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Serum amyloid A and protein AA: Molecular mechanisms of a transmissible amyloidosis
Authors:Gunilla T. Westermark  Per Westermark
Affiliation:a Division of Cell Biology, Diabetes Research Centre, Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Linköping University, 58185 Linköping, Sweden
b Department of Medical Cell Biology, Uppsala University, 75123 Uppsala, Sweden
c Department of Genetics and Pathology, Rudbeck Laboratory, Uppsala University, SE-75185 Uppsala, Sweden
Abstract:Systemic AA-amyloidosis is a complication of chronic inflammatory diseases and the fibril protein AA derives from the acute phase reactant serum AA. AA-amyloidosis can be induced in mice by an inflammatory challenge. The lag phase before amyloid develops can be dramatically shortened by administration of a small amount of amyloid fibrils. Systemic AA-amyloidosis is transmissible in mice and may be so in humans. Since transmission can cross species barriers it is possible that AA-amyloidosis can be induced by amyloid in food, e.g. foie gras. In mice, development of AA-amyloidosis can also be accelerated by other components with amyloid-like properties. A new possible risk factor may appear with synthetically made fibrils from short peptides, constructed for tissue repair.
Keywords:Amyloid   Fibril   Prion   Transmission   Seeding
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