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Temperature influences the interaction of ruminant PrPTSE with soil
Authors:Ben C Maddison  Jonathan P Owen  Maged A Taema  George Shaw  Kevin C Gough
Institution:1.ADAS UK; School of Veterinary Medicine and Science; The University of Nottingham; Sutton Bonington, Leicestershire UK;2.School of Veterinary Medicine and Science; The University of Nottingham; Sutton Bonington, Leicestershire UK;3.Division of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences; School of Biosciences; The University of Nottingham; Sutton Bonington, Leicestershire UK
Abstract:Ovine scrapie and cervid chronic wasting disease can be transmitted in the absence of animal-to-animal contact, and environmental reservoirs of infectivity have been implicated in their spread and persistence. Investigating environmental factors that influence the interaction of disease-associated PrP with soils is imperative to understanding what is likely to be the complex role of soil in disease transmission. Here, we describe the effects of soil temperature on the binding/desorption and persistence of both ovine scrapie- and bovine BSE-PrPTSE. Binding of PrPTSE to a sandy loam soil at temperatures of 4°C, 8–12°C and 25–30°C demonstrated that an increase in temperature resulted in (1) a decrease in the amount of PrPTSE recovered after 24 h of interaction with soil, (2) an increase in the amount of N-terminal cleavage of the prion protein over 11 d and (3) a decrease in the persistence of PrPTSE on soil over an 18 mo period.
Keywords:BSE  environment  prion  scrapie  soil  transmission
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