Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Prion Research Center (PRC) and the Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA.
J Biol Chem. 2024 Sep;300(9):107617. doi: 10.1016/j.jbc.2024.107617. Epub 2024 Jul 30.
While animal prion diseases are a threat to human health, their zoonotic potential is generally inefficient because of interspecies prion transmission barriers. New animal models are required to provide an understanding of these prion transmission barriers and to assess the zoonotic potential of animal prion diseases. To address this goal, we generated Drosophila transgenic for human or nonhuman primate prion protein (PrP) and determined their susceptibility to known pathogenic prion diseases, namely varient Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD) and classical bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), and that with unknown pathogenic potential, namely chronic wasting disease (CWD). Adult Drosophila transgenic for M129 or V129 human PrP or nonhuman primate PrP developed a neurotoxic phenotype and showed an accelerated loss of survival after exposure to vCJD, classical BSE, or CWD prions at the larval stage. vCJD prion strain identity was retained after passage in both M129 and V129 human PrP Drosophila. All of the primate PrP fly lines accumulated prion seeding activity and concomitantly developed a neurotoxic phenotype, generally including accelerated loss of survival, after exposure to CWD prions derived from different cervid species, including North American white-tailed deer and muntjac, and European reindeer and moose. These novel studies show that primate PrP transgenic Drosophila lack known prion transmission barriers since, in mammalian hosts, V129 human PrP is associated with severe resistance to classical BSE prions, while both human and cynomolgus macaque PrP are associated with resistance to CWD prions. Significantly, our data suggest that interspecies differences in the amino acid sequence of PrP may not be a principal determinant of the prion transmission barrier.
虽然动物朊病毒病对人类健康构成威胁,但由于物种间朊病毒传播障碍,其人畜共患病潜力通常较低。需要新的动物模型来了解这些朊病毒传播障碍,并评估动物朊病毒病的人畜共患病潜力。为了实现这一目标,我们生成了转基因果蝇,表达人类或非人灵长类动物朊病毒蛋白(PrP),并确定了它们对已知致病性朊病毒病的易感性,即变异型克雅氏病(vCJD)和经典牛海绵状脑病(BSE),以及具有未知致病性潜力的慢性消耗性疾病(CWD)。成年转基因果蝇表达 M129 或 V129 人类 PrP 或非人灵长类动物 PrP 后,在幼虫期暴露于 vCJD、经典 BSE 或 CWD 朊病毒后,会出现神经毒性表型,并加速死亡。vCJD 朊病毒株的身份在 M129 和 V129 人类 PrP 果蝇中传递后得以保留。所有灵长类动物 PrP 蝇系在暴露于源自不同鹿种的 CWD 朊病毒后,包括北美白尾鹿和獐,以及欧洲驯鹿和驼鹿,均积累了朊病毒接种活性,并同时表现出神经毒性表型,通常包括加速死亡。这些新的研究表明,由于在哺乳动物宿主中,V129 人类 PrP 与对经典 BSE 朊病毒的严重抗性相关,而人类和食蟹猕猴 PrP 均与对 CWD 朊病毒的抗性相关,因此灵长类动物 PrP 转基因果蝇缺乏已知的朊病毒传播障碍。重要的是,我们的数据表明,PrP 氨基酸序列的种间差异可能不是朊病毒传播障碍的主要决定因素。