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Prion diseases are fatal, infectious, and incurable neurodegenerative conditions affecting humans and animals, caused by the misfolding of the cellular prion protein (PrPC) into its pathogenic isoform, PrPSc. In humans, sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) is the most prevalent prion disease. Recently, we demonstrated that treatment with the FDA-approved anti-HIV drug efavirenz (EFV) significantly reduced PrPSc and extended survival of scrapie prion-infected mice. Among other effects, EFV activates the brain-specific cholesterol-metabolizing enzyme, CYP46A1, which converts cholesterol into 24S-hydroxycholesterol (24S-HC). However, drugs effective against scrapie prions often fail in human prion diseases, and a relation of the antiprion effects of EFV to CYP46A1 activation is not established. Thus, we evaluated EFV treatment in mice overexpressing human PrPC infected with human sCJD prions. Oral, low-dose EFV treatment starting at 30 or 130 days postinfection significantly slowed disease progression and extended their survival. At early clinical stage, we observed reduced PrPSc accumulation, decreased cholesterol and lipid droplet content, and elevated CYP46A1 and 24S-HC levels in EFV-treated mice. Overexpression of CYP46A1 in prion-infected neuronal cells reduced PrPSc levels and increased 24S-HC, indicating that antiprion effects of EFV correlate with CYP46A1 activation. These findings highlight EFV as a safe and efficacious therapeutic candidate for human prion diseases.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.190296 | DOI Listing |
Cell Rep
September 2025
Center for Brain Immunology and Glia (BIG), Department of Neuroscience, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22908, USA; Neuroscience Graduate Program, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22908, USA; Brain Immunology and Glia Graduate Training Program, University of Virginia, Charlott
Tauopathies encompass a large majority of dementia diagnoses and are characterized by toxic neuronal or glial inclusions of the microtubule-associated protein tau. Tau has a high propensity to induce prion-like spreading throughout the brain via a variety of mechanisms, making tauopathy a rapid and lethal form of neurodegeneration that currently lacks an effective therapy or cure. Tau aggregation and neuronal loss associated with this pathology are accompanied by robust neuroinflammation.
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September 2025
Department of Pharmacy, College of Pharmacy, and Institute of Pharmaceutical Science & Technology, Hanyang University ERICA, Ansan, Republic of Korea.
Cellular prion protein (PrP) is a glycoprotein tethered to the plasma membrane via a GPI-anchor, and it plays a crucial role in prion diseases by undergoing conformational change to PrP. To generate a knock-in (KI) mouse model expressing bank vole PrP (BVPrP), a KI targeting construct was designed. However, a Prnp gene sequence that encodes PrP lacking seven C-terminal amino acid residues of the GPI-anchoring signal sequence (GPI-SS) was unintentionally introduced into the construct.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Neuropathol
September 2025
Neurological Disorders Group, Hospital Clínico San Carlos, IdISSC, Madrid, Spain.
TDP-43 is a nuclear protein encoded by the TARDBP gene, which forms pathological aggregates in various neurodegenerative diseases, collectively known as TDP-43 proteinopathies, including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). These diseases are characterized by multiple pathological mechanisms, with disruptions in lipid regulatory pathways emerging as a critical factor. However, the role of TDP-43 in the regulation of the brain lipid homeostasis and the potential connection of TDP-43 dysfunction to myelin alterations in TDP-43 proteionopathies remain poorly understood, despite the fact that lipids, particularly cholesterol, comprise nearly 70% of myelin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neuropathol Exp Neurol
September 2025
Department of Medicine (RMH), The University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, Australia.
Prion diseases are rare neurodegenerative disorders that share misfolding of the normal cellular prion protein into disease-causing isoforms known as "prions" as the critical pathophysiological event. Definite diagnosis can only be achieved through neuropathological confirmation. The neuropathological features of prion disease are well described; however, some molecular subtypes are typified by characteristic neuropathological features that are subtle or absent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
August 2025
Neuroimmunology Section, Laboratory of Neurological Infections and Immunity (LNII), Rocky Mountain Laboratories (RML), National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), NIH, Hamilton, MT, USA.
Genetic mutations affecting proteasome function can result in multi-organ diseases, such as Chronic atypical neutrophilic dermatosis with lipodystrophy and elevated temperature (CANDLE) syndrome. Neurological symptoms associated with CANDLE suggest that proteasomal mutations may impact neuronal development and/or function. We generated cerebral organoids (COs) from CANDLE patient induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), which exhibited impaired neuronal development when compared to COs from healthy control iPSCs.
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