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Post‐translational changes to PrP alter transmissible spongiform encephalopathy strain properties
Authors:Enrico Cancellotti  Sukhvir P Mahal  Robert Somerville  Abigail Diack  Deborah Brown  Pedro Piccardo  Charles Weissmann  Jean C Manson
Institution:1. Division of Neurobiology, The Roslin Institute and Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, University of Edinburgh, , Easter Bush, Midlothian, UK;2. Department of Infectology, Scripps Florida, , Jupiter, FL, USA;3. Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, Food and Drug Administration, , Rockville, MD, USA
Abstract:The agents responsible for transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs), or prion diseases, contain as a major component PrPSc, an abnormal conformer of the host glycoprotein PrPC. TSE agents are distinguished by differences in phenotypic properties in the host, which nevertheless can contain PrPSc with the same amino‐acid sequence. If PrP alone carries information defining strain properties, these must be encoded by post‐translational events. Here we investigated whether the glycosylation status of host PrP affects TSE strain characteristics. We inoculated wild‐type mice with three TSE strains passaged through transgenic mice with PrP devoid of glycans at the first, second or both N‐glycosylation sites. We compared the infectious properties of the emerging isolates with TSE strains passaged in wild‐type mice by in vivo strain typing and by the standard scrapie cell assay in vitro. Strain‐specific characteristics of the 79A TSE strain changed when PrPSc was devoid of one or both glycans. Thus infectious properties of a TSE strain can be altered by post‐translational changes to PrP which we propose result in the selection of mutant TSE strains.
Keywords:glycosylation  phenotypic change  prion  transmissible spongiform encephalopathy
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