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1.
Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE) or prion diseases result in aberrant metabolism of prion protein (PrP) and the accumulation of a protease-resistant, insoluble, and possibly infectious form of PrP, PrP-res. Studies of PrP biosynthesis, intracellular trafficking, and degradation has been studied in a variety of tissue culture cells. Pulse-chase metabolic labeling studies in scrapie-infected cells indicated that PrP-res is made posttranslationally from an apparently normal protease sensitive precursor, PrP-sen, after the latter reaches the cell surface. Cell-free reactions have provided evidence that PrP-res itself can induce the conversion of PrP-sen to PrP-res in a highly species- and strain-specific manner. These studies have shed light on the mechanism of PrP-res formation and suggest molecular bases for TSE species barrier effects and agent strain propagation.  相似文献   

2.
Neurodegeneration caused by the transmissible spongiform encephalopathies is associated with the conversion of a normal host protein, PrP-sen, into an abnormal aggregated protease-resistant form, PrP-res. In scrapie-infected mouse neuroblastoma cells, mouse PrP-sen is converted into PrP-res but recombinant hamster PrP-sen expressed in these cells is not. In the present studies, recombinant hamster/mouse PrP-sen molecules were expressed in these scrapie-infected cells to define specific PrP amino acid residues critical for the conversion to PrP-res. The results showed that homology to the region of mouse PrP-sen from amino acid residues 112 to 138 was required for conversion of recombinant PrP-sen to PrP-res in scrapie-infected mouse cells. Furthermore, a single hamster-specific PrP amino acid at residue 138 could inhibit the conversion of the recombinant PrP-sen into PrP-res. The data are consistent with studies in humans which show that specific amino acid residue changes within PrP can influence disease pathogenesis and transmission of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies across species barriers.  相似文献   

3.
Mutations within a host cellular protein, PrP, have been associated with disease in the transmissible spongiform encephalopathies. Murine neuroblastoma cells persistently infected with mouse scrapie accumulate protease-resistant PrP (PrP-res), the abnormal form of PrP associated with disease in the transmissible spongiform encephalopathies. These cells provide a controlled system in which to study the molecular interactions which are important in the formation of PrP-res. We have expressed recombinant PrP molecules in mouse scrapie-infected murine neuroblastoma cells and assayed the effect of these heterologous PrP genes on the formation and accumulation of PrP-res. The results demonstrate that expression of heterologous PrP molecules which differ from the endogenous PrP by as little as one amino acid can profoundly interfere with the overall accumulation of PrP-res. The data suggest that precise interactions between homologous PrP molecules are important in PrP-res accumulation and that heterologous PrP molecules can block these interactions.  相似文献   

4.
Priola SA  Chabry J  Chan K 《Journal of virology》2001,75(10):4673-4680
In the transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, disease is closely associated with the conversion of the normal proteinase K-sensitive host prion protein (PrP-sen) to the abnormal proteinase K-resistant form (PrP-res). Amino acid sequence homology between PrP-res and PrP-sen is important in the formation of new PrP-res and thus in the efficient transmission of infectivity across species barriers. It was previously shown that the generation of mouse PrP-res was strongly influenced by homology between PrP-sen and PrP-res at amino acid residue 138, a residue located in a region of loop structure common to PrP molecules from many different species. In order to determine if homology at residue 138 also affected the formation of PrP-res in a different animal species, we assayed the ability of hamster PrP-res to convert a panel of recombinant PrP-sen molecules to protease-resistant PrP in a cell-free conversion system. Homology at amino acid residue 138 was not critical for the formation of protease-resistant hamster PrP. Rather, homology between PrP-sen and hamster PrP-res at amino acid residue 155 determined the efficiency of formation of a protease-resistant product induced by hamster PrP-res. Structurally, residue 155 resides in a turn at the end of the first alpha helix in hamster PrP-sen; this feature is not present in mouse PrP-sen. Thus, our data suggest that PrP-res molecules isolated from scrapie-infected brains of different animal species have different PrP-sen structural requirements for the efficient formation of protease-resistant PrP.  相似文献   

5.
The accumulation of an abnormal, protease-resistant form of the protein PrP (PrP-res) in hosts with scrapie and related transmissible spongiform encephalopathies appears to be important in disease pathogenesis. To gain insight into the mechanism of PrP-res accumulation and the in vivo antiscrapie activity of certain polyanions, we have studied effects of sulfated glycans on PrP metabolism in scrapie-infected neuroblastoma cells. Pentosan polysulfate, like the amyloid-binding dye Congo red, potently inhibited the accumulation of PrP-res in these cells without apparent effects on the metabolism of the normal isoform. The inhibition was due primarily to prevention of new PrP-res accumulation rather than destabilization of preexisting PrP-res. PrP-res accumulation remained depressed in the cultures after removal of the inhibitors. The activities of other sulfated glycans, nonsulfated polyanions, dextran, and DEAE-dextran were compared with those of pentosan polysulfate and Congo red. This comparison provided evidence that the density of sulfation and molecular size are factors influencing anti-PrP-res activity of sulfated glycans. The relative potencies of these compounds corresponded well with their previously determined antiscrapie activities in vivo, suggesting that the prophylactic effects of sulfated polyanions may be due to inhibition of PrP-res accumulation. Since PrP-res amyloid is known to contain sulfated glycosaminoglycans, we reason that these inhibitors may competitively block an interaction between PrP and endogenous glycosaminoglycans that is essential for its accumulation in a protease-resistant, potentially amyloidogenic state.  相似文献   

6.
Conversion of the normal protease-sensitive prion protein (PrP) to its abnormal protease-resistant isoform (PrP-res) is a major feature of the pathogenesis associated with transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) diseases. In previous experiments, PrP conversion was inhibited by a peptide composed of hamster PrP residues 109 to 141, suggesting that this region of the PrP molecule plays a crucial role in the conversion process. In this study, we used PrP-res derived from animals infected with two different mouse scrapie strains and one hamster scrapie strain to investigate the species specificity of these conversion reactions. Conversion of PrP was found to be completely species specific; however, despite having three amino acid differences, peptides corresponding to the hamster and mouse PrP sequences from residues 109 to 141 inhibited both the mouse and hamster PrP conversion systems equally. Furthermore, a peptide corresponding to hamster PrP residues 119 to 136, which was identical in both mouse and hamster PrP, was able to inhibit PrP-res formation in both the mouse and hamster cell-free systems as well as in scrapie-infected mouse neuroblastoma cell cultures. Because the PrP region from 119 to 136 is very conserved in most species, this peptide may have inhibitory effects on PrP conversion in a wide variety of TSE diseases.  相似文献   

7.
Transmissible spongiform encephalopathy diseases are characterized by conversion of the normal protease-sensitive host prion protein, PrP-sen, to an abnormal protease-resistant form, PrP-res. In the current study, deletions were introduced into the flexible tail of PrP-sen (23) to determine if this region was required for formation of PrP-res in a cell-free assay. PrP-res formation was significantly reduced by deletion of residues 34-94 relative to full-length hamster PrP. Deletion of another nineteen amino acids to residue 113 further reduced the amount of PrP-res formed. Furthermore, the presence of additional proteinase K cleavage sites indicated that deletion to residue 113 generated a protease-resistant product with an altered conformation. Conversion of PrP deletion mutants was also affected by post-translational modifications to PrP-sen. Conversion of unglycosylated PrP-sen appeared to alter both the amount and the conformation of protease-resistant PrP-res produced from N-terminally truncated PrP-sen. The N-terminal region also affected the ability of hamster PrP to block mouse PrP-res formation in scrapie-infected mouse neuroblastoma cells. Thus, regions within the flexible N-terminal tail of PrP influenced interactions required for both generating and disrupting PrP-res formation.  相似文献   

8.
Transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) diseases are characterized by the accumulation in brain of an abnormal protease-resistant form of the host-encoded prion protein (PrP), PrP-res. PrP-res conformation differs among TSE agents derived from various sources, and these conformational differences are thought to influence the biological characteristics of these agents. In this study, we introduced deletions into the flexible N-terminal region of PrP (residues 34-124) and investigated the effect of this region on the conformation of PrP-res generated in an in vitro cell-free conversion assay. PrP deleted from residues 34 to 99 generated 12-16-kDa protease-resistant bands with intact C termini but variable N termini. The variable N termini were the result of exposure of new protease cleavage sites in PrP-res between residues 130 and 157, suggesting that these new cleavage sites were caused by alterations in the conformation of the PrP-res generated. Similarly truncated 12-16-kDa PrP bands were also identified in brain homogenates from mice infected with mouse-passaged hamster scrapie as well as in the cell-free conversion assay using conditions that mimicked the hamster/mouse species barrier to infection. Thus, by its effects on PrP-res conformation, the flexible N-terminal region of PrP seemed to influence TSE pathogenesis and cross-species TSE transmission.  相似文献   

9.
Prion protein (PrP) is usually attached to membranes by a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchor that associates with detergent-resistant membranes (DRMs), or rafts. To model the molecular processes that might occur during the initial infection of cells with exogenous transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) agents, we examined the effect of membrane association on the conversion of the normal protease-sensitive PrP isoform (PrP-sen) to the protease-resistant isoform (PrP-res). A cell-free conversion reaction approximating physiological conditions was used, which contained purified DRMs as a source of PrP-sen and brain microsomes from scrapie-infected mice as a source of PrP-res. Interestingly, DRM-associated PrP-sen was not converted to PrP-res until the PrP-sen was either released from DRMs by treatment with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC), or the combined membrane fractions were treated with the membrane-fusing agent polyethylene glycol (PEG). PEG-assisted conversion was optimal at pH 6--7, and acid pre-treating the DRMs was not sufficient to permit conversion without PI-PLC or PEG, arguing against late endosomes/lysosomes as primary compartments for PrP conversion. These observations raise the possibility that generation of new PrP-res during TSE infection requires (i) removal of PrP-sen from target cells; (ii) an exchange of membranes between cells; or (iii) insertion of incoming PrP-res into the raft domains of recipient cells.  相似文献   

10.
Congo red and certain sulfated glycans are potent inhibitors of protease-resistant PrP accumulation in scrapie-infected cells. One hypothesis is that these inhibitors act by blocking the association between protease-resistant PrP and sulfated glycosaminoglycans or proteoglycans (e.g., heparan sulfate proteoglycan) that is observed in amyloid plaques of scrapie-infected brain tissue. Accordingly, we have investigated whether the apparent precursor of protease-resistant PrP, protease-sensitive PrP, binds to Congo red and heparin, a highly sulfated glycosaminoglycan with an inhibitory potency like that of heparan sulfate. Protease-sensitive PrP released from the surface of mouse neuroblastoma cells bound to heparin-agarose and Congo red-glass beads. Sucrose density gradient fractionation provided evidence that at least some of the PrP capable of binding heparin-agarose was monomeric. Free Congo red blocked PrP binding to heparin and vice versa, suggesting that these ligands share a common binding site. The relative efficacies of pentosan polysulfate, Congo red, heparin, and chondroitin sulfate in blocking PrP binding to heparin-agarose corresponded with their previously demonstrated potencies in inhibiting protease-resistant PrP accumulation. These results are consistent with the idea that sulfated glycans and Congo red inhibit protease-resistant PrP accumulation by interfering with the interaction of PrP with an endogenous glycosaminoglycan or proteoglycan.  相似文献   

11.
Accumulation of an abnormal, protease-resistant form of an endogenous protein, PrP, is a characteristic feature of scrapie and related transmissible spongiform encephalopathies. This abnormal isoform is also present in the amyloid plaques that are often observed in these diseases. In mouse neuroblastoma cells persistently infected with scrapie, the abnormal protease-resistant isoform of PrP is derived from an operationally normal protease-sensitive precursor. Conversion of PrP to the protease-resistant state occurs either on the plasma membrane or along an endocytic pathway by an unknown mechanism. Inhibitors of protease-resistant PrP accumulation have been identified, and these include the amyloid-binding dye Congo red and certain sulfated glycans. The similarity of these compounds to sulfated glycosaminoglycans, which are components of all natural amyloids, has led to the hypothesis that the inhibitors act by competitively blocking an interaction between endogenous glycosaminoglycan(s) and PrP that is critical for amyloidogenic PrP accumulation. The proven prophylactic effect of these sulfated glycans in animal models of scrapie suggests that they represent a group of compounds that might interfere with the pathogenic formation of amyloid in a variety of diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease.  相似文献   

12.
Previous studies have indicated that scrapie infection results in the accumulation of a proteinase K-resistant form of an endogenous brain protein generally referred to as prion protein (PrP). The molecular nature of the scrapie-associated modification of PrP accounting for proteinase K resistance is not known. As an approach to understanding the cellular events associated with the PrP modification in brain tissue, we sought to identify proteinase K-resistant PrP (PrP-res) in scrapie-infected neuroblastoma cells in vitro and to compare properties of PrP-res with those of its normal proteinase K-sensitive homolog, PrP-sen. PrP-res was detected by immunoblot in scrapie-infected but not uninfected neuroblastoma clones. Densitometry of immunoblots indicated that there was two- to threefold more PrP-res than PrP-sen in one infected clone. Metabolic labeling and membrane immunofluorescence experiments indicated that PrP-sen was located on the cell surface and could be removed from intact cells by phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C and proteases. In contrast, PrP-res was not removed after reaction with these enzymes. Thus, either the scrapie-associated PrP-res was not on the cell surface or it was there in a form that is resistant to these hydrolytic enzymes. Attempts to detect intracellular PrP-res by immunofluorescent staining of fixed and permeabilized cells revealed that PrP was present in discrete perinuclear Golgi-like structures. However, the staining pattern was similar in both scrapie-infected and uninfected clones, and thus the intracellular staining may have represented only PrP-sen. Analysis of scrapie infectivity in cells treated with extracellular phospholipase, proteinase K, and trypsin indicated that, like PrP-res, the scrapie agent was not removed from the infected cells by any of these enzymes.  相似文献   

13.
A protease-resistant form of the protein PrP (PrP-res) accumulates in tissues of mammals infected with scrapie, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, and related transmissible neurodegenerative diseases. This abnormal form of PrP can aggregate into insoluble amyloid-like fibrils and plaques and has been identified as the major component of brain fractions enriched for scrapie infectivity. Using a recently developed technique in Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy which allows protein conformational analysis in aqueous media, we have studied the secondary structure of the proteinase K resistant core of PrP-res (PrP-res 27-30) as it exists in highly infectious fibril preparations. Second-derivative analysis of the infrared spectra has enabled us to quantitate the relative amounts of different secondary structures in the PrP-res aggregates. The analysis indicated that PrP-res 27-30 is predominantly composed of beta-sheet (47%), which is consistent with its amyloid-like properties. In addition, significant amounts of turn (31%) and alpha-helix (17%) were identified, indicating that amyloid-like fibrils need not be exclusively beta-sheet. The infrared-based secondary structure compositions were then used as constraints to improve the theoretical localization of the secondary structures within PrP-res 27-30.  相似文献   

14.
Vorberg I  Chan K  Priola SA 《Journal of virology》2001,75(21):10024-10032
A fundamental event in the pathogenesis of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE) is the conversion of a normal, proteinase K-sensitive, host-encoded protein, PrP-sen, into its protease-resistant isoform, PrP-res. During the formation of PrP-res, PrP-sen undergoes conformational changes that involve an increase of beta-sheet secondary structure. While previous studies in which PrP-sen deletion mutants were expressed in transgenic mice or scrapie-infected cell cultures have identified regions in PrP-sen that are important in the formation of PrP-res, the exact role of PrP-sen secondary structures in the conformational transition of PrP-sen to PrP-res has not yet been defined. We constructed PrP-sen mutants with deletions of the first beta-strand, the second beta-strand, or the first alpha-helix and tested whether these mutants could be converted to PrP-res in both scrapie-infected neuroblastoma cells (Sc(+)-MNB cells) and a cell-free conversion assay. Removal of the second beta-strand or the first alpha-helix significantly altered both processing and the cellular localization of PrP-sen, while deletion of the first beta-strand had no effect on these events. However, all of the mutants significantly inhibited the formation of PrP-res in Sc(+)-MNB cells and had a greatly reduced ability to form protease-resistant PrP in a cell-free assay system. Thus, our results demonstrate that deletion of the beta-strands and the first alpha-helix of PrP-sen can fundamentally affect PrP-res formation and/or PrP-sen processing.  相似文献   

15.
Inhibition of the accumulation of protease-resistant prion protein (PrP-res) is a prime strategy in the development of potential transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) therapeutics. Here we show that curcumin (diferoylmethane), a major component of the spice turmeric, potently inhibits PrP-res accumulation in scrapie agent-infected neuroblastoma cells (50% inhibitory concentration, approximately 10 nM) and partially inhibits the cell-free conversion of PrP to PrP-res. In vivo studies showed that dietary administration of curcumin had no significant effect on the onset of scrapie in hamsters. Nonetheless, other studies have shown that curcumin is nontoxic and can penetrate the brain, properties that give curcumin advantages over inhibitors previously identified as potential prophylactic and/or therapeutic anti-TSE compounds.  相似文献   

16.
A common feature of scrapie and related transmissible spongiform encephalopathies is the accumulation of an abnormal protease-resistant form of PrP which may be the major component of the infectious agent. While it is known that both the normal (protease-sensitive) PrP and protease-resistant PrP are encoded by the same endogenous gene, the nature of the disease-associated modification of PrP is not understood. To study the cellular events leading to the formation of protease-resistant PrP, we have compared its biosynthesis to that of its normal isoform in scrapie-infected mouse neuroblastoma cells. In pulse-chase labeling experiments, the protease-resistant PrP was synthesized and degraded much more slowly than the normal PrP, suggesting that protease-resistant PrP is made from a protease-sensitive precursor. More significantly, we found that the precursor of protease-resistant PrP was eliminated from intact cells by treatments with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C and trypsin. This demonstrated that, unlike the protease-resistant PrP itself, the precursor is phospholipase- and protease-sensitive and at least transiently found on the cell surface. By these criteria, the precursor of protease-resistant PrP is indistinguishable from the normal PrP isoform. These results indicate that the conversion of PrP to the protease- and phospholipase-resistant state is a post-translational event that occurs after the precursor reaches the cell surface.  相似文献   

17.
A conformational conversion of the normal, protease- sensitive prion protein (PrP-sen or PrP(C)) to a protease-resistant form (PrP-res or PrP(Sc)) is commonly thought to be required in transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs). Endogenous sulfated glycosaminoglycans are associated with PrP-res deposits in vivo, suggesting that they may facilitate PrP-res formation. On the other hand, certain exogenous sulfated glycans can profoundly inhibit PrP-res accumulation and serve as prophylactic anti-TSE compounds in vivo. To investigate the seemingly paradoxical effects of sulfated glycans on PrP-res formation, we have assayed their direct effects on PrP conversion under physiologically compatible cell-free conditions. Heparan sulfate and pentosan polysulfate stimulated PrP-res formation. Conversion was stimulated further by increased temperature. Both elevated temperature and pentosan polysulfate promoted interspecies PrP conversion. Circular dichroism spectropolarimetry measurements showed that pentosan polysulfate induced a conformational change in PrP-sen that may potentiate its PrP-res-induced conversion. These results show that certain sulfated glycosaminoglycans can directly affect the PrP conversion reaction. Therefore, depending upon the circumstances, sulfated glycans may be either cofactors or inhibitors of this apparently pathogenic process.  相似文献   

18.
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) of deer and elk, and little is known about its transmissibility to other species. An important factor controlling interspecies TSE susceptibility is prion protein (PrP) homology between the source and recipient species/genotypes. Furthermore, the efficiency with which the protease-resistant PrP (PrP-res) of one species induces the in vitro conversion of the normal PrP (PrP-sen) of another species to the protease-resistant state correlates with the cross-species transmissibility of TSE agents. Here we show that the CWD-associated PrP-res (PrP(CWD)) of cervids readily induces the conversion of recombinant cervid PrP-sen molecules to the protease-resistant state in accordance with the known transmissibility of CWD between cervids. In contrast, PrP(CWD)-induced conversions of human and bovine PrP-sen were much less efficient, and conversion of ovine PrP-sen was intermediate. These results demonstrate a barrier at the molecular level that should limit the susceptibility of these non-cervid species to CWD.  相似文献   

19.
Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (prion diseases), Alzheimer's disease, and other amyloidoses result in the accumulation of certain abnormally stable proteins that are thought by many to play central roles in disease pathogenesis. Using scrapie-infected neuroblastoma cells as a model system, we found that Congo red, an amyloid-binding dye, potently inhibits the accumulation of the scrapie-associated, protease-resistant isoform of protein PrP without affecting the metabolism of the normal isoform. Growth of the cells with submicromolar concentrations of Congo red for 5 days reduced the amount of protease-resistant PrP detected in the cultures by greater than 90%. This activity of Congo red suggests that it selectively disrupts the conversion of PrP to the protease-resistant isoform or destabilizes this isoform once it is made. Potential therapeutic applications of Congo red are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
A central feature of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE or prion diseases) involves the conversion of a normal, protease-sensitive glycoprotein termed prion protein (PrP-sen) into a pro-tease-resistant form, termed PrP-res. The N terminus of PrP-sen has five copies of a repeating eight amino acid sequence (octapeptide repeat). The presence of one to nine extra copies of this motif is associated with a heritable form of Creutzfeld-Jakob disease (CJD) in humans. An increasing number of octapeptide repeats correlates with earlier CJD onset, suggesting that the rate at which PrP-sen misfolds into PrP-res may be influenced by these mutations. In order to determine if octapeptide repeat insertions influence the rate at which PrP-res is formed, we used a hamster PrP amyloid-forming peptide (residues 23-144) into which two to 10 extra octapeptide repeats were inserted. The spontaneous formation of protease-resistant PrP amyloid from these peptides was more rapid in response to an increased number of octapeptide repeats. Furthermore, experiments using full-length glycosylated hamster PrP-sen demonstrated that PrP-res formation also occurred more rapidly from PrP-sen molecules expressing 10 extra copies of the octapeptide repeat. The rate increase for PrP-res formation did not appear to be due to any influence of the octapeptide repeat region on PrP structure, but rather to more rapid binding between PrP molecules. Our data from both models support the hypothesis that extra octapeptide repeats in PrP increase the rate at which protease resistant PrP is formed which in turn may affect the rate of disease onset in familial forms of CJD.  相似文献   

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