Literature DB >> 21466851

Acute exposure to prion infection induces transient oxidative stress progressing to be cumulatively deleterious with chronic propagation in vitro.

Cathryn L Haigh1, Amelia R McGlade, Victoria Lewis, Colin L Masters, Victoria A Lawson, Steven J Collins.   

Abstract

Neuronal loss is a pathological feature of prion diseases for which increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) and consequent oxidative stress is one proposed mechanism. The processes underlying ROS production in prion disease and the precise relationship to misfolding of the prion protein remain obscure. Using cell culture models of prion infection we found that cells demonstrate a rapid, prion protein (PrP) dependent, increase in intracellular ROS following exposure to infectious inoculum. ROS production correlated with internalisation and increased intracellular protease resistant PrP (PrP(Res)). The ROS increase was predominantly lysosomal in origin but not sustained, with cells adapting within 48 hours. Overall ROS levels remained normal in the chronically prion infected cell population; however a subpopulation characterised by loss of membrane phosphatidylserine asymmetry exhibited highly peroxidised intracellular aggregates that localised with PrP and intense caspase activation. These apoptotic cells showed increased ROS closely correlating with increased PrP(Res). Our findings demonstrate that a PrP-dependent, transient, increase in intracellular ROS is characteristic of acute cellular prion infection, while chronic phases of prion infection in vitro are associated with a significant subpopulation manifesting apoptosis accompanying heightened oxidative stress and increased PrP(Res) burden. Such observations strengthen the direct links between heightened ROS and ongoing prion propagation with eventual cellular demise.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21466851     DOI: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2011.03.035

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Free Radic Biol Med        ISSN: 0891-5849            Impact factor:   7.376


  15 in total

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5.  The prion protein regulates beta-amyloid-mediated self-renewal of neural stem cells in vitro.

Authors:  Steven J Collins; Carolin Tumpach; Qiao-Xin Li; Victoria Lewis; Timothy M Ryan; Blaine Roberts; Simon C Drew; Victoria A Lawson; Cathryn L Haigh
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7.  Cellular prion protein (PrPC) of the neuron cell transformed to a PK-resistant protein under oxidative stress, comprising main mitochondrial damage in prion diseases.

Authors:  Fangzhong Yuan; Lifeng Yang; Zhuming Zhang; Wenyu Wu; Xiangmei Zhou; Xiaomin Yin; Deming Zhao
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8.  The Prion Protein N1 and N2 Cleavage Fragments Bind to Phosphatidylserine and Phosphatidic Acid; Relevance to Stress-Protection Responses.

Authors:  Cathryn L Haigh; Carolin Tumpach; Simon C Drew; Steven J Collins
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-08-07       Impact factor: 3.240

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10.  The Immp2l mutation causes age-dependent degeneration of cerebellar granule neurons prevented by antioxidant treatment.

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