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The molecular determinants of a universal prion acceptor. | LitMetric

The molecular determinants of a universal prion acceptor.

PLoS Pathog

Tanz Centre for Research in Neurodegenerative Diseases, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • In prion diseases, a species barrier typically hinders prion transmission, but bank voles can efficiently transmit prions between species due to their unique prion protein, BVPrP.
  • Researchers identified specific amino acids in BVPrP that allow it to replicate prions from both mice and hamsters, highlighting the importance of residues N155, N170, V112, I139, and M205.
  • The study also discovered that certain residues (E227 and S230) in BVPrP may limit prion accumulation, suggesting they evolved to counteract BVPrP's tendency to misfold.

Article Abstract

In prion diseases, the species barrier limits the transmission of prions from one species to another. However, cross-species prion transmission is remarkably efficient in bank voles, and this phenomenon is mediated by the bank vole prion protein (BVPrP). The molecular determinants of BVPrP's ability to function as a universal prion acceptor remain incompletely defined. Building on our finding that cultured cells expressing BVPrP can replicate both mouse and hamster prion strains, we systematically identified key residues in BVPrP that permit cross-species prion replication. We found that residues N155 and N170 of BVPrP, which are absent in mouse PrP but present in hamster PrP, are critical for cross-species prion replication. Additionally, BVPrP residues V112, I139, and M205, which are absent in hamster PrP but present in mouse PrP, are also required to enable replication of both mouse and hamster prions. Unexpectedly, we found that residues E227 and S230 near the C-terminus of BVPrP severely restrict prion accumulation following cross-species prion challenge, suggesting that they may have evolved to counteract the inherent propensity of BVPrP to misfold. PrP variants with an enhanced ability to replicate both mouse and hamster prions displayed accelerated spontaneous aggregation kinetics in vitro. These findings suggest that BVPrP's unusual properties are governed by a key set of amino acids and that the enhanced misfolding propensity of BVPrP may enable cross-species prion replication.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11414987PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012538DOI Listing

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