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Prion potentiation after life-long dormancy in mice devoid of PrP. | LitMetric

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Article Abstract

Prions are neurotropic pathogens composed of misfolded assemblies of the host-encoded prion protein PrP which replicate by recruitment and conversion of further PrP by an autocatalytic seeding polymerization process. While it has long been shown that mouse-adapted prions cannot replicate and are rapidly cleared in transgenic PrP mice invalidated for PrP, these experiments have not been done with other prions, including from natural resources, and more sensitive methods to detect prion biological activity. Using transgenic mice expressing human PrP to bioassay prion infectivity and RT-QuIC cell-free assay to measure prion seeding activity, we report that prions responsible for the most prevalent form of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in human (MM1-sCJD) can persist indefinitely in the brain of intra-cerebrally inoculated PrP mice. While low levels of seeding activity were measured by RT-QuIC in the brain of the challenged PrP mice, the bio-indicator humanized mice succumbed at a high attack rate, suggesting relatively high levels of persistent infectivity. Remarkably, these humanized mice succumbed with delayed kinetics as compared to MM1-sCJD prions directly inoculated at low doses, including the limiting one. Yet, the disease that did occur in the humanized mice on primary and subsequent back-passage from PrP mice shared the neuropathological and molecular characteristics of MM1-sCJD prions, suggesting no apparent strain evolution during lifelong dormancy in PrP brain. Thus, MM1-sCJD prions can persist for the entire life in PrP brain with potential disease potentiation on retrotransmission to susceptible hosts. These findings highlight the capacity of prions to persist and rejuvenate in non-replicative environments, interrogate on the type of prion assemblies at work and alert on the risk of indefinite prion persistence with PrP-lowering therapeutic strategies.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8111064PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcab092DOI Listing

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