Beck E
Department of Neuropathology, Institute of Psychiatry, London, Great Britain.
Acta Neuropathol. 1988;76(3):295-305. doi: 10.1007/BF00687779.
Fourteen BD IX rats were inoculated intracerebrally with a homogenate prepared from the immature cerebellar cortex of 10-day-old rats, when synaptogenesis is at its peak in this species. Eight controls were inoculated with mature cerebellar cortex. Transient ultrastructural changes were observed between 2 and 23 weeks' incubation in those animals which had received an inoculum of immature cerebellum. These changes pointed to a re-activation of embryonic or neo-natal growth mechanisms and were identical to those occurring in kuru-inoculated spider monkeys. With longer incubation histopathological lesions such as intracytoplasmic vacuolation, chromatolysis and neuronophagia appeared in neurons of the brain stem reticular formation. Such features are common in all the spongiform encephalopathies. All controls were negative. It is suggested that the transmissible agent in these diseases might be the factor which influences the various stages of normal neuronal maturation. A hypothesis is developed which would reconcile the "infectious" character of these diseases with a genetic factor and explain the "unconventional" behaviour of the agent as well as the mode of its transmission.