4.7 Article

A single amino acid residue in bank vole prion protein drives permissiveness to Nor98/atypical scrapie and the emergence of multiple strain variants

Journal

PLOS PATHOGENS
Volume 18, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1010646

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Funding

  1. Ministero della Salute [RF-2009-1474624, RF-2016-02364498]

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Prions are infectious agents that misfold cellular prion protein (PrP(C)) into infectious aggregates (PrPSc), causing fatal neurodegenerative diseases. The transmission of prions depends on the recipient's PrP(C) sequence and the incoming prion strain. Nor98/atypical scrapie (AS) is a less contagious prion disease compared to classical scrapie (CS), and the relationship between AS and CS strains is still unknown. The study found that the M109I polymorphism affects the susceptibility to AS, and AS isolates in different species encoded the same strain. Additionally, minor CS-like strain components were found in AS isolates.
Prions are infectious agents that replicate through the autocatalytic misfolding of the cellular prion protein (PrP(C)) into infectious aggregates (PrPSc) causing fatal neurodegenerative diseases in humans and animals. Prions exist as strains, which are encoded by conformational variants of PrPSc. The transmissibility of prions depends on the PrP(C) sequence of the recipient host and on the incoming prion strain, so that some animal prion strains are more contagious than others or are transmissible to new species, including humans. Nor98/atypical scrapie (AS) is a prion disease of sheep and goats reported in several countries worldwide. At variance with classical scrapie (CS), AS is considered poorly contagious and is supposed to be spontaneous in origin. The zoonotic potential of AS, its strain variability and the relationships with the more contagious CS strains remain largely unknown. We characterized AS isolates from sheep and goats by transmission in ovinised transgenic mice (tg338) and in two genetic lines of bank voles, carrying either methionine (BvM) or isoleucine (BvI) at PrP residue 109. All AS isolates induced the same pathological phenotype in tg338 mice, thus proving that they encoded the same strain, irrespective of their geographical origin or source species. In bank voles, we found that the M109I polymorphism dictates the susceptibility to AS. BvI were susceptible and faithfully reproduced the AS strain, while the transmission in BvM was highly inefficient and was characterized by a conformational change towards a CS-like prion strain. Sub-passaging experiments revealed that the main strain component of AS is accompanied by minor CS-like strain components, which can be positively selected during replication in both AS-resistant or AS-susceptible animals. These findings add new clues for a better comprehension of strain selection dynamics in prion infections and have wider implications for understanding the origin of contagious prion strains, such as CS.

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