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Autocatalytic conversion of recombinant prion proteins displays a species barrier
Authors:Baskakov Ilia V
Affiliation:Medical Biotechnology Center, University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute, Baltimore, Maryland 21201, USA. Baskakov@umbi.umd.edu
Abstract:The most unorthodox feature of the prion disease is the existence of an abnormal infectious isoform of the prion protein, PrP(Sc). According to the "protein-only" hypothesis, PrP(Sc) propagates its abnormal conformation in an autocatalytic manner using the normal isoform, PrP(C), as a substrate. Because autocatalytic conversion is considered a key element of prion replication, in this study I tested whether in vitro conversion of recombinant PrP into abnormal isoform displays specific features of an autocatalytic process. I found that recombinant human PrP formed two distinct beta-sheet rich isoforms, the beta-oligomer and the amyloid fibrils. The kinetics of the fibrils formation measured at different pH values were consistent with a model in which the beta-oligomer was not on the kinetic pathway to the fibrillar form. As judged by electron microscopy, an acidic pH favored to the long fibrils, whereas short fibrils morphologically similar to "prion rods" were formed at neutral pH. At neutral pH the conversion to the fibrils can be seeded with small aliquots of preformed fibrils. As small as 0.001% aliquot displayed seeding activity. The conversion of human PrP was seeded with high efficacy only with the preformed fibrils of human but not mouse PrP and vice versa. These studies illustrate that in vitro conversion of recombinant PrP displays specific features of an autocatalytic process and mimics the transmission barrier of prion propagation observed in vivo. I speculate that this model can be used as a rapid assay for assessing the intrinsic propensities of prion transmission between different species.
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