Prusiner S B
Department of Neurology, University of California, San Francisco 94143.
Science. 1991 Jun 14;252(5012):1515-22. doi: 10.1126/science.1675487.
Prions cause transmissible and genetic neurodegenerative diseases, including scrapie and bovine spongiform encephalopathy of animals and Creutzfeldt-Jakob and Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker diseases of humans. Infectious prion particles are composed largely, if not entirely, of an abnormal isoform of the prion protein, which is encoded by a chromosomal gene. A posttranslational process, as yet unidentified, converts the cellular prion protein into an abnormal isoform. Scrapie incubation times, neuropathology, and prion synthesis in transgenic mice are controlled by the prion protein gene. Point mutations in the prion protein genes of animals and humans are genetically linked to development of neuro-degeneration. Transgenic mice expressing mutant prion proteins spontaneously develop neurologic dysfunction and spongiform neuropathology. Understanding prion diseases may advance investigations of other neurodegenerative disorders and of the processes by which neurons differentiate, function for decades, and then grow senescent.
朊病毒会引发可传播的和遗传性神经退行性疾病,包括动物的羊瘙痒症和牛海绵状脑病,以及人类的克雅氏病和格斯特曼-施特劳斯勒-谢inker病。传染性朊病毒颗粒即使不是完全由朊病毒蛋白的异常异构体组成,也主要由其构成,该蛋白由染色体基因编码。一个尚未明确的翻译后过程将细胞朊病毒蛋白转化为异常异构体。羊瘙痒症的潜伏期、神经病理学以及转基因小鼠中的朊病毒合成由朊病毒蛋白基因控制。动物和人类朊病毒蛋白基因中的点突变与神经退行性变的发生存在遗传关联。表达突变朊病毒蛋白的转基因小鼠会自发出现神经功能障碍和海绵状神经病理学变化。对朊病毒疾病的理解可能会推动对其他神经退行性疾病以及神经元分化、数十年发挥功能然后衰老的过程的研究。