Central Veterinary Institute (CVI) of Wageningen UR, Department of Bacteriology and TSEs, P.O. Box 65, 8200 AB Lelystad, The Netherlands.
Vaccine. 2010 Nov 16;28(49):7810-23. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2010.09.012. Epub 2010 Oct 20.
Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) or prion diseases are fatal neurodegenerative disorders and include among others Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans, bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in cattle, and scrapie in sheep. The central event in disease development in TSEs is the refolding of the normal host-encoded cellular prion protein (PrP) into abnormal and disease associated prion protein. The agent is thought to consist mainly or exclusively of these pathologically folded PrP molecules. The exact molecular mechanisms underlying this process and the role of normal PrP in the conversion to pathological isoforms of PrP are still poorly understood. The highly conserved PrP gene structure and organisation however, suggests that its function is important, even though PrP knockout mice appear to develop normally. Conversion of normal PrP is initiated by interaction with abnormal PrP (or "agent") resulting in refolding of normal PrP into new pathological PrP ("agent replication"). Normal PrP was shown to interact/bind with many different molecules including metal ions, nucleic acids, several (receptor) proteins, and the prion protein itself. The processes underlying agent replication (normal to abnormal PrP conversion) are most likely initiated by selective interaction between PrP molecules and potentially influenced by chaperone molecules. Thus far no vaccine, disease reversing therapeutic compounds or strategies (cure) exists, although there are some compounds capable of slowing the progression of prion disease. Studies towards interference to date have primarily focussed on inference with the interaction between normal and pathological isoforms of PrP in order to develop therapeutic strategies or find compounds capable of inhibiting prion propagation. Most described strategies are either directed at depletion of normal PrP and thus preventing pathological PrP formation and accumulation, or are based on preventing interaction between normal and abnormal PrP. Other therapeutic strategies focus on selective (self-)interaction of normal PrP molecules. Increased understanding of these interactions and the processes in which normal PrP plays a (active) role, could potentially lead to new modes of inhibiting prion protein conversion in which the physiological function(s) of normal PrP is retained. Ultimately this may lead to therapeutic strategies that are effective not only as a prophylactic but also in later stages of prion disease development. Here we review the data underlying these PrP-based approaches.
传染性海绵状脑病(TSEs)或朊病毒病是致命的神经退行性疾病,包括人类克雅氏病、牛海绵状脑病(BSE)和绵羊痒病等。TSE 中疾病发展的中心事件是正常宿主编码的细胞朊病毒蛋白(PrP)的重折叠为异常和与疾病相关的朊病毒蛋白。该制剂被认为主要或完全由这些病理性折叠的 PrP 分子组成。然而,这种过程的确切分子机制以及正常 PrP 在转化为病理性 PrP 异构体中的作用仍知之甚少。高度保守的 PrP 基因结构和组织,表明其功能很重要,即使 PrP 敲除小鼠似乎正常发育。正常 PrP 的转化是由与异常 PrP(或“制剂”)的相互作用启动的,导致正常 PrP 重新折叠为新的病理性 PrP(“制剂复制”)。已经表明正常 PrP 与许多不同的分子相互作用/结合,包括金属离子、核酸、几种(受体)蛋白和朊病毒蛋白本身。制剂复制(正常到异常 PrP 转化)的过程最有可能是由 PrP 分子之间的选择性相互作用启动的,并且可能受到伴侣分子的影响。到目前为止,虽然有一些化合物能够减缓朊病毒疾病的进展,但还没有疫苗、逆转疾病的治疗性化合物或策略(治愈)。研究进展主要集中在干扰正常和病理性 PrP 异构体之间的相互作用上,以开发治疗策略或寻找能够抑制朊病毒传播的化合物。大多数描述的策略要么针对正常 PrP 的耗竭,从而防止病理性 PrP 的形成和积累,要么基于阻止正常和异常 PrP 之间的相互作用。其他治疗策略侧重于正常 PrP 分子的选择性(自我)相互作用。对这些相互作用以及正常 PrP 发挥(主动)作用的过程的深入了解,可能会导致新的抑制朊病毒蛋白转化模式,其中保留正常 PrP 的生理功能。最终,这可能会导致不仅作为预防措施而且在朊病毒疾病发展的后期阶段都有效的治疗策略。在这里,我们回顾了基于这些 PrP 的方法的基础数据。