Zabel Mark D, Reid Crystal
Prion Research Center at Colorado State University, Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Fort Collins, CO 80521, USA
Prion Research Center at Colorado State University, Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Fort Collins, CO 80521, USA.
Pathog Dis. 2015 Dec;73(9):ftv087. doi: 10.1093/femspd/ftv087. Epub 2015 Oct 7.
Proteins were described as distinct biological molecules and their significance in cellular processes was recognized as early as the 18th century. At the same time, Spanish shepherds observed a disease that compelled their Merino sheep to pathologically scrape against fences, a defining clinical sign that led to the disease being named scrapie. In the late 19th century, Robert Koch published his postulates for defining causative agents of disease. In the early 20th century, pathologists Creutzfeldt and Jakob described a neurodegenerative disease that would later be included with scrapie into a group of diseases known as transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs). Later that century, mounting evidence compelled a handful of scientists to betray the prevailing biological dogma governing pathogen replication that Watson and Crick so convincingly explained by cracking the genetic code just two decades earlier. Because TSEs seemed to defy these new rules, J.S. Griffith theorized mechanisms by which a pathogenic protein could encipher its own replication blueprint without a genetic code. Stanley Prusiner called this proteinaceous infectious pathogen a prion. Here we offer a concise account of the discovery of prions, the causative agent of TSEs, in the wider context of protein biochemistry and infectious disease. We highlight the discovery of prions in yeast and discuss the implication of prions as epigenomic carriers of biological and pathological information. We also consider expanding the prion hypothesis to include other proteins whose alternate isoforms confer new biological or pathological properties.
蛋白质被描述为独特的生物分子,其在细胞过程中的重要性早在18世纪就得到了认可。与此同时,西班牙牧羊人观察到一种疾病,这种疾病迫使他们的美利奴羊病态地蹭围栏,这一典型的临床症状导致该疾病被命名为羊瘙痒症。19世纪后期,罗伯特·科赫发表了他关于确定疾病病原体的准则。20世纪初,病理学家克雅二氏描述了一种神经退行性疾病,该疾病后来与羊瘙痒症一起被归入一组被称为传染性海绵状脑病(TSEs)的疾病。在那个世纪后期,越来越多的证据迫使一些科学家背离了当时盛行的关于病原体复制的生物学教条,而就在二十年前,沃森和克里克通过破解遗传密码如此令人信服地解释了这一教条。由于TSEs似乎违背了这些新规则,J.S. 格里菲斯提出了一种机制,即致病蛋白可以在没有遗传密码的情况下加密其自身的复制蓝图。斯坦利·普鲁西纳将这种蛋白质传染性病原体称为朊病毒。在此,我们在蛋白质生物化学和传染病的更广泛背景下,简要介绍朊病毒(TSEs的病原体)的发现。我们重点介绍酵母中朊病毒的发现,并讨论朊病毒作为生物和病理信息的表观基因组载体的意义。我们还考虑将朊病毒假说扩展到包括其他蛋白质,这些蛋白质的不同异构体具有新的生物学或病理特性。