Prions Flashcards
What is a prion
Protinacious infectious particles
- no nucleic acids!!
Chronic Wasting Disease
Progressive, fatal neurological disease of captive and/or free ranging mule deer, mule deer hybrids, black and white tailed deer, Rocky Mountain elk in NA
- mule deer: 1-14.3%
- elk: 1-2.4%
- moose: 1%
- reported in 25 states (including MS)
- import infected animals from states with CWD
Which prion is in sheep
Scrapie
- incubation period: 2-5 years
- transmission: contact with placenta and placental fluids, oral
- sheep may live 1-6 months after onset of clinical signs
- spread in Europe and North America, sporadically Africa and Asian
How to inactivate a prion
Only incineration can destroy/inactivate
- combo of chemical and physical inactivation
- temp of 100 C is necessary to destroy prion, but is impractical to environment
- incinerate brain, spinal cord, eye
What is prohibited in the food chain with regard to cattle
Cattle by-products
- brain, trigeminal ganglia, eye, skull, tonsils, dorsal root ganglia, vertebral column, spinal cord, distal ileum
How are prions transmitted
Oral or intracerebral routes
Control of mad cow disease
- control in UK: exclusion meat, offal, and other materials from cattle for feed products
- EU: restrict import of beef, live cattle, meat, bone meal, and other cattle products from UK
- biohazard: UK declared BSE agent as a human pathogen, so lab safety precautions for Creutzfelt-Jacob disease
Characteristics of prions
- incubation period of 1.5 to 30 years
- most infectious particles concentrate in brain, spinal cord, not in muscles
- resistant to UV and gamma-irradiation
- no detectable acquired immune response
- basic lesions: spongiform degeneration of the brain, astroglial hypertrophy and proliferation
PRNP gene
Ubiquitous, high levels in neurons and follicular dendritic cells
PrPc
Normal cellular isoform, 209 amino acids, function is unclear but important in myelin maintenance
PrPsc
Abnormal conformer, same amino acids, convert PrPc into PrPsc molecules
- PrPsc builds up, creates microscopic plaques = neuronal degeneration and neurological dysfunction
Prions result in a _______ change
Conformational
- modify protein functions, cellular phenotypes, cause fatal disease
Clinical sings of CWD
Weight loss, lose appetite, salivate, polydipsia, grind teeth, polyuria, stay away herds, walk in patterns, carry head low, die a few months with clinical signs
CWD infected cervids harbor prion aggregates in:
Pancreas, adrenal gland, peripheral nerves, muscle, lymphoid tissues throughout the body
Where to find prions after CWD infection
- lymph node, tonsils, Peyer’s patches within 3 months post oral exposure
- detected in dorsal motor nucleus of vagus nerve by 6 months