Incomplete glycosylation during prion infection unmasks a prion protein epitope that facilitates prion detection and strain discrimination

被引:0
|
作者
Kang H.-E. [1 ,4 ]
Bian J. [1 ]
Kane S.J. [1 ]
Kim S. [1 ]
Selwyn V. [1 ,2 ]
Crowell J. [1 ]
Bartz J.C. [3 ]
Telling G.C. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Prion Research Center (PRC), Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO
[2] Program in Cell and Molecular Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO
[3] Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Creighton University, Omaha, NE
[4] Foreign Animal Disease Division, Animal and Plant Quarantine Agency, Gimcheon-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do
来源
Telling, Glenn C. (glenn.telling@colostate.edu) | 1600年 / American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Inc.卷 / 295期
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Praseodymium compounds - Monoclonal antibodies - Strain - Chemical detection - Glycosylation;
D O I
10.1074/jbc.ra120.012796
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The causative factors underlying conformational conversion of cellular prion protein (PrPC) into its infectious counterpart (PrPSc) during prion infection remain undetermined, in part because of a lack of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that can distinguish these conformational isoforms. Here we show that the anti-PrP mAb PRC7 recognizes an epitope that is shielded from detection when glycans are attached to Asn-196. We observed that whereas PrPC is predisposed to full glycosylation and is therefore refractory to PRC7 detection, prion infection leads to diminished PrPSc glycosylation at Asn-196, resulting in an unshielded PRC7 epitope that is amenable to mAb recognition upon renaturation. Detection of PRC7-reactive PrPSc in experimental and natural infections with various mouse-adapted scrapie strains and with prions causing deer and elk chronic wasting disease and transmissible mink encephalopathy uncovered that incomplete PrPSc glycosylation is a consistent feature of prion pathogenesis. We also show that interrogating the conformational properties of the PRC7 epitope affords a direct means of distinguishing different prion strains. Because the specificity of our approach for prion detection and strain discrimination relies on the extent to which N-linked glycosylation shields or unshields PrP epitopes from antibody recognition, it dispenses with the requirement for additional standard manipulations to distinguish PrPSc from PrPC, including evaluation of protease resistance. Our findings not only highlight an innovative and facile strategy for prion detection and strain differentiation, but are also consistent with a mechanism of prion replication in which structural instability of incompletely glycosylated PrP contributes to the conformational conversion of PrPC to PrPSc © 2020 Kang et al. Published under exclusive license by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:10420 / 10433
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Ultrasensitive detection of scrapie prion protein using seeded conversion of recombinant prion protein
    Atarashi R.
    Moore R.A.
    Sim V.L.
    Hughson A.G.
    Dorward D.W.
    Onwubiko H.A.
    Priola S.A.
    Caughey B.
    Nature Methods, 2007, 4 (8) : 645 - 650
  • [32] Bank Vole Prion Protein As an Apparently Universal Substrate for RT-QuIC-Based Detection and Discrimination of Prion Strains
    Orru, Christina D.
    Groveman, Bradley R.
    Raymond, Lynne D.
    Hughson, Andrew G.
    Nonno, Romolo
    Zou, Wenquan
    Ghetti, Bernardino
    Gambetti, Pierluigi
    Caughey, Byron
    PLOS PATHOGENS, 2015, 11 (06)
  • [33] The N-Terminal Sequence of Prion Protein Consists an Epitope Specific to the Abnormal Isoform of Prion Protein (PrPSc)
    Masujin, Kentaro
    Kaku-Ushiki, Yuko
    Miwa, Ritsuko
    Okada, Hiroyuki
    Shimizu, Yoshihisa
    Kasai, Kazuo
    Matsuura, Yuichi
    Yokoyama, Takashi
    PLOS ONE, 2013, 8 (02):
  • [34] Prion protein ubiquitination in scrapie infection
    Wong, BS
    Kang, SC
    Brown, DR
    Whiteman, M
    Li, R
    Pan, T
    Perry, G
    Wisniewski, T
    Sy, MS
    JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, 2004, 88 : 55 - 55
  • [35] Strain-Dependent Prion Infection in Mice Expressing Prion Protein with Deletion of Central Residues 91-106
    Uchiyama, Keiji
    Miyata, Hironori
    Yamaguchi, Yoshitaka
    Imamura, Morikazu
    Okazaki, Mariya
    Pasiana, Agriani Dini
    Chida, Junji
    Hara, Hideyuki
    Atarashi, Ryuichiro
    Watanabe, Hitomi
    Kondoh, Gen
    Sakaguchi, Suehiro
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES, 2020, 21 (19) : 1 - 18
  • [36] Mutational analysis of topological determinants in prion protein (PrP) and measurement of transmembrane and cytosolic PrP during prion infection
    Stewart, RS
    Harris, DA
    JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2003, 278 (46) : 45960 - 45968
  • [37] Prion strain discrimination using luminescent conjugated polymers
    Christina J Sigurdson
    K Peter R Nilsson
    Simone Hornemann
    Giuseppe Manco
    Magdalini Polymenidou
    Petra Schwarz
    Mario Leclerc
    Per Hammarström
    Kurt Wüthrich
    Adriano Aguzzi
    Nature Methods, 2007, 4 : 1023 - 1030
  • [38] Prion strain discrimination using luminescent conjugated polymers
    Sigurdson, Christina J.
    Peter, K.
    Nilsson, R.
    Hornemann, Simone
    Manco, Giuseppe
    Polymenidou, Magdalini
    Schwarz, Petra
    Leclerc, Mario
    Hammarstroem, Per
    Wuethrich, Kurt
    Aguzzi, Adriano
    NATURE METHODS, 2007, 4 (12) : 1023 - 1030
  • [39] Altered prion protein glycosylation in the aging mouse brain
    Goh, Angeline Xi-Hua
    Li, Chaoyang
    Sy, Man-Sun
    Wong, Boon-Seng
    JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, 2007, 100 (03) : 841 - 854
  • [40] Dogs are resistant to prion infection, due to the presence of asparagine at position 163 of their prion protein
    Vidal, Enric
    Fernandez-Borges, Natalia
    Erana, Hasier
    Parra, Beatriz
    Pintado, Belen
    Sanchez-Martin, Manuel A.
    Charco, Jorge M.
    Ordonez, Montserrat
    Perez-Castro, Miguel A.
    Pumarola, Marti
    Mathiason, Candace K.
    Mayoral, Tomas
    Castilla, Joaquin
    FASEB JOURNAL, 2020, 34 (03): : 3969 - 3982