inoculated with mouse scrapie prions, they remained free of scrapie symptoms for at least 13 months while wild-type controls all died within 6 months. Surprisingly, heterozygous Prn-p0/+ mice also showed enhanced resistance to scrapie. After introduction of Syrian hamster PrP transgenes, Prn-P0/0 mice became highly susceptible to hamster but not to mouse prions. These experiments show that PrP(C), possibly at close to normal levels, is required for the usual susceptibility to scrapie and that lack of homology between incoming prions and the host's PrP genes retards disease.