The nature of transmission in prion diseases

被引:0
|
作者
Ridley, RM
Baker, HF
机构
关键词
prion; prion disease; BSE; CJD; scrapie; spongiform encephalopathy;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Replicating biological information is usually stored only within nucleic acid. The existence of 'strains' of agent in prion disease (scrapie, BSE, CTD has been taken to indicate an independent genome within the transmissible agent. Other replicable information exists, however, both in biology and elsewhere, including, for example, the 'meme' (the neural correlate of ideas which replicate in human brains by communication) and the computer virus. From this broader viewpoint, we explore the possibility that 'strain' differences in prion disease reflect biological information stored within the prion protein rather than in nucleic acid. Much of the disease variation in mice (used as evidence for strain differences) can be accounted for by the primary structures of the prion protein of the host (the experimentally infected mouse) and the donor mouse (from which infectious tissue is taken). Information determining residual disease variation (when these factors have been excluded) map reside in different conformational states of host prion protein, Prion protein can adopt different conformational and glycosylation states. The information which these states contain is only partially conserved on transmission between animals, permitting the appearance of both 'strain stability' and 'strain mutation'. Different sources of replicating, biological information including information in the 'agent' (the abnormal form of prion protein) and in the host prion gene (PRNP) are in evolutionary competition, We argue that, in the prion diseases, replicating information is not carried in nucleic acid in either the host or the 'agent' but is carried within the conformational state of the abnormal form of prion protein.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:273 / 280
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Soil and the transmission of prion diseases
    Pedersen, Joel
    Johnson, Christopher J.
    Bell, Christen M.
    Jacobson, Kurt H.
    Benson, Craig H.
    McKenzie, Debbie
    Aiken, Judd M.
    GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA, 2009, 73 (13) : A1007 - A1007
  • [2] Understanding transmission of the prion diseases
    Manson, JC
    TRENDS IN MICROBIOLOGY, 1999, 7 (12) : 465 - 467
  • [3] Transmission of prion diseases by blood transfusion
    Hunter, N
    Foster, J
    Chong, A
    McCutcheon, S
    Parnham, D
    Eaton, S
    MacKenzie, C
    Houston, F
    JOURNAL OF GENERAL VIROLOGY, 2002, 83 : 2897 - 2905
  • [4] INHERITED PRION DISEASES AND TRANSMISSION TO RODENTS
    TATEISHI, J
    KITAMOTO, T
    BRAIN PATHOLOGY, 1995, 5 (01) : 53 - 59
  • [5] Transfusion transmission of human prion diseases
    Zou, Shimian
    Fang, Chyang T.
    Schonberger, Lawrence B.
    TRANSFUSION MEDICINE REVIEWS, 2008, 22 (01) : 58 - 69
  • [6] Role of blood in the transmission of prion diseases
    Larska, M
    Polak, MP
    MEDYCYNA WETERYNARYJNA, 2003, 59 (08) : 670 - 672
  • [7] Transmission of human prion diseases to rodents
    Tateishi, J
    SEMINARS IN VIROLOGY, 1996, 7 (03): : 175 - 180
  • [8] Prions' travels - Feces and transmission of prion diseases
    Bosque, P. J.
    Tyler, K. L.
    JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2008, 198 (01): : 8 - 9
  • [9] Managing the risk of nosocomial transmission of prion diseases
    Weber, DJ
    Rutala, WA
    CURRENT OPINION IN INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2002, 15 (04) : 421 - 425
  • [10] Human prion diseases: biology and transmission by blood
    Ironside, J. W.
    ISBT SCIENCE SERIES, VOL 1, NO 1: STATE OF THE ART PRESENTATIONS, 2006, 1 (01): : 15 - 20