Subclinical prion disease induced by oral inoculation

被引:41
作者
Thackray, AM
Klein, MA
Bujdoso, R
机构
[1] Univ Cambridge, Dept Clin Vet Med, Ctr Vet Sci, Cambridge CB3 0ES, England
[2] Univ Wurzburg, Inst Virol & Immunbiol, Prion Res Grp, D-97078 Wurzburg, Germany
关键词
D O I
10.1128/JVI.77.14.7991-7998.2003
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Natural transmission of prion disease is believed to occur by peripheral infection such as oral inoculation. Following this route of inoculation, both the peripheral nervous system and the lymphoreticular system may be involved in the subsequent neuroinvasion of the central nervous system by prions, which may not necessarily result in clinical signs of terminal disease. Subclinical prion disease, characterized by the presence of infectivity and PrPSc in the absence of overt clinical signs, may occur. It is not known which host factors contribute to whether infection with prions culminates in a terminal or subclinical disease state. We have investigated whether the level of host PrPc protein expression is a factor in the development of subclinical prion disease. When RML prion inoculum was inoculated by either the i.c. or intraperitoneal route, wild-type and tga20 mice both succumbed to terminal prion disease. In contrast, orally inoculated tga20 mice succumbed to terminal prion disease, whereas wild-type mice showed no clinical signs. However, wild-type mice sacrificed 375 or 525 days after oral inoculation harbored significant levels of brain PrPSc and infectivity. These data show that same-species transmission of prions by the oral route in animals that express normal levels of PrPc can result in subclinical prion disease. This indicates that the level of host PrPc protein expression is a contributing factor to the regulation of development of terminal prion disease. Events that increase PrPc expression may predispose a prion-infected animal to the more deleterious effects of prion pathology.
引用
收藏
页码:7991 / 7998
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], INQUIRY BSE VARIANT
[2]   Early accumulation of pathological PrP in the enteric nervous system and gut-associated lymphoid tissue of hamsters orally infected with scrapie [J].
Beekes, M ;
McBride, PA .
NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS, 2000, 278 (03) :181-184
[3]   Cerebral targeting indicates vagal spread of infection in hamsters fed with scrapie [J].
Beekes, M ;
McBride, PA ;
Baldauf, E .
JOURNAL OF GENERAL VIROLOGY, 1998, 79 :601-607
[4]   Autonomous nervous system innervation of lymphoid territories in spleen: A possible involvement of nonadrenergic neurons for prion neuroinvasion in natural scrapie [J].
Bencsik A. ;
Lezmi S. ;
Baron T. .
Journal of NeuroVirology, 2001, 7 (5) :447-453
[5]   PrP-expressing tissue required for transfer of scrapie infectivity from spleen to brain [J].
Blattler, T ;
Brandner, S ;
Raeber, AJ ;
Klein, MA ;
Voigtlander, T ;
Weissmann, C ;
Aguzzi, A .
NATURE, 1997, 389 (6646) :69-73
[6]   Scrapie replication in lymphoid tissues depends on prion protein-expressing follicular dendritic cells [J].
Brown, KL ;
Stewart, K ;
Ritchie, DL ;
Mabbott, NA ;
Williams, A ;
Fraser, H ;
Morrison, WI ;
Bruce, ME .
NATURE MEDICINE, 1999, 5 (11) :1308-1312
[7]   MICE DEVOID OF PRP ARE RESISTANT TO SCRAPIE [J].
BUELER, H ;
AGUZZI, A ;
SAILER, A ;
GREINER, RA ;
AUTENRIED, P ;
AGUET, M ;
WEISSMANN, C .
CELL, 1993, 73 (07) :1339-1347
[8]  
BUELER H, 1994, MOL MED, V1, P19
[9]   Prion diseases: What is the neurotoxic molecule? [J].
Chiesa, R ;
Harris, DA .
NEUROBIOLOGY OF DISEASE, 2001, 8 (05) :743-763
[10]   STRUCTURAL CLUES TO PRION REPLICATION [J].
COHEN, FE ;
PAN, KM ;
HUANG, Z ;
BALDWIN, M ;
FLETTERICK, RJ ;
PRUSINER, SB .
SCIENCE, 1994, 264 (5158) :530-531