Department of Neurology and Physiology/Pharmacology, State University of New York Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, New York, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013 Jul 3;8(7):e66352. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0066352. Print 2013.
Human prion diseases are fatal neurodegenerative disorders associated with an accumulation of PrP(Sc) in the central nervous system (CNS). Of the human prion diseases, sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD), which has no known origin, is the most common form while variant CJD (vCJD) is an acquired human prion disease reported to differ from other human prion diseases in its neurological, neuropathological, and biochemical phenotype. Peripheral tissue involvement in prion disease, as judged by PrP(Sc) accumulation in the tonsil, spleen, and lymph node has been reported in vCJD as well as several animal models of prion diseases. However, this distribution of PrP(Sc) has not been consistently reported for sCJD. We reexamined CNS and non-CNS tissue distribution and levels of PrP(Sc) in both sCJD and vCJD. Using a sensitive immunoassay, termed SOFIA, we also assessed PrP(Sc) levels in human body fluids from sCJD as well as in vCJD-infected humanized transgenic mice (Tg666). Unexpectedly, the levels of PrP(Sc) in non-CNS human tissues (spleens, lymph nodes, tonsils) from both sCJD and vCJD did not differ significantly and, as expected, were several logs lower than in the brain. Using protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA) followed by SOFIA, PrP(Sc) was detected in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), but not in urine or blood, in sCJD patients. In addition, using PMCA and SOFIA, we demonstrated that blood from vCJD-infected Tg666 mice showing clinical disease contained prion disease-associated seeding activity although the data was not statistically significant likely due to the limited number of samples examined. These studies provide a comparison of PrP(Sc) in sCJD vs. vCJD as well as analysis of body fluids. Further, these studies also provide circumstantial evidence that in human prion diseases, as in the animal prion diseases, a direct comparison and intraspecies correlation cannot be made between the levels of PrP(Sc) and infectivity.
人类朊病毒病是致命的神经退行性疾病,与中枢神经系统 (CNS) 中 PrP(Sc)的积累有关。在人类朊病毒病中,散发性克雅氏病 (sCJD) 最为常见,这种疾病没有已知的病因,而变异型克雅氏病 (vCJD) 是一种获得性人类朊病毒病,据报道,其在神经、神经病理学和生物化学表型方面与其他人类朊病毒病不同。在 vCJD 以及几种朊病毒病动物模型中,已报道了通过扁桃体、脾脏和淋巴结中 PrP(Sc)的积累来判断朊病毒病的外周组织受累。然而,这种 PrP(Sc)的分布在 sCJD 中并未得到一致报道。我们重新检查了 sCJD 和 vCJD 中中枢神经系统和非中枢神经系统组织的分布和 PrP(Sc)水平。我们还使用一种称为 SOFIA 的敏感免疫测定法评估了 sCJD 人体液和感染 vCJD 的人源化转基因小鼠 (Tg666) 中的 PrP(Sc)水平。出乎意料的是,sCJD 和 vCJD 中非中枢神经系统人体组织 (脾脏、淋巴结、扁桃体) 中的 PrP(Sc)水平没有显著差异,并且与预期的一样,比大脑中的 PrP(Sc)水平低几个对数级。使用蛋白质错误折叠循环扩增 (PMCA) 后进行 SOFIA,我们在 sCJD 患者的脑脊液 (CSF) 中检测到了 PrP(Sc),但在尿液或血液中未检测到。此外,我们使用 PMCA 和 SOFIA 证明,表现出临床疾病的 vCJD 感染 Tg666 小鼠的血液中含有朊病毒病相关的传播活性,尽管由于检查的样本数量有限,数据没有统计学意义。这些研究提供了 sCJD 与 vCJD 中 PrP(Sc)的比较以及对体液的分析。此外,这些研究还提供了间接证据,表明在人类朊病毒病中,与动物朊病毒病一样,不能在 PrP(Sc)水平和感染性之间进行直接比较和种内相关性。