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      Transcriptome analysis of CNS immediately before and after the detection of PrP Sc in SSBP/1 sheep scrapie

      research-article
      , *
      Veterinary Microbiology
      Elsevier Scientific Pub. Co
      Scrapie, Prion, Gene expression, Thalamus, Medulla, CNS+

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          Highlights

          • Arrays and DGE-tags quantified gene expression in the CNS during sheep scrapie.

          • Neurological receptors were increased with disease progression.

          • Clues to basis of psychiatric changes.

          • Step changes to gene expression after the detection of PrP Sc in CNS.

          Abstract

          Sheep scrapie is a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE), progressive and fatal neurodegenerative diseases of the central nervous system (CNS) linked to the accumulation of misfolded prion protein, PrP Sc. New Zealand Cheviot sheep, homozygous for the VRQ genotype of the PRNP gene are most susceptible with an incubation period of 193 days with SSBP/1 scrapie. However, the earliest time point that PrP Sc can be detected in the CNS is 125 days (D125). The aim of this study was to quantify changes to the transcriptome of the thalamus and obex (medulla) at times immediately before (D75) and after (D125) PrP Sc was detected. Affymetrix gene arrays were used to quantify gene expression in the thalamus and Illumina DGE-tag profiling for obex. Ingenuity Pathway Analysis was used to help describe the biological processes of scrapie pathology.

          Neurological disease and Cancer were common Bio Functions in each tissue at D75; inflammation and cell death were major processes at D125. Several neurological receptors were significantly increased at D75 (e.g. CHRNA6, GRM1, HCN2), which might be clues to the molecular basis of psychiatric changes associated with TSEs. No genes were significantly differentially expressed at both D75 and D125 and there was no progression of events from earlier to later time points. This implies that there is no simple linear progression of pathological or molecular events. There seems to be a step-change between D75 and D125, correlating with the detection of PrP Sc, resulting in the involvement of different pathological processes in later TSE disease.

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          Most cited references29

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          Chemokines in innate and adaptive host defense: basic chemokinese grammar for immune cells.

          Chemokines compose a sophisticated communication system used by all our cell types, including immune cells. Chemokine messages are decoded by specific receptors that initiate signal transduction events leading to a multitude of cellular responses, leukocyte chemotaxis and adhesion in particular. Critical determinants of the in vivo activities of chemokines in the immune system include their presentation by endothelial cells and extracellular matrix molecules, as well as their cellular uptake via "silent" chemokine receptors (interceptors) leading either to their transcytosis or to degradation. These regulatory mechanisms of chemokine histotopography, as well as the promiscuous and overlapping receptor specificities of inflammation-induced chemokines, shape innate responses to infections and tissue damage. Conversely, the specific patterns of homeostatic chemokines, where each chemokine is perceived by a single receptor, are charting lymphocyte navigation routes for immune surveillance. This review presents our current understanding of the mechanisms that regulate the cellular perception and pathophysiologic meaning of chemokines.
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            Depleting neuronal PrP in prion infection prevents disease and reverses spongiosis.

            The mechanisms involved in prion neurotoxicity are unclear, and therapies preventing accumulation of PrPSc, the disease-associated form of prion protein (PrP), do not significantly prolong survival in mice with central nervous system prion infection. We found that depleting endogenous neuronal PrPc in mice with established neuroinvasive prion infection reversed early spongiform change and prevented neuronal loss and progression to clinical disease. This occurred despite the accumulation of extraneuronal PrPSc to levels seen in terminally ill wild-type animals. Thus, the propagation of nonneuronal PrPSc is not pathogenic, but arresting the continued conversion of PrPc to PrPSc within neurons during scrapie infection prevents prion neurotoxicity.
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              Mice devoid of PrP are resistant to scrapie.

              S.B. Prusiner proposed that the infectious agent of scraple, the prion, is PrPSc, a modified form of the normal host protein PrPC. Prn-p0/0 mice devoid of PrPC 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 PrPC, 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.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Vet Microbiol
                Vet. Microbiol
                Veterinary Microbiology
                Elsevier Scientific Pub. Co
                0378-1135
                1873-2542
                10 October 2014
                10 October 2014
                : 173
                : 3-4
                : 201-207
                Affiliations
                [0005]The Roslin Institute & R(D)SVS, University of Edinburgh, Easter Bush, Midlothian, Edinburgh EH25 9RG, UK
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author. Tel.: +44 131 651 9114; fax: +44 131 651 9107. john.hopkins@ 123456ed.ac.uk john.hopkins@ 123456roslin.ed.ac.uk
                Article
                S0378-1135(14)00367-8
                10.1016/j.vetmic.2014.07.026
                4206282
                25183238
                d3744b6d-6636-44b1-9394-5f13376db4f8
                © 2014 The Authors
                History
                : 18 March 2014
                : 25 July 2014
                : 27 July 2014
                Categories
                Article

                Veterinary medicine
                scrapie,prion,gene expression,thalamus,medulla,cns+
                Veterinary medicine
                scrapie, prion, gene expression, thalamus, medulla, cns+

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