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NEW BSE
FINDINGS By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
OXFORD, England (5/1/96)-
A series of new studies of the
genetics of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (mad cow disease)
provides some new pieces in the puzzle of prion diseases.
Prion proteins occur naturally in the brain, but their normal
function remains a mystery. When altered in certain ways,
prions appear to act as the pathological agents associated with
spongiform encephalopathies such as BSE, CJD and scrapie.
These `rogue' prions are unusual in that they can convert normal
prions into copies of themselves, spreading the disease.
Researchers at the University of Oxford report (1) that the
prion proteins of humans and cattle appear to have closer
genetic similarities than previously believed. This result has
significant implications for the understanding of BSE and the
clinically similar human disorder Creutzfeld-Jakob disease
(CJD). In particular, it may prompt a reevaluation of the case
for a causal link between BSE and CJD.
The researchers compared the nucleotide sequences of the genes
of naturally occurring prion proteins in a variety of animals
in order to create an evolutionary `family tree'. The cattle
prion is, as expected, more closely related overall to that of
sheep than to the human form. However, cattle and human prions
share two unusual features of their sequences that are not found
in sheep prions.
These features take the form of the substitution of one amino
acid in the mature prion protein for another at a given position
in the sequence: a substitution of histidine in place of
tyrosine at position 155, and serine instead of aspartic acid at
position 143. The odds of the two otherwise unrelated prion
proteins sharing these two substitutions at these precise
positions are very long (1.2 in 10,000 against). Both
substitutions occur in a region of the gene thought to be
involved in the acquisition of prion diseases.
The researchers point out that correlation is not the same thing
as causation, but that we should nevertheless "remain attentive
to rare events that might be associated with the emergence of
what may be a new strain of this disease".
A group of German researchers reports new findings (2) that
provide a clue to how infectious prions cause tissue damage. The
researchers found that the production of oxygen radicals may be
at the root of the disease. It appears the prions cause brain
cells known as microglia to increase their production of oxygen
radicals. The researchers also found that neurons from mice
deficient in the precursor protein that can become transformed
into the rogue prion are not destroyed even when microglia are
around.
The German research offers a glimmer of optimism for the
treatment of prion disease (there is no cure at present). They
reported preliminary findings indicating that the effects of the
rogue brain cells might be blocked by anti-oxidants such as
vitamin E.
At this point researchers are not even sure what the normal role
of prions is. A new study (3) by Swiss researchers suggest that
the normal brain protein PrP are involved in the regulation of
sleep. Their studies show that mice without the PrP gene
undergo an alteration in normal circadian rhythms and sleep
patterns. In PrP-deficient mice, the daily rhythm maintains a
regular rate even when the mice are subjected to total
darkness for long periods, rather than drifting as it does in
normal mice. Electroencephalogram readings showed that the
sleep patterns were far more disturbed and `fragmented' than
usual.
The results suggest that PrP plays an important function in the
regulation of sleep, a finding that may be connected with the
symptoms of the latest prion disease to be recognized, an
inherited syndrome called fatal familial insomnia.
Another related study (4) showed that elderly PrP-deficient mice
developed ataxia as a result of unusual damage to cells in the
motor cortex. Japanese researchers genetically engineered mice
that lacked the prion protein in their brains. The mice
developed normally until the age of 70 weeks. But at about 70
weeks old, all the mice without prions without exception became
easily identifiable by their abnormal gait. The mice had lost
most of their Purkinje cells, large branching brain cells in the
center of the cerebellum. These cells are known to produce
prions. The investigators concluded it was most likely that loss
of prion protein in Purkinje cells was the primary cause of the
death of these cells. They speculate it could be the loss of
normal prion protein that causes the damage in diseases like CJD
and BSE. This would mean that prions are important to brain
functions and it is the mutation rather than the prion itself
that is dangerous.
For a comprehensive discussion of prions and BSE, please see the
interview with Dr. FA Murphy in the Newsmaker section of What's
News in Access Excellence.
SOURCES:
1. David C. Krakauer, et al.; Nature, 4/25/96, page 675.
2. D. Brown et al; Nature, 3/28/96, pp. 345-347.
3. I. Tobler, et al.; Nature, 4/18/96, pp 639-642.
4. Katamine, et al.; Nature 380, 528-531; 1996.
Related information on the
Internet
Interview with Dr. FA Murphy, with prion graphics
The Official Mad Cow Disease Home Page(Many Links).
UK-Institute for Animal Health
UK- Institute for Food Health and Technology
Mad Cow: The Science and the Story
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