| Literature DB >> 18957103 |
Justin J Greenlee1, Eric M Nicholson, Amir N Hamir, Gary P Noyes, Mark T Holtzapple, Marcus E Kehrli.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prions, the infectious agents that cause transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs), are relatively resistant to destruction by physical, enzymatic, and chemical treatments. Hydrolysis in boiling saturated calcium hydroxide (limewater) utilizes inexpensive chemicals to digest protein components of offal. The purpose of this work was to determine if incubating brain material from scrapie-infected sheep in near-boiling saturated calcium hydroxide solution (Ca(OH)2) would abolish immunoreactivity of the infectious prion (PrPSc) as determined by western blot.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18957103 PMCID: PMC2588617 DOI: 10.1186/1756-0500-1-99
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Figure 1Western blot of non-treated brain homogenates. Representative western blots of scrapie-positive and scrapie-negative sheep brain homogenates. Lane 1-Molecular weight marker; lane 2-Scrapie-positive brain without proteinase K digestion; lane 3-Scrapie-positive brain treated with proteinase K; lane 4-Blank; lane 5-Scrapie-negative brain without proteinase K digestion; lane 6-scrapie-negative brain with proteinase K digestion. Only the scrapie-positive brain homogenate exhibits proteinase K resistance.
Figure 2Western blot after calcium hydroxide treatment. Western blot analysis of calcium hydroxide treatment of scrapie-negative (A) and scrapie-positive (B) sheep brain homogenate. For both, Lane 1-molecular weight marker; lane 2–0 minutes; lane 3–10 minutes; lane 4–20 minutes; lane 5–30 minutes; lane 6–60 minutes; lane 7–120 minutes; lane 8–240 minutes. PrP immunoreactivity is abolished in scrapie-positive samples after 10 minutes treatment with calcium hydroxide.