4.6 Article

Bona fide atypical scrapie faithfully reproduced for the first time in a rodent model

Journal

ACTA NEUROPATHOLOGICA COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40478-022-01477-7

Keywords

Atypical; Scrapie; Spontaneous; Prion disease; Isoleucine

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (Spanish Government) - EU FEDER funds [AGL 2013-46756-P, PID2021-122201OB-C21, PID2020-117465 GB-I00]
  2. Infectious diseases edition of the Fundacio La Marato de TV3 [ATYPRION 201821-30-31-32, EFA148/16 REDPRION]
  3. European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) through the Interreg V-A Spain-France-Andorra program [EFA148/16 REDPRION]
  4. CERCA Programme/Generalitat de Catalunya

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Atypical Scrapie is considered a spontaneous idiopathic prion disease in small ruminants, and unlike classical scrapie, its occurrence and control strategies may affect its transmissibility.
Atypical Scrapie, which is not linked to epidemics, is assumed to be an idiopathic spontaneous prion disease in small ruminants. Therefore, its occurrence is unlikely to be controlled through selective breeding or other strategies as it is done for classical scrapie outbreaks. Its spontaneous nature and its sporadic incidence worldwide is reminiscent of the incidence of idiopathic spontaneous prion diseases in humans, which account for more than 85% of the cases in humans. Hence, developing animal models that consistently reproduce this phenomenon of spontaneous PrP misfolding, is of importance to study the pathobiology of idiopathic spontaneous prion disorders. Transgenic mice overexpressing sheep PrPC with I112 polymorphism (TgShI112, 1-2 x PrP levels compared to sheep brain) manifest clinical signs of a spongiform encephalopathy spontaneously as early as 380 days of age. The brains of these animals show the neuropathological hallmarks of prion disease and biochemical analyses of the misfolded prion protein show a ladder-like PrPres pattern with a predominant 7-10 kDa band. Brain homogenates from spontaneously diseased transgenic mice were inoculated in several models to assess their transmissibility and characterize the prion strain generated: TgShI112 (ovine I112 ARQ PrPC), Tg338 (ovine VRQ PrPC), Tg501 (ovine ARQ PrPC), Tg340 (human M129 PrPC), Tg361 (human V129 PrPC), TgVole (bank vole I109 PrPC), bank vole (I109I PrPC), and sheep (AHQ/ARR and AHQ/AHQ churra-tensina breeds). Our analysis of the results of these bioassays concludes that the strain generated in this model is indistinguishable to that causing atypical scrapie (Nor98). Thus, we present the first faithful model for a bona fide, transmissible, ovine, atypical scrapie prion disease.

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