Yang Wenbin, Cook Julie, Rassbach Benjamin, Lemus Azucena, DeArmond Stephen J, Mastrianni James A
Department of Neurology, University of Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA.
J Neurosci. 2009 Aug 12;29(32):10072-80. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2542-09.2009.
Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker syndrome (GSS) is a genetic prion disease typified clinically by the development of progressive ataxia and dementia, and histopathologically by the presence of prion protein (PrP) amyloid plaques in the CNS, especially within the cerebellum. Several mutations of the PrP gene (PRNP) are associated with GSS, but only the P102L mutation has been convincingly modeled in transgenic (Tg) mice. To determine whether other mutations carry specific GSS phenotypic information, we constructed Tg mice that express PrP carrying the mouse homolog of the GSS-associated A117V mutation. Tg(A116V) mice express approximately six times the endogenous levels of PrP, develop progressive ataxia by approximately 140 d, and die by approximately 170 d. Compared with a mouse model of transmissible Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), the ataxia of Tg(A116V) mice is more prominent, and the course of disease is more protracted, paralleling that observed in human disease. Neuropathology includes mild scattered vacuolation and prominent, mainly cerebellar localized, thioflavin S-positive PrP plaques comprised of full-length PrP(A116V). In some mice, more prominent vacuolation or a noncerebellar distribution of PrP plaques was evident, suggesting some variability in phenotype. The biophysical properties of PrP from Tg(A116V) mice and human GSS(A117V) revealed a similarly low fraction of insoluble PrP and a weakly protease-resistant approximately 13 kDa midspan PrP fragment, not observed in CJD. Overall, Tg(A116V) mice recapitulate many clinicopathologic features of GSS(A117V) that are distinct from CJD, supporting PrP(A116V) to carry specific phenotypic information. The occasional variation in histopathology they exhibit may shed light on a similar observation in human GSS(A117V).
格斯特曼-施特劳斯勒-谢inker综合征(GSS)是一种遗传性朊病毒病,临床特征为进行性共济失调和痴呆,组织病理学特征为中枢神经系统(尤其是小脑)中存在朊病毒蛋白(PrP)淀粉样斑块。PrP基因(PRNP)的几种突变与GSS相关,但只有P102L突变已在转基因(Tg)小鼠中得到令人信服的建模。为了确定其他突变是否携带特定的GSS表型信息,我们构建了表达携带与GSS相关的A117V突变的小鼠同源物的PrP的Tg小鼠。Tg(A116V)小鼠表达的PrP内源性水平约为六倍,约140天时出现进行性共济失调,约170天时死亡。与可传播性克雅氏病(CJD)的小鼠模型相比,Tg(A116V)小鼠的共济失调更明显,病程更长,与人类疾病中观察到的情况相似。神经病理学包括轻度散在空泡化和突出的、主要位于小脑的硫黄素S阳性PrP斑块,由全长PrP(A116V)组成。在一些小鼠中,空泡化更明显或PrP斑块的非小脑分布明显,表明表型存在一些变异性。来自Tg(A116V)小鼠和人类GSS(A117V)的PrP的生物物理特性显示,不溶性PrP的比例同样较低,并且存在一个约13 kDa的中跨度PrP片段,对蛋白酶的抗性较弱,这在CJD中未观察到。总体而言,Tg(A116V)小鼠概括了GSS(A117V)许多与CJD不同的临床病理特征,支持PrP(A116V)携带特定的表型信息。它们偶尔表现出的组织病理学变化可能有助于解释人类GSS(A117V)中的类似观察结果。