Unexpected prion phenotypes in experimentally transfused animals: predictive models for humans?

Prion

a Prion Research Unit, Institut François Jacob, Division of Fundamental Research , Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique , Fontenay-aux-Roses , France.

Published: August 2018

The recently reevaluated high prevalence of healthy carriers (1/2,000 in UK) of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (v-CJD), whose blood might be infectious, suggests that the evolution of this prion disease might not be under full control as expected. After experimental transfusion of macaques and conventional mice with blood derived from v-CJD exposed (human and animal) individuals, we confirmed in these both models the transmissibility of v-CJD, but we also observed unexpected neurological syndromes transmissible by transfusion: despite their prion etiology confirmed through transmission experiments, these original cases would escape classical prion diagnosis, notably in the absence of detectable abnormal PrP with current techniques. It is noteworthy that macaques developed an original, yet undescribed myelopathic syndrome associating demyelination and pseudo-necrotic lesions of spinal cord, brainstem and optical tract without affecting encephalon, which is rather evocative of spinal cord disease than prion disease in human medicine. These observations strongly suggest that the spectrum of human prion diseases may extend the current field restricted to the phenotypes associated to protease-resistant PrP, and may notably include spinal cord diseases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6277188PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19336896.2018.1505399DOI Listing

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