In recent publications, it was shown that disease-associated prion protein (PrP(d)) accumulates in the lymphoid tissue of the rectal mucosa of a high proportion of scrapie-infected sheep at clinical and preclinical stages, regardless of several host factors; PrP(d) can also be detected in biopsy specimens of rectal mucosa, with an increased probability proportional to age or incubation period and with an efficiency almost identical to that of tonsil biopsies. Rectal biopsies have the advantages of providing higher numbers of lymphoid follicles and of being simpler to perform, which makes them suitable for scrapie screening in the field. In biopsy samples, PrP(d) could be demonstrated by immunohistochemical (IHC) and Western immunoblotting methods, and the purpose of the present study was to optimize and evaluate a "rapid test" for the diagnosis of scrapie in rectal biopsy samples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRapid BSE tests are widely used diagnostics in veterinary medicine and more than 11 million tests are applied worldwide. The evaluation of new rapid BSE tests and the quality assurance of approved BSE tests pose a challenge owing to the natural scarcity of BSE-infected bovine brainstems and regional variations in prion titer. Transgenic mice expressing bovine prion protein (Tg4092) offer an alternative approach to these problems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Biochem
January 2000
Ca2+-dependent protein kinase (CDPK-1) was purified from maize seedlings, and its substrate specificity studied using a set of synthetic peptides derived from the phosphorylatable sequence RVLSRLHS15VRER of maize sucrose synthase 2. The decapeptide LARLHSVRER was found to be efficiently phosphorylated as a minimal substrate. The same set of peptides were found to be phosphorylated by mammalian protein kinase Cbeta (PKC), but showed low reactivity with protein kinase A (PKA).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Biophys Res Commun
June 1998
The ER retention of lumenal proteins is achieved by a process which involves binding of escaped proteins via the C-terminal KDEL-tags to a KDEL receptor (erd2 receptor) in a post-ER compartment and return of the protein-receptor complex back to the ER. The transmembrane topology of the human KDEL receptor, which is an integral membrane protein, has been proposed. We have synthesised sets of cellulose-bound overlapping peptides covering the complete se quence of the receptor to study the interaction of the erd2 receptor with lumenal ER proteins, CaBP1 and CaBP2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Increased protein kinase C activity has been reported in erythrocytes from patients with primary hypertension and also from hypertensive rats. In this phenomenological study, we investigated whether a possible increased activity was the result of an augmented amount of enzyme molecules or a more active enzyme.
Design: Collect blood samples, separate erythrocytes from other blood cells.