| Literature DB >> 15185494 |
Hitaru Kishida1, Yuji Sakasegawa, Kota Watanabe, Yoshio Yamakawa, Masahiro Nishijima, Yoshiyuki Kuroiwa, Naomi S Hachiya, Kiyotoshi Kaneko.
Abstract
Dominant-negative mouse prion protein (PrP) with a lysine mutation at codon 218 (Q218K) is known to inhibit prion replication. In order to gain further mechanistic insight into such dominant negative inhibition, non-glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored recombinant PrP with Q218K (rPrP-Q218K) was investigated. When applied into scrapie-infected mouse neuroblastoma (ScN2a) cells, rPrP-Q218K but not wild-type rPrP (rPrP-WT) exclusively inhibited abnormal protease-resistant pathogenic isoform (PrPSc) replication without reducing the viability of the cells. It was even more efficient than quinacrine, which has already been prescribed for sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) patients; 50% effective concentration (EC50) = 0.20 microM, 99% effective concentration (EC99) = 0.86 microM vs. EC50 = 0.45 microM, EC99 = 1.5 microM. Besides, no apparent cell damage was observed at the concentration of up to 4.3 microM (100 micrograms/ml). In combination treatment with 0.43 microM (10 micrograms/ml) of rPrP-Q218K, EC99 of quinacrine was decreased from 1.5 microM to 0.5 microM, and the cell viability was recovered from 50% to over 90% as inversely proportional to the concentration of quinacrine. Such combination could alleviate the side effects of quinacrine by reducing its effective concentration without changing or even acceleration the inhibition efficacy. Since homogeneous, high-quality rPrPs could be easily prepared from Escherichia coli in large quantities, rPrP-Q218K is a good candidate for a prion replication antagonist.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15185494 DOI: 10.1080/13506120410001689634
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Amyloid ISSN: 1350-6129 Impact factor: 7.141