Literature DB >> 21779169

Dissociation of infectivity from seeding ability in prions with alternate docking mechanism.

Michael B Miller1, James C Geoghegan, Surachai Supattapone.   

Abstract

Previous studies identified two mammalian prion protein (PrP) polybasic domains that bind the disease-associated conformer PrP(Sc), suggesting that these domains of cellular prion protein (PrP(C)) serve as docking sites for PrP(Sc) during prion propagation. To examine the role of polybasic domains in the context of full-length PrP(C), we used prion proteins lacking one or both polybasic domains expressed from Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells as substrates in serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification (sPMCA) reactions. After ∼5 rounds of sPMCA, PrP(Sc) molecules lacking the central polybasic domain (ΔC) were formed. Surprisingly, in contrast to wild-type prions, ΔC-PrP(Sc) prions could bind to and induce quantitative conversion of all the polybasic domain mutant substrates into PrP(Sc) molecules. Remarkably, ΔC-PrP(Sc) and other polybasic domain PrP(Sc) molecules displayed diminished or absent biological infectivity relative to wild-type PrP(Sc), despite their ability to seed sPMCA reactions of normal mouse brain homogenate. Thus, ΔC-PrP(Sc) prions interact with PrP(C) molecules through a novel interaction mechanism, yielding an expanded substrate range and highly efficient PrP(Sc) propagation. Furthermore, polybasic domain deficient PrP(Sc) molecules provide the first example of dissociation between normal brain homogenate sPMCA seeding ability from biological prion infectivity. These results suggest that the propagation of PrP(Sc) molecules may not depend on a single stereotypic mechanism, but that normal PrP(C)/PrP(Sc) interaction through polybasic domains may be required to generate prion infectivity.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21779169      PMCID: PMC3136465          DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1002128

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS Pathog        ISSN: 1553-7366            Impact factor:   6.823


Introduction

Prions are infectious proteinaceous particles that cause fatal neurodegenerative diseases, including Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), and chronic wasting disease (CWD). Prions contain PrPSc, a protease-resistant detergent-insoluble β-sheet-rich conformer of the normal cellular protein PrPC [1], [2]. PrPSc is an essential and possibly the sole component of infectious prions. Prion propagation and disease require the presence of PrPC, encoded by the host Prnp gene [3], [4], [5], [6]. Cell-free in vitro propagation systems have emerged as valuable tools to investigate PrPSc and prion propagation [7]. By serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification (sPMCA), prion infectivity can be propagated in vitro [8]. More rapid and less costly than the gold standard inoculation bioassay, sPMCA has been proposed as an in vitro method to detect prion infectivity [9]. Indeed, samples which seed robust sPMCA propagation have been previously associated with biological infectivity [8], [10]. However, it is unknown if PrPSc molecules that robustly seed PMCA propagation in wild type brain homogenate are always associated with appropriate levels of specific infectivity. Recent studies have reconstituted infectious PrPSc propagation using purified PrPC substrate and supplementary conversion cofactors, a set of minimal components that appear necessary for prion propagation [11], [12]. PrPSc appears to propagate by autocatalysis, binding PrPC to induce conversion into a new PrPSc molecule [13]. However, the mechanisms of binding and conversion remain unclear. Studies using motif-grafted antibodies or PrP-derived peptides identified two polybasic regions that bind strongly to PrPSc [14], [15], [16], suggesting that these PrPC domains may serve as docking sites for PrPSc. The N-terminal (N-PBD, 23–28) and central (C-PBD, 100–109) polybasic domains both fall in the N-terminal flexible region of PrPC, which is less ordered than the C-terminus [17], [18]. Antibodies directed at C-PBD can impede prion propagation in cultured cells and in vivo [19], [20], possibly by blocking a PrPSc-binding site on PrPC. The polybasic domains may also be involved in interaction with lipid molecules during the conversion process [21] and may affect the structure of misfolded prion protein [22]. Mice overexpressing PrP transgenes lacking amino acids 23–88 show reduced prion susceptibility [23], but these studies did not examine N-PBD in isolation. Transgenic mice with deletions that include C-PBD display lethal neurologic illness, but this phenotype precluded inoculation experiments assessing prion susceptibility [24], [25], [26]. The specific role of these domains in the context of the entire PrPC molecule has been studied in N2a cells co-expressing wild-type and mutant PrPC [27], but biochemical examinations of binding interactions and of propagation with pure substrates are lacking. In full-length PrPC, the relative importance of the N-terminal and central polybasic domains in binding PrPSc is unclear. Moreover, while much evidence points to a significant role for PrPC polybasic domains, it is not known if PrPSc-PrPC interactions are universally stereotypic – whether all PrPSc molecules use the same PrPC epitopes for interaction. Using a combination of Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell expression, protein purification, and reconstitution sPMCA techniques, we engineered PrPSc molecules lacking polybasic domains. These novel PrPSc molecules, which propagate robustly in vitro, enabled us to assess whether PrPC polybasic domains are universally required for PrPSc docking and propagation. PBD-deficient PrPSc molecules also provided us with a unique opportunity to dissect the relationship between the ability to seed formation of wild type PrPSc molecules in vitro and prion infectivity in vivo.

Materials and Methods

Mutagenesis and expression of recPrP-myc for binding

Sequence encoding mouse PrP-A 23–230 was amplified, using the following primers to add an N-terminal start codon and a C-terminal tag encoding amino acids 410–419 of human c-myc (NCBI accession number NP_002458.2): N: 5′- aaaaaacatatgaaaaagcggccaaagcctggagggt-3′, C: 5′-aaaactcgagtcattacagatcctcttctgagatgagtttttgttcggatcttctcccgtcgtaatag-3′. This fusion gene was inserted into pET22b(+) for bacterial expression. N-terminal (ΔN, 23–28) and central (ΔC, 100–109) polybasic domains were deleted by site-directed mutagenesis (GeneTailor, Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). From transfected Escherichia coli Rosetta cells, recombinant PrP was purified in a manner similar to that described by Wang et al. [12]. Cells from 500 mL induced (Overnight Express Autoinduction System, Novagen, EMD Chemicals, Gibbstown, NJ) overnight culture were pelleted at 8,000×g for 10 min.; lysed with 40 mL BugBuster, Lysonase (Novagen), and intermittent sonication over 20 min.; and inclusion bodies were prepared by two cycles of centrifugation (16,000×g, 15 min.) and 0.1× Bugbuster resuspension, followed by an additional 16,000×g 15 min. spin. Inclusion body pellets were solubilized in 8 mL 8 M guanidine hydrochloride, insoluble material removed by centrifugation (8,000×g, 10 min.), and protein added to 3.6 g Ni-NTA Hisbind Superflow resin (Novagen) pre-equilibrated in denaturing buffer (100 mM sodium phosphate, 10 mM Tris, 6 M Guanidine, 10 mM β-mercaptoethanol, pH 8.0). After 30 min. binding, resin was transferred to column support, and protein was refolded by a linear 12 hr. 125 mL gradient of denaturing to refolding buffer (100 mM sodium phosphate, 10 mM Tris, pH 8.0), followed by 60 mL wash at 1 mL/min. in refolding buffer. Protein was eluted from nickel affinity resin by 1 mL/min. 500 mM imidazole, 100 mM sodium phosphate pH 6.5; then dialyzed into 20 mM sodium phosphate pH 6.5 (3×2 L for 30 min.) and into water (3×2 L for 30 min., 1×4 L overnight). If observed, precipitate was removed by centrifugation at 100,000×g for 60 min. The nickel eluate was loaded on 2 mL pre-equilibrated (30 mL 10 mM sodium phosphate pH 6.5, 1 mL/min.) CM sepharose (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) at 0.5 mL/min., washed with 50 mL NaCl at 1 mL/min., and eluted with a gradient (300–650 mM NaCl, 0.5 mL/min.). Fractions containing >0.1 OD280 (>0.037 mg/mL PrP) [28] were pooled and dialyzed into water (2×4 L for 30 min., 1×4 L overnight), then stored at −70°C. Protein concentration was determined by bicinchoninic acid (BCA) assay.

PrPSc-PrP binding assays

RML scrapie-infected brain homogenate (5% BH in tris-buffered saline) or CHO ΔC-PrPSc (sPMCA round 16 product, therefore 1016-fold dilution of original wild-type scrapie seed) were vortexed for 15 sec., sonicated for 1 min. at 70% power (Misonix 4000 with Microplate Horn, Qsonica, Newtown, CT), and centrifuged at 500×g for 15 min. Normalized amounts of this clarified preparation (12.4 µL brain homogenate PrPSc, 16.5 µL PrPSc) were incubated with 3.5 µg purified E. coli recPrP-myc (wild-type or lacking polybasic domain) in 250 µL binding buffer (50 mM tris, 200 mM NaCl, 1% Triton X-100, 1% Tween-20, pH 7.5) for 1 hr. at 4°C with 10 r.p.m. end-over-end rotation. Concurrently, 16 µL 30 mg/mL Dynabeads Protein A (Invitrogen) was washed with 2×500 µL phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), collected by a Magnetic Particle Separator (PureBiotech, Middlesex, NJ), and incubated with 3.6 µg 9E10 anti-myc antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA) in 250 µL binding buffer for 30 min. at room temp. with 10 r.p.m. end-over-end rotation. Next, the solution of PrPSc and PrP-myc was added to the bead-anti-myc complexes, and rotated for 1 hr. at 4°C. Following this incubation, beads were collected, and supernatant was aspirated. Beads were rinsed in 4×500 µL wash buffer (50 mM tris, 200 mM NaCl, 0.05% Tween 20), and analyzed for bound PrPSc. Signal intensities were quantified by densitometry with ImageGauge V4.22 (Fujifilm) in quant mode.

Expression and preparation of PrP from Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells

Sequences encoding wild-type and polybasic domain deletion mutant (ΔN = Δ23–28; ΔC-PBD = Δ100–109; ΔΔ-PBD = Δ23–28 Δ100–109) PrP were inserted in pcDNA5/FRT plasmids. These were used to express PrP from CHO cells, which was prepared as described previously [29]. For hamster experiments, homologous deletion mutants were used (Δ23–28, Δ101–110, or ΔΔ).

Reconstituted serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification (sPMCA) with CHO-expressed PrP

Reactions were prepared and carried out as described by Geoghegan et al. [29]. Briefly, CHO-expressed mouse PrP (wild-type or polybasic domain deletion mutant) was mixed with Prnp (Zurich) brain homogenate (2.5% final concentration). Ninety microliters of this reconstituted substrate was mixed with 10 µL seed. Reactions were initially seeded with 0.1% scrapie-infected brain homogenate (mouse strain RML) in PBS, with 10 µL of product used to seed the subsequent round. ΔC-PrPSc seed was produced by 16 rounds of sPMCA (1016-fold dilution of original wild-type scrapie seed), containing <1 original PrPSc molecule [8]. Unseeded reactions were given 10 µL PBS as initial seed. For reactions lacking cofactor, buffer (PBS 1% Triton X-100) replaced Prnp brain homogenate. Each PMCA round consisted of incubation at 37°C for 24 hr. with 20 sec. microplate horn sonication at 85% power every 30 min. One set of seeded samples was not subjected to PMCA (round 0), while another set was not subjected to protease digestion (−PK) to observe input PrP. For hamster sPMCA experiments, or Sc237 strain was used, CHO HaPrP was supplemented with 20 µg/mL synthetic poly(A) RNA (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), and PrPSc was detected by immunoblot after 50 µg/mL digestion for 60 min.

sPMCA with brain homogenate

Brain homogenate sPMCA experiments were adapted from Castilla et al. [30]. 90 µL 10% CD-1 mouse brain (Biochemed, Winchester, VA) homogenate was prepared in PBS, 1% Triton X-100, 5 mM EDTA, Roche Complete mini protease inhibitor, then seeded with PrPSc (10 µL of round 16 product). One round of PMCA consisted of 30 sec. 90% power microplate horn sonication pulses every 30 min. for 24 hr. at 37°C. 10 µL of each reaction product was transferred to fresh brain homogenate for the following round.

PrPSc detection

Mouse PrPSc was detected by digestion with 25 µg/mL proteinase K (Roche, Indianapolis, IN) for 30 min. at 37°C and 750 r.p.m. shaking, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), transfer to polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), and Western detection with anti-PrP and horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-mouse sheep IgG (GE Healthcare, Piscataway, NJ). Signals were detected by enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL) (SuperSignal West Femto Substrate, Pierce, Rockford, IL) and visualized by a Fuji (Fujifilm) LAS-3000 chemiluminescence documentation system. Hamster PrPSc was detected with 50 µg/mL proteinase K for 60 min. Experiments detecting only wild-type PrP used 6D11 anti-PrP antibody. Because the central polybasic domain (C-PBD) forms part of the 6D11 epitope, and therefore ΔC PrP is not detected by 6D11 (data not shown), reconstituted sPMCA experiments utilized anti-PrP mAb 27/33.

Biological infectivity assay

RML PrPSc, propagated with CHO wild-type or ΔC- PrPC in vitro by sPMCA (Figures 1B, S4) for at least 14 rounds, was diluted 1∶10 in diluent (PBS+1 mg/mL BSA). ΔN- and ΔΔ-PrPSc molecules, propagated from ΔC-PrPSc (Figure 2B), were prepared in the same manner. By serial dilution, each inoculum contained 10−15 of the original seed, equivalent to less than one original PrPSc molecule [8]. PrPSc preparations (30 µL) were injected intracerebrally into female CD-1 mice aged 6 weeks (Charles River Laboratories, Wilmington, MA). For two samples (ΔC-PrPSc and ΔΔ-PrPSc), end-point dilution bioassays were performed, in which 10-fold serial dilutions were inoculated to measure the amount of prion infectivity present in the original sample. As described previously [11], animals were monitored daily for clinical signs of neurological dysfunction over the standard one-year observation period. Animals showing terminal scrapie were sacrificed, and their brains were analyzed for PrPSc (by 25 µg/mL protease digestion and immunoblot) and for spongiform degeneration (by hematoxylin & eosin histology) [11]. Random asymptomatic animals were sacrificed after one year, and their brains were likewise analyzed for PrPSc and spongiform degeneration.
Figure 1

Interaction of wild-type PrPSc with mutant PrP molecules.

(A) Binding of PrPSc to PrP. RML scrapie-infected mouse brain homogenate was incubated with myc-tagged PrP of wild-type sequence or lacking the central (ΔC-PBD: Δ100–109) or N-terminal (ΔN-PBD: Δ23–28) polybasic domain. Bound PrPSc was captured with 9E10 anti-myc antibody on magnetic protein A Dynabeads, and detected by 25 µg/mL proteinase K digestion and anti-PrP (6D11) immunoblot. (B) Propagation of PrPSc. RML scrapie-infected mouse brain homogenate was propagated by serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification (sPMCA) for five rounds with wild-type or polybasic deletion mutant PrPC prepared from Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. Reactions were supplemented with Prnp mouse brain homogenate. In addition to scrapie-seeded reactions, an unseeded reaction was performed with ΔC-PBD PrP substrate. One sample of each reaction was not subjected to protease digestion (−PK). All others were subjected to limited proteolysis with 25 µg/mL proteinase K. PrP was detected by immunoblot (anti-PrP 27/33).

Figure 2

Interaction of ΔC-PBD PrPSc with mutant PrP molecules.

(A) Binding of ΔC-PBD PrPSc to PrP. ΔC-PBD PrPSc was incubated with wild-type or polybasic mutant (ΔC-PBD, ΔN-PBD) myc-tagged PrP. Bound PrPSc was captured with 9E10 anti-myc antibody on magnetic protein A Dynabeads, and detected by 25 µg/mL proteinase K digestion and anti-PrP (27/33) immunoblot. (B) Propagation of ΔC-PBD PrPSc. ΔC-PBD PrPSc was propagated by sPMCA with polybasic deletion mutant PrPC prepared from Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. Reactions were supplemented with Prnp mouse brain homogenate. One sample of each reaction was not subjected to protease digestion (−PK), loading ¼ of volume. All others were subjected to limited proteolysis by 25 µg/mL proteinase K digestion. PrP was detected by immunoblot (anti-PrP 27/33).

Interaction of wild-type PrPSc with mutant PrP molecules.

(A) Binding of PrPSc to PrP. RML scrapie-infected mouse brain homogenate was incubated with myc-tagged PrP of wild-type sequence or lacking the central (ΔC-PBD: Δ100–109) or N-terminal (ΔN-PBD: Δ23–28) polybasic domain. Bound PrPSc was captured with 9E10 anti-myc antibody on magnetic protein A Dynabeads, and detected by 25 µg/mL proteinase K digestion and anti-PrP (6D11) immunoblot. (B) Propagation of PrPSc. RML scrapie-infected mouse brain homogenate was propagated by serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification (sPMCA) for five rounds with wild-type or polybasic deletion mutant PrPC prepared from Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. Reactions were supplemented with Prnp mouse brain homogenate. In addition to scrapie-seeded reactions, an unseeded reaction was performed with ΔC-PBD PrP substrate. One sample of each reaction was not subjected to protease digestion (−PK). All others were subjected to limited proteolysis with 25 µg/mL proteinase K. PrP was detected by immunoblot (anti-PrP 27/33).

Interaction of ΔC-PBD PrPSc with mutant PrP molecules.

(A) Binding of ΔC-PBD PrPSc to PrP. ΔC-PBD PrPSc was incubated with wild-type or polybasic mutant (ΔC-PBD, ΔN-PBD) myc-tagged PrP. Bound PrPSc was captured with 9E10 anti-myc antibody on magnetic protein A Dynabeads, and detected by 25 µg/mL proteinase K digestion and anti-PrP (27/33) immunoblot. (B) Propagation of ΔC-PBD PrPSc. ΔC-PBD PrPSc was propagated by sPMCA with polybasic deletion mutant PrPC prepared from Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. Reactions were supplemented with Prnp mouse brain homogenate. One sample of each reaction was not subjected to protease digestion (−PK), loading ¼ of volume. All others were subjected to limited proteolysis by 25 µg/mL proteinase K digestion. PrP was detected by immunoblot (anti-PrP 27/33).

Ethics statement

All animals were handled in strict accordance with good animal practice, as defined by the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals of the National Institutes of Health. The Dartmouth College Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee approved the animal work (assurance number A3259-01). Inoculations were performed under isoflurane anesthesia, and all efforts were made to minimize suffering.

Results

Interaction and propagation of wild-type PrPSc with PrP molecules lacking polybasic domains

Studies using fragments of PrP identified N-terminal (23–28) and central (100–109 in mouse) polybasic domains as potential binding sites for PrPSc [14], [16]. To investigate the role of these domains in the context of full-length PrPC, we developed a novel magnet-based assay to examine direct interaction between PrPSc and PrPC molecules with or without deletions of these polybasic regions. In this assay, PrPSc was incubated with purified recombinant myc-tagged PrP, and then adherent molecules were pulled down by α-myc antibodies attached to Protein A magnetic beads. Substitution of a short myc epitope in place of the C-terminal glycophosphatidylinositol anchor of PrPC permitted specific capture. The assay specifically assesses PrPSc binding to PrP (Figure S1 in Supporting Information S1), and indicates that purified PrPSc binds to purified PrP (Figure S2 in Supporting Information S1). Next, we compared binding of PrPSc to wild-type and mutant PrP substrates. In contrast to quantitative RML PrPSc binding by wild-type PrP (∼100% by densitometry), PrP lacking the central polybasic domain (ΔC) bound significantly less PrPSc (∼50%) and N-terminal polybasic deletion mutant PrP (ΔN) bound still less PrPSc (∼20%) (Figure 1A). Purified PrPSc also adhered to wild-type PrP more strongly than to polybasic mutant PrP (Figure S2 in Supporting Information S1). These results suggest that both PrP polybasic domains contribute to PrPSc binding. To test the function of PrPC polybasic domains in prion propagation, we performed sPMCA experiments with wild type and mutant PrPC substrate. These PrPC molecules, prepared from CHO cells transfected with wild-type or mutant Prnp DNA, were detergent-soluble (Figure S3 in Supporting Information S1) and membrane-anchored (Figure S4 in Supporting Information S1), indicative of proper folding and intracellular trafficking. In reconstituted, three-round sPMCA experiments with PrPC and Prnp brain homogenate, PrPSc propagated efficiently, converting the PrPC to protease-resistant autocatalytic PrPSc molecules (Figure 1B and S5 in Supporting Information S1). In contrast, PrPC molecules missing one (ΔN, ΔC) or both (ΔΔ) polybasic domains did not support efficient propagation, indicating that PrPC requires these domains to facilitate PrPSc propagation. This result was also found with Sc237 hamster prions, as we observed no propagation of protease-resistant PrP with polybasic mutant hamster PrPC (Figure S5 in Supporting Information S1). When we examined propagation in polybasic mutant substrates beyond three rounds, surprisingly, one mutant (ΔC) reproducibly produced PrPSc molecules, typically between rounds 3–5 (Figure 1B). Further, these ΔC-PrPSc molecules propagated robustly and indefinitely (Figure S6 in Supporting Information S1), indicating capability of PrPC to support propagation despite absence of the central polybasic domain. Indeed, ΔC-PrP conversion was extremely efficient, with ∼100% of substrate converted to PrPSc, outpacing even wild-type PrP conversion ratios (∼20% of substrate). ΔC-PrPSc molecules appear to derive from the original wild-type PrPSc seed, as unseeded reactions did not generate PrPSc (Figure 1B).

Interaction range of ΔC-PrPSc molecules

The unexpected generation of ΔC-PrPSc molecules led us to conduct a series of experiments to assess the role of polybasic domains in ΔC-PrPSc propagation. Using the magnetic myc-capture assay, we tested binding to various PrP substrates. In contrast to wild-type PrPSc, ΔC-PrPSc reproducibly bound more strongly to ΔC-PrP (∼50% of input) than to wild type PrP (∼35% of input) (Figure 2A). Furthermore, ΔC-PrPSc bound to ΔN-PrP (∼30% of input), suggesting a significantly different interaction mechanism than wild-type PrPSc. Interestingly, wild-type PrPSc-PrPC binding appeared stronger than ΔC-PBD mutant PrPSc-PrPC interactions. We next examined ΔC-PrPSc propagation with other polybasic mutant substrates. Fitting with its binding behavior, ΔC-PrPSc propagated successfully in ΔN-PrPC (Figure 2B). Moreover, the ΔC-PrPSc seed also propagated in ΔΔ-PrPC with robust conversion, indicating that presence of a polybasic domain is not an absolute requirement for PrPC to convert to a protease-resistant autocatalytic form. Indeed, all three types of ΔPBD-PrPSc molecules propagated robustly, with stringent proteinase K digestion (25 µg/mL) revealing a protease-resistant core with a ∼7 kDa molecular weight shift.

Cofactor dependence and seeding specificity of PrPSc molecules lacking polybasic domains

Infectious wild-type PrPSc molecules depend on accessory cofactor molecules for propagation [11], [12], [31]. We tested whether polybasic domain mutant PrPSc molecules exhibit this characteristic by performing parallel sPMCA reactions, omitting the supplemental Prnp brain homogenate from one set (Figure 3). All three PrPSc mutants (ΔC, ΔN, and ΔΔ) failed to propagate in the absence of Prnp brain homogenate, pointing to a cofactor-dependent propagation mechanism. The signals seen in initial rounds of cofactor-negative propagation are likely due to the presence of residual Prnp brain homogenate carried over from the PrPSc seed mixture. By the third round of sPMCA in cofactor-free substrate, no PrPSc molecules were detected.
Figure 3

Effect of accessory cofactors on the propagation of ΔPBD PrPSc molecules.

In vitro-generated ΔC-PBD, ΔN-PBD, and ΔΔ-PBD PrPSc molecules were propagated by sPMCA with autologous PrPC prepared from Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. One set of reactions was supplemented with Prnp mouse brain homogenate (+cofactor), while a second set received only buffer (−cofactor). One sample of each reaction was not subjected to protease digestion (−PK), while all others were digested with 25 µg/mL proteinase K. –PK reactions for ΔC-PBD and ΔΔ-PBD were loaded with ¼ volume. PrP was detected by immunoblot (anti-PrP 27/33).

Effect of accessory cofactors on the propagation of ΔPBD PrPSc molecules.

In vitro-generated ΔC-PBD, ΔN-PBD, and ΔΔ-PBD PrPSc molecules were propagated by sPMCA with autologous PrPC prepared from Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. One set of reactions was supplemented with Prnp mouse brain homogenate (+cofactor), while a second set received only buffer (−cofactor). One sample of each reaction was not subjected to protease digestion (−PK), while all others were digested with 25 µg/mL proteinase K. –PK reactions for ΔC-PBD and ΔΔ-PBD were loaded with ¼ volume. PrP was detected by immunoblot (anti-PrP 27/33). Infectious PrPSc seeds propagation in wild-type brain homogenate [32], [33] to the extent that successful sPMCA propagation is considered potentially diagnostic for prion infectivity [9]. We tested if ΔPBD-PrPSc molecules could seed propagation in wild-type brain homogenate (Figure 4). Like wild-type PrPSc, all three PrPSc polybasic mutants (ΔC, ΔN, and ΔΔ) seeded serial propagation with success. Each of these reactions displayed positive conversion signals in round 1, suggesting a high amount of prion infectivity [34]. Interestingly, the PrPSc molecules that formed were predominantly diglycosylated, whereas PrPSc molecules formed from wild-type seeds displayed the three glycoforms in equivalent amounts. It has been shown that the ability to produce different PrPSc glycoforms is not due to preferential interaction, but rather inherent conformation [35]. This study found that mouse RML prions only require unglycosylated PrPC for propagation, and that glycosylated forms of PrPSc can be made in its presence. This suggests that the observed glycosylation pattern described here may be caused by a different fold in polybasic mutant PrPSc.
Figure 4

ΔPBD PrPSc molecules seeding wild-type brain homogenate sPMCA reactions.

In vitro-generated ΔC-PBD, ΔN-PBD, and ΔΔ-PBD PrPSc molecules were propagated by sPMCA for three rounds with wild-type mouse brain homogenate, containing wild-type PrPC substrate. Control reactions seeded with wild-type native RML prions and unseeded reactions were also tested. One sample of each reaction was not subjected to protease digestion (−PK), while all others were digested with 25 µg/mL proteinase K. PrP was detected by immunoblot (anti-PrP 6D11).

ΔPBD PrPSc molecules seeding wild-type brain homogenate sPMCA reactions.

In vitro-generated ΔC-PBD, ΔN-PBD, and ΔΔ-PBD PrPSc molecules were propagated by sPMCA for three rounds with wild-type mouse brain homogenate, containing wild-type PrPC substrate. Control reactions seeded with wild-type native RML prions and unseeded reactions were also tested. One sample of each reaction was not subjected to protease digestion (−PK), while all others were digested with 25 µg/mL proteinase K. PrP was detected by immunoblot (anti-PrP 6D11). Thus, all three PBD mutant PrPSc molecules share the hallmark biochemical characteristics of infectious wild-type PrPSc molecules [11]: (1) a highly protease-resistant core, (2) cofactor-dependent propagation, and (3) the ability to seed wild-type brain homogenate sPMCA reactions.

Infectivity of polybasic mutant PrPSc molecules

We tested whether mutant PrPSc molecules, generated in vitro from CHO-expressed PrP, are infectious to animals. Following sPMCA propagation sufficient to dilute out original seeds, wild-type and mutant (ΔC, ΔN, and ΔΔ) PrPSc molecules were inoculated intracerebrally into wild-type mice. Wild-type CHO PrPSc contains significant infectivity, causing scrapie disease in all animals with an incubation period comparable to RML prions propagated in vitro in brain homogenate [36] (Table 1). Affected animals displayed accumulation of protease-resistant prion protein and significant histopathological spongiform degeneration (Figure 5), as we previously reported for hamster prions propagated in vitro in wild-type CHO-expressed hamster PrP [29]. Animals inoculated with wild-type CHO PrPSc also showed robust levels of protease-resistant PrPSc on Western blot.
Table 1

Biological infectivity assay of in vitro-generated autocatalytic PrPSc molecules.

Incubation period (days)
InoculumCatalytic PrPSc Dilution dScrapie killed eKilled, not scrapie fUnspecified death
Wild-type PrPSc +10−1 162,162,193,203
ΔC-PBD PrPSc +10−1 453,460,469371350,418
10−2 461,547317,397
10−3 611398388,507
10−4 547275,505
10−5 245,421,448,587
10−6 426,635,635
10−7 635,635,635427
a ΔN-PBD PrPSc +10−1 564455360,394,405,421,480,511
a ΔΔ-PBD PrPSc +10−1 457,477239,294,347,450,466,490
10−2 393371,541,576
10−3 233,478464,595
10−4 581456,556
10−5 602,602428,498
10−6 337,366,548450
10−7 602,602490,590
b No PrP10−1 427,635576
c ΔC-PBD PrPC 10−1 635,635476
c ΔN-PBD PrPC 10−1 602,602,602,602
c ΔΔ-PBD PrPC 10−1 602,602,602498,543,548

RML prions were propagated in vitro by sPMCA with purified CHO-expressed PrPC+Prnp brain homogenate.

Generated by in vitro propagation of ΔC-PBD PrPSc (Figure 2).

Propagation in mock-purified untransfected CHO lysate+Prnp brain homogenate.

Unseeded PMCA reactions.

Upon observation of clinical signs, scrapie illness was confirmed by Western blot for protease-resistant PrP and histopathology for spongiform degeneration.

These animals showed no clinical signs of scrapie illness, and upon death or sacrifice were found to be negative biochemically for protease-resistant PrP and pathologically for spongiform degeneration. After >600 days post-inoculation, all remaining animals were sacrificed, analyzed for PrPSc, and included in this table.

These animals showed no clinical signs of scrapie illness, but tissue was not obtained due to sacrifice for other condition (such as dermatitis) or sudden death.

Figure 5

Biochemical and neuropathological analysis of mice inoculated with in vitro-generated PrPSc molecules.

Brains were dissected from wild-type mice showing terminal scrapie signs (PrPSc and ΔC-PBD PrPSc inocula) or similarly aged mice not displaying scrapie signs (mock-propagated, ΔN-PBD PrPSc, and ΔΔ-PBD PrPSc inocula). (A) Equivalent amounts of 10% brain homogenate were treated with buffer (−PK) or 25 µg/mL proteinase K (+PK to show PrPSc) and detected by anti-PrP (6D11) immunoblot. A greater exposure of the same immunoblot is displayed below, to illustrate samples containing low amounts of PrPSc. (B) Neuropathology of cerebellum and hippocampus. Brain sections were stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E). The black bar denotes 100 µm.

Biochemical and neuropathological analysis of mice inoculated with in vitro-generated PrPSc molecules.

Brains were dissected from wild-type mice showing terminal scrapie signs (PrPSc and ΔC-PBD PrPSc inocula) or similarly aged mice not displaying scrapie signs (mock-propagated, ΔN-PBD PrPSc, and ΔΔ-PBD PrPSc inocula). (A) Equivalent amounts of 10% brain homogenate were treated with buffer (−PK) or 25 µg/mL proteinase K (+PK to show PrPSc) and detected by anti-PrP (6D11) immunoblot. A greater exposure of the same immunoblot is displayed below, to illustrate samples containing low amounts of PrPSc. (B) Neuropathology of cerebellum and hippocampus. Brain sections were stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E). The black bar denotes 100 µm. RML prions were propagated in vitro by sPMCA with purified CHO-expressed PrPC+Prnp brain homogenate. Generated by in vitro propagation of ΔC-PBD PrPSc (Figure 2). Propagation in mock-purified untransfected CHO lysate+Prnp brain homogenate. Unseeded PMCA reactions. Upon observation of clinical signs, scrapie illness was confirmed by Western blot for protease-resistant PrP and histopathology for spongiform degeneration. These animals showed no clinical signs of scrapie illness, and upon death or sacrifice were found to be negative biochemically for protease-resistant PrP and pathologically for spongiform degeneration. After >600 days post-inoculation, all remaining animals were sacrificed, analyzed for PrPSc, and included in this table. These animals showed no clinical signs of scrapie illness, but tissue was not obtained due to sacrifice for other condition (such as dermatitis) or sudden death. In contrast to wild-type, polybasic mutant PrPSc molecules show diminished in vivo infectivity. ΔC-PrPSc caused scrapie disease only in a fraction of animals, including those receiving the most concentrated inocula, with an incubation time 2.5-fold greater than animals inoculated with wild-type PrPSc. ΔC-PrPSc-inoculated diseased animals showed mild vacuolation (Figures 5B and S7 in Supporting Information S1) and displayed low levels of PrPSc on Western blot, with diglycosylated molecules most abundant. Such a glycoform ratio contrasts with the even distribution of glycoforms in animals inoculated with wild-type PrPSc (Figures 5A and S8 in Supporting Information S1), also seen with in vitro propagation (Figure 4). Both wild-type and ΔC-PrPSc induced scrapie illness characterized neurologically by lethargy and ataxia. ΔN-PrPSc molecules induced scrapie illness in a single animal, following a 564-day incubation period (Figure S9 in Supporting Information S1), with other such inoculated animals showing no scrapie illness (Figure 5). Due to the sudden nature of some deaths, we did not obtain tissue from all animals, but brain samples from many non-scrapie deaths were obtained as indicated in Table 1. ΔΔ-PrPSc molecules did not induce scrapie illness, as gauged by clinical observation and lack of protease-resistant PrP or histopathological change in animals sacrificed over one year after inoculation (Figure 5). Thus, while polybasic deletion mutant PrPSc molecules recapitulated in vitro many characteristics of infectious PrPSc molecules, they displayed low specific infectivity in wild-type mice.

Discussion

In this study, we have engineered polybasic domain deficient PrPSc molecules that efficiently interact with and catalyze the conversion of an expanded range of PrPC substrates, including native PrPC in wild-type mouse brain homogenate. Remarkably, despite possessing the biochemical characteristics and in vitro seeding activity of wild-type prions, PBD-deficient PrPSc molecules possessed little or no in vivo infectivity.

Requirement of PrPC polybasic domains for propagation of wild-type PrPSc

Studies of PrP fragments have indicated that polybasic domains can interact with PrPSc [14], [16]. To investigate both prion binding and conversion in the context of the entire PrP molecule, we designed mutant prion proteins lacking one or both polybasic domains, which were detergent-soluble and properly trafficked, as determined by PI-PLC release. Using a novel magnetic capture assay, we found that both PrPC polybasic domains were required for optimal PrPSc binding. In reconstituted sPMCA experiments with PrP expressed and prepared from CHO cells, deletion of either or both polybasic domains of substrate PrPC prevented efficient propagation of wild-type PrPSc. As mutants lacking either domain did not efficiently bind or propagate wild-type PrPSc, both PrPC polybasic domains appear required to contact PrPSc for efficient propagation of wild-type prions. Work using N2a cells co-expressing wild-type and mutant PrP suggested that the N-terminal polybasic domain may not play a role in conversion [27]. However, the presence of endogenous wild-type PrPC may have provided conditions that facilitated conversion of the weaker-binding mutant PrP substrate. The results presented in this paper, using mutant substrate alone to test binding and propagation, suggest that the PrPC N-terminal polybasic domain indeed participates in wild-type PrPSc binding and propagation.

Delayed conversion of PrP lacking polybasic domains

When sPMCA reactions seeded with wild-type prions were carried out to 3–5 rounds, ΔC-PrPC substrate molecules converted to a form resistant to protease digestion under stringent conditions (25 µg/mL proteinase K at 37°C). After protease digestion, this form displayed a classical shift in molecular weight of ∼7 kDa. This form was also autocatalytic, continuing to propagate robustly (∼100% conversion) and indefinitely in ΔC-PrPC substrate. In seeking to understand the surprising kinetics of the initial conversion event, which occurred after four rounds and 10−4 dilution of the original seed, we found that unseeded control reactions did not generate the mutant PrPSc product. Thus, ΔC-PrPSc did not arise de novo [11], but may have emerged from amplification of a few molecules of a minority conformation present in the original PrPSc seed. Such an event is consistent with recent reports of multiple prion strains emerging from a single “pure” source [37], [38], and 4–5 serial amplification rounds are required to detect PrPSc conformers at very low concentrations [34].

Expanded substrate range and increased converting efficiency of ΔC-PrPSc

Once formed, the novel ΔC-PrPSc molecules bound to and propagated in ΔN-PrPC and ΔΔ-PrPC substrates, forming new PrPSc molecules lacking either one or both polybasic domains. Thus, in contrast to wild-type PrPSc, ΔC-PrPSc is universally catalytic in polybasic mutant PrPC, exhibiting an expanded substrate range that points to an alternative docking mechanism during propagation. Each of the ΔPBD PrPSc species propagated robustly, including even the mutant lacking both polybasic domains (ΔΔ). While wild-type PrPSc propagates by binding to substrate polybasic domains, ΔPBD mutant PrPSc molecules appear to utilize a different mechanism to bind PrPC, as outlined by the model in Figure 6. This indicates that prion docking, and perhaps other events in conversion, do not necessarily follow a rigidly conserved mechanism. In contrast, self-replicating fungal prions appear to utilize a stereotypic mechanism requiring glutamine/asparagine repeats [39].
Figure 6

Model of PrP replicative interaction mechanisms.

This diagram summarizes a proposed model for the interaction, propagation, and infectivity behavior of wild-type and polybasic deletion mutant PrP molecules. Wild-type PrPSc seed binds and propagates efficiently with autologous PrPC substrate, using PrPC polybasic domains (represented by rectangular protrusion) for docking. However, if PrPC lacks one or both polybasic domains, PrPSc binds less well and exhibits impaired propagation. If PrPSc molecules lacking polybasic domains can be formed, they can bind and propagate efficiently with an expanded range of PrPC substrates. ΔPBD-PrPSc may propagate by a different mechanism than wild-type PrPSc, utilizing different residues (symbolized by round protrusion) of PrPC for binding. A neoepitope (round depression) may be exposed in the polybasic mutant PrPSc molecules. Legend: Sc = PrPSc; C = PrPC; WT = wild-type. ΔPBD = deletion in polybasic domain; ++ = polybasic domain.

Model of PrP replicative interaction mechanisms.

This diagram summarizes a proposed model for the interaction, propagation, and infectivity behavior of wild-type and polybasic deletion mutant PrP molecules. Wild-type PrPSc seed binds and propagates efficiently with autologous PrPC substrate, using PrPC polybasic domains (represented by rectangular protrusion) for docking. However, if PrPC lacks one or both polybasic domains, PrPSc binds less well and exhibits impaired propagation. If PrPSc molecules lacking polybasic domains can be formed, they can bind and propagate efficiently with an expanded range of PrPC substrates. ΔPBD-PrPSc may propagate by a different mechanism than wild-type PrPSc, utilizing different residues (symbolized by round protrusion) of PrPC for binding. A neoepitope (round depression) may be exposed in the polybasic mutant PrPSc molecules. Legend: Sc = PrPSc; C = PrPC; WT = wild-type. ΔPBD = deletion in polybasic domain; ++ = polybasic domain. The expanded interaction range of mutant PrPSc molecules could be explained by the exposure of a neoepitope on mutant PrPSc (Figure 6). If ΔPBD mutant PrPSc molecules propagate from a minority constituent conformer within wild-type PrPSc, the putative neoepitope may also be present on these minority seed molecules. Mechanisms of PrPSc docking may also vary between different natural prion strains. Further studies are required to assess binding-site heterogeneity of PrPSc-PrPC interactions, including identification of specific docking sites used by ΔΔ-PBD molecules. We also observed that ΔC-PrPSc molecules, once formed, catalyzed nearly complete conversion of autologous substrate, ∼5-fold greater than wild-type PrPSc autocatalysis. Thus, ΔC-PrPSc molecules show robust catalytic activity in terms of both substrate range and prion protein converting efficiency.

Polybasic deficient PrPSc molecules resemble wild-type PrPSc in vitro

Our biochemical analysis revealed that ΔPBD PrPSc mutants possess all of the biochemical hallmarks that characterize wild-type infectious prions. All three ΔPBD PrPSc mutants (ΔC, ΔN, and ΔΔ) drive conversion of PrPC in wild-type brain homogenate sPMCA experiments, a model of the conversion event in prion pathogenesis [8]. Furthermore, ΔPBD PrPSc molecules are resistant to stringent protease digestion, demonstrating a post-digestion molecular weight shift that is characteristic of PrPSc. ΔPBD PrPSc molecules are also autocatalytic, propagating indefinitely in autologous PrPC substrate. The propagation of ΔPBD PrPSc requires an accessory cofactor provided by Prnp brain homogenate. Thus, unlike some fungal protein conformations, which have been shown to propagate in vitro with only the alternatively folded substrate protein [40], [41], [42], [43], ΔPBD PrPSc behaves like infectious mammalian prions in requiring a supplementary cofactor for propagation [11], [12], [31], [44], [45].

Dissociation of brain homogenate sPMCA seeding activity from in vivo infectivity

PrPSc table-1-captionmolecules generated from CHO-expressed wild-type PrPC induced scrapie illness in wild-type mice with a 100% attack rate (scrapie incubation time = 180±11 days). In contrast, despite exhibiting the in vitro hallmarks of wild-type infectious PrPSc as described above, mutant ΔC-PrPSc and ΔN-PrPSc molecules showed low infectivity in vivo (≤3000 LD50 units/mL and ∼300 LD50 units/mL, respectively), and ΔΔ-PrPSc showed no infectivity. Some inoculum-host PrP sequence N-terminal differences can mildly prolong scrapie incubation time, but these did not alter attack rates [46], [47], and much larger N-terminal PrPSc deletions than the ΔN-PrPSc that we report here did not significantly affect incubation time or attack rate in wild-type animals [23]. For example, protease-digested PrPSc yields PrP27-30, which is highly infectious to wild-type animals despite lacking amino acids 23–88 [48], [49]. Given that ΔPBD PrPSc molecules drive robust propagation in vitro in wild-type brain homogenate sPMCA, their diminished biological infectivity was highly unexpected, and represents dissociation between in vitro catalysis and in vivo infectivity, most notably for ΔN-PBD and ΔΔ-PBD PrPSc. To our knowledge, this report is the first demonstration of absent or minimal infectivity in samples that successfully seed propagation of wild-type brain homogenate during sPMCA, suggesting that the normal route of PrPC/PrPSc interaction through polybasic domains may be required for generating infectious prions. Why might appropriate PBD-mediated interaction be required for infectivity? One possibility is that PBD-deficient PrPSc molecules may be more susceptible to existing host mechanisms for prion clearance [50], [51], [52], [53], perhaps by exposure of a neoepitope on PrPSc that serves as a clearance signal. If this explanation were correct, then all three PBD-deficient PrPSc molecules must be preferential targets for the clearance mechanism. A more plausible explanation is that the non-PBD mediated interaction mechanisms used by ΔPBD-PrPSc molecules to propagate in vitro lead to the production of alternative PrPSc conformations that are intrinsically non-infectious or have reduced infectivity. Consistent with this explanation, we observed different PrPSc glycosylation patterns in animals inoculated with ΔC-PrPSc compared to animals inoculated with wild-type PrPSc. Such a distinction could be caused by an altered ability of mutant PrPSc to interact with non-PrP host molecules during in vivo propagation. For example, the in vitro detergent micelle environment differs from the membrane environments where propagation occurs in vivo. On the other hand, high titers of strain-preserved prion infectivity are propagated in vitro in detergent micelles [8], [11], [32], suggesting that in vitro propagation recapitulates native events fairly well. Finally, it should be emphasized that although mutant PrPSc molecules were used in this study to uncover the dissociation between seeding ability and infectivity, the results are directly relevant to the mechanisms responsible for forming naturally occurring prions because normal wild type brain homogenates and normal wild type mice were used in sPMCA seeding assays and in vivo bioassays, respectively. The contrast between highly infectious wild type PrPSc and minimally infectious ΔPBD-PrPSc molecules provides a novel paradigm that can be used to determine the specific structural basis of prion infectivity. Supporting methods and nine supporting figures: S1–S9. This supporting information contains figures that are referenced in the main text and additional methods for the supporting figures. (DOC) Click here for additional data file.
  53 in total

1.  Formation of native prions from minimal components in vitro.

Authors:  Nathan R Deleault; Brent T Harris; Judy R Rees; Surachai Supattapone
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2007-05-29       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Cell-free propagation of prion strains.

Authors:  Joaquín Castilla; Rodrigo Morales; Paula Saá; Marcelo Barria; Pierluigi Gambetti; Claudio Soto
Journal:  EMBO J       Date:  2008-09-18       Impact factor: 11.598

3.  Autophagy induction by trehalose counteracts cellular prion infection.

Authors:  Yasmine Aguib; Andreas Heiseke; Sabine Gilch; Constanze Riemer; Michael Baier; Hermann M Schätzl; Alexa Ertmer
Journal:  Autophagy       Date:  2009-04-19       Impact factor: 16.016

4.  Identifying key components of the PrPC-PrPSc replicative interface.

Authors:  Gil C Abalos; Justin T Cruite; Anne Bellon; Saskia Hemmers; Junya Akagi; James A Mastrianni; R Anthony Williamson; Laura Solforosi
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2008-09-30       Impact factor: 5.157

5.  The polybasic N-terminal region of the prion protein controls the physical properties of both the cellular and fibrillar forms of PrP.

Authors:  Valeriy G Ostapchenko; Natallia Makarava; Regina Savtchenko; Ilia V Baskakov
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  2008-09-04       Impact factor: 5.469

6.  The effects of prion protein proteolysis and disaggregation on the strain properties of hamster scrapie.

Authors:  Andrea M Deleault; Nathan R Deleault; Brent T Harris; Judy R Rees; Surachai Supattapone
Journal:  J Gen Virol       Date:  2008-10       Impact factor: 3.891

7.  Darwinian evolution of prions in cell culture.

Authors:  Jiali Li; Shawn Browning; Sukhvir P Mahal; Anja M Oelschlegel; Charles Weissmann
Journal:  Science       Date:  2009-12-31       Impact factor: 47.728

8.  Crossing the species barrier by PrP(Sc) replication in vitro generates unique infectious prions.

Authors:  Joaquín Castilla; Dennisse Gonzalez-Romero; Paula Saá; Rodrigo Morales; Jorge De Castro; Claudio Soto
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2008-09-05       Impact factor: 41.582

9.  Characterization of prion protein (PrP)-derived peptides that discriminate full-length PrPSc from PrPC.

Authors:  Anthony L Lau; Alice Y Yam; Melissa M D Michelitsch; Xuemei Wang; Carol Gao; Robert J Goodson; Robert Shimizu; Gulliver Timoteo; John Hall; Angelica Medina-Selby; Doris Coit; Colin McCoin; Bruce Phelps; Ping Wu; Celine Hu; David Chien; David Peretz
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2007-06-29       Impact factor: 11.205

10.  Trans-dominant inhibition of prion propagation in vitro is not mediated by an accessory cofactor.

Authors:  James C Geoghegan; Michael B Miller; Aimee H Kwak; Brent T Harris; Surachai Supattapone
Journal:  PLoS Pathog       Date:  2009-07-31       Impact factor: 6.823

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  32 in total

1.  Cofactor molecules induce structural transformation during infectious prion formation.

Authors:  Michael B Miller; Daphne W Wang; Fei Wang; Geoffrey P Noble; Jiyan Ma; Virgil L Woods; Sheng Li; Surachai Supattapone
Journal:  Structure       Date:  2013-10-10       Impact factor: 5.006

2.  Molecular dynamics simulations of early steps in RNA-mediated conversion of prions.

Authors:  Erik J Alred; Michael Nguyen; Maggie Martin; Ulrich H E Hansmann
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  2017-04-30       Impact factor: 6.725

Review 3.  The diversity and relationship of prion protein self-replicating states.

Authors:  Nina Klimova; Natallia Makarava; Ilia V Baskakov
Journal:  Virus Res       Date:  2014-10-13       Impact factor: 3.303

4.  The N-terminal, polybasic region of PrP(C) dictates the efficiency of prion propagation by binding to PrP(Sc).

Authors:  Jessie A Turnbaugh; Ursula Unterberger; Paula Saá; Tania Massignan; Brian R Fluharty; Frederick P Bowman; Michael B Miller; Surachai Supattapone; Emiliano Biasini; David A Harris
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2012-06-27       Impact factor: 6.167

5.  Uncontrolled SFK-mediated protein trafficking in prion and Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  Edward Málaga-Trillo; Katharina Ochs
Journal:  Prion       Date:  2016-09-02       Impact factor: 3.931

Review 6.  Prion neurotoxicity.

Authors:  Nhat T T Le; Bei Wu; David A Harris
Journal:  Brain Pathol       Date:  2019-01-17       Impact factor: 6.508

7.  Prion nucleation site unmasked by transient interaction with phospholipid cofactor.

Authors:  Ashley A Zurawel; Daniel J Walsh; Sean M Fortier; Tamutenda Chidawanyika; Suvrajit Sengupta; Kurt Zilm; Surachai Supattapone
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  2014-01-02       Impact factor: 3.162

8.  Prion formation, but not clearance, is supported by protein misfolding cyclic amplification.

Authors:  Ronald A Shikiya; Thomas E Eckland; Alan J Young; Jason C Bartz
Journal:  Prion       Date:  2014       Impact factor: 3.931

9.  Isolation of novel synthetic prion strains by amplification in transgenic mice coexpressing wild-type and anchorless prion proteins.

Authors:  Gregory J Raymond; Brent Race; Jason R Hollister; Danielle K Offerdahl; Roger A Moore; Ravindra Kodali; Lynne D Raymond; Andrew G Hughson; Rebecca Rosenke; Dan Long; David W Dorward; Gerald S Baron
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2012-08-22       Impact factor: 5.103

10.  Mutated but Not Deleted Ovine PrP(C) N-Terminal Polybasic Region Strongly Interferes with Prion Propagation in Transgenic Mice.

Authors:  Manal Khalifé; Fabienne Reine; Sophie Paquet-Fifield; Johan Castille; Laetitia Herzog; Marthe Vilotte; Mohammed Moudjou; Katayoun Moazami-Goudarzi; Samira Makhzami; Bruno Passet; Olivier Andréoletti; Didier Vilette; Hubert Laude; Vincent Béringue; Jean-Luc Vilotte
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2015-11-25       Impact factor: 5.103

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