Department of Pathology, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.
Gut. 2010 Dec;59(12):1643-51. doi: 10.1136/gut.2010.222620.
The intestine is recognised to play a key role in the transmission of prion diseases. These diseases are associated with pathological isoforms (PrP(Sc)) of the normal cellular prion protein (PrP(C)) and can be transmitted between individuals or arise spontaneously. The brain, as the primary site of prion replication, could provide infectious prions to peripheral tissues. Here, we examine whether the brain is a source of intestinal prion accumulation.
Following intracerebral inoculation with human origin prions the ileums of BalbC mice with clinical prion disease were assessed by Western immunoblot and immunohistochemical analysis for the presence of PrP(Sc) and the survival of enteric glial cells (EGCs) and specific neuronal subpopulations in the myenteric and submucosal plexus.
PrP(Sc) was detected in the ileum of 13/13 mice following intracerebral inoculation with prions and 0/4 saline-inoculated mice. PrP(Sc) was localised at detectable levels in the Peyer's patches of infected mice. Investigation of neuronal subpopulations revealed a significant decrease in neurofilament reactive neurons (11±8%, p<0.05, n=5) compared with saline-inoculated mice (23±5%, n=3). Neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) and tyrosine hydroxylase reactive neurons were decreased in some (2 of 4 and 1 of 3, respectively) but not all prion-infected mice, whereas calretinin and vasoactive intestinal peptide reactive neurons were unaffected. EGCs were highly distorted in circumscribed ganglia of the myenteric plexus. In areas of glial derangement, the neurons showed undefined outlines and faint cytoplasmic immunoreactivity for the pan-neuronal marker Hu and loss of nNOS reactivity.
The present work shows that PrP(Sc) can be transmitted from the brain to the intestine. This causes pathological changes in enteric glia and neurons. We conclude that PrP(Sc) of brain origin finds a substrate in the naturally occurring PrP(C) of EGCs and neurons. This results in a reservoir of PrP(Sc) in the intestine, which may represent a source of prion disease transmission through surgical procedures and environmental contamination.
肠道被认为在朊病毒病的传播中起着关键作用。这些疾病与正常细胞朊病毒蛋白(PrP(C))的病理性异构体(PrP(Sc))有关,可在个体之间传播或自发发生。大脑是朊病毒复制的主要部位,可能为外周组织提供感染性朊病毒。在这里,我们研究大脑是否是肠道朊病毒积累的来源。
用源自人类的朊病毒经颅内接种后,通过 Western 免疫印迹和免疫组织化学分析,评估具有临床朊病毒病的 BalbC 小鼠回肠中 PrP(Sc)的存在以及肠神经胶质细胞(EGC)和特定神经元亚群在肌间和黏膜下神经丛中的存活情况。
用朊病毒颅内接种后,13/13 只感染小鼠的回肠中检测到 PrP(Sc),而 0/4 只盐水接种的小鼠中未检测到。感染小鼠的派尔集合淋巴结中可检测到 PrP(Sc)的局部定位。对神经元亚群的研究表明,与盐水接种的小鼠(23±5%,n=3)相比,神经丝反应性神经元显著减少(11±8%,p<0.05,n=5)。并非所有感染朊病毒的小鼠均存在神经元一氧化氮合酶(nNOS)和酪氨酸羟化酶反应性神经元减少(分别为 2 只中的 4 只和 1 只中的 3 只),而钙视网膜蛋白和血管活性肠肽反应性神经元不受影响。EGC 在肌间神经丛的限定神经节中高度变形。在神经胶质紊乱区域,神经元的轮廓不清晰,细胞质对泛神经元标志物 Hu 的免疫反应性较弱,并且 nNOS 反应性丧失。
本研究表明,PrP(Sc)可从大脑传播到肠道,从而导致肠神经胶质细胞和神经元发生病理变化。我们得出结论,源自大脑的 PrP(Sc)在天然存在的 EGC 和神经元的 PrP(C)中找到了基质。这导致了肠道中 PrP(Sc)的储存,这可能是通过手术程序和环境污染传播朊病毒病的来源。