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Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) in Cervids and the Consequences of a Mutable Protein Conformation

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ACS OMEGA
卷 7, 期 15, 页码 12474-12492

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AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.2c00155

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CWD is a prion disease that affects cervids and can spread easily in contaminated environments and among wild cervids. Though no tested CWD strain has been shown to infect humans, the emergence of a zoonotic strain could have negative consequences for hunting economy and game meat consumers.
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a prion disease of cervids (deer, elk, moose, etc.). It spreads readily from CWD-contaminated environments and among wild cervids. As of 2022, North American CWD has been found in 29 states, four Canadian provinces and South Korea. The Scandinavian form of CWD originated independently. Prions propagate their pathology by inducing a natively expressed prion protein (PrPC) to adopt the conformation. Like other prion diseases, transmissible CWD prions can arise spontaneously. The CWD prions can respond to selection pressures resulting in the emergence of new strain phenotypes. Annually, 11.5 million Americans hunt and harvest nearly 6 million deer, indicating that CWD is a potential threat to an important American food source. No tested CWD strain has been shown to be zoonotic. However, this may not be true for emerging strains. Should a zoonotic CWD strain emerge, it could adversely impact the hunting economy and game meat consumers.

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