Pierre Sarradin1, Céline Viglietta2, Claude Limouzin3, Olivier Andréoletti4, Nathalie Daniel-Carlier2, Céline Barc1, Mathieu Leroux-Coyau2, Patricia Berthon5, Jérôme Chapuis6, Christelle Rossignol5, Jean-Luc Gatti7, Maya Belghazi8, Valérie Labas9, Jean-Luc Vilotte10, Vincent Béringue6, Frédéric Lantier5, Hubert Laude6, Louis-Marie Houdebine2. 1. INRA-Université de Tours, UMR1282, Infectiologie et Santé Publique, ISP, Nouzilly, France; INRA, UE1277, Plate-Forme d'Infectiologie Expérimentale, PFIE, Nouzilly, France. 2. INRA-CNRS-ENVA, UMR1198, Biologie du Développement et Reproduction, BDR, Jouy-en-Josas, France. 3. INRA, UE1277, Plate-Forme d'Infectiologie Expérimentale, PFIE, Nouzilly, France. 4. UMR INRA ENVT 1225, Interactions Hôtes Agents Pathogènes, Toulouse, France. 5. INRA-Université de Tours, UMR1282, Infectiologie et Santé Publique, ISP, Nouzilly, France. 6. INRA, UR892, Virologie Immunologie Moléculaires, Jouy-en-Josas, France. 7. INRA- CNRS-UNS, UMR1355, Institut Sophia Agrobiotech, ISA, Sophia Antipolis, France; INRA, UMR INRA85, UMR CNRS 7247, Université de Tours, Institut Français du Cheval et de l'Equitation, Physiologie de la Reproduction et des Comportements, Plate-forme d'Analyse Intégrative des Biomolécules, Nouzilly, France. 8. INRA, UMR INRA85, UMR CNRS 7247, Université de Tours, Institut Français du Cheval et de l'Equitation, Physiologie de la Reproduction et des Comportements, Plate-forme d'Analyse Intégrative des Biomolécules, Nouzilly, France; CNRS-Aix-Marseille Université, UMR7286, Centre de Recherche en Neurobiologie et Neurophysiologie de Marseille, CRN2M, Marseille, France. 9. CNRS-Aix-Marseille Université, UMR7286, Centre de Recherche en Neurobiologie et Neurophysiologie de Marseille, CRN2M, Marseille, France. 10. INRA, UMR1313, Génétique Animale et Biologie Intégrative, Jouy-en-Josas, France.
Abstract
Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) are a group of neurodegenerative diseases affecting a wide range of mammalian species. They are caused by prions, a proteinaceous pathogen essentially composed of PrPSc, an abnormal isoform of the host encoded cellular prion protein PrPC. Constrained steric interactions between PrPSc and PrPC are thought to provide prions with species specificity, and to control cross-species transmission into other host populations, including humans. Transgenetic expression of foreign PrP genes has been successfully and widely used to overcome the recognized resistance of mouse to foreign TSE sources. Rabbit is one of the species that exhibit a pronounced resistance to TSEs. Most attempts to infect experimentally rabbit have failed, except after inoculation with cell-free generated rabbit prions. To gain insights on the molecular determinants of the relative resistance of rabbits to prions, we generated transgenic rabbits expressing the susceptible V136R154Q171 allele of the ovine PRNP gene on a rabbit wild type PRNP New Zealand background and assessed their experimental susceptibility to scrapie prions. All transgenic animals developed a typical TSE 6-8 months after intracerebral inoculation, whereas wild type rabbits remained healthy more than 700 days after inoculation. Despite the endogenous presence of rabbit PrPC, only ovine PrPSc was detectable in the brains of diseased animals. Collectively these data indicate that the low susceptibility of rabbits to prion infection is not enciphered within their non-PrP genetic background.
Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) are a group ofneurodegenerative diseases affecting a wide range ofmammalian species. They are caused by prions, a proteinaceous pathogen essentially composed ofPrPSc, an abnormal isoform ofthe host encoded cellular prion proteinPrPC. Constrained steric interactions between PrPSc and PrPC are thought to provide prions with species specificity, and to control cross-species transmission into other host populations, including humans. Transgenetic expression of foreign PrP genes has been successfully and widely used to overcome the recognized resistance ofmouseto foreign TSE sources. Rabbit is one ofthe species that exhibit a pronounced resistance to TSEs. Most attempts to infect experimentally rabbit have failed, except after inoculation with cell-free generated rabbit prions. To gain insights onthe molecular determinants ofthe relative resistance ofrabbitsto prions, we generated transgenicrabbits expressing the susceptible V136R154Q171 allele ofthe ovine PRNP gene on a rabbit wild type PRNP New Zealand background and assessed their experimental susceptibility to scrapie prions. All transgenic animals developed a typical TSE 6-8 months after intracerebral inoculation, whereas wild type rabbits remained healthy more than 700 days after inoculation. Despite the endogenous presence ofrabbit PrPC, only ovine PrPSc was detectable in the brains of diseased animals. Collectively these data indicate that the low susceptibility ofrabbits to prion infection is not enciphered within their non-PrP genetic background.
Scrapie in small ruminants, bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in cattle, chronic wasting disease (CWD) in cervids, transmissible minkencephalopathy (TME) or Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in humans belong to a group of fatal neurodegenerative diseases referred toas transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) or prion diseases [1]. TSEs are characterized by the accumulation in the central nervous system (CNS) of a ß-sheet enriched, protease-resistant and aggregated isoform (PrPSc) ofthe host encoded cellular prion protein (PrPC). During TSE pathogenesis, PrPSc seeds, acquired through infection or arising from spontaneous conversion of wild type or mutant PrPC, are believed to template the conformational change of host PrPCto nascent PrPSc forms. This autocatalytic polymerization process leads to deposition ofinjurious deposits into the brain. PrPSc particles are thought to be the major if notthe sole component ofTSEs infectious agent or prion [2]. Distinct strains of prions are recognized phenotypically in a given host species. They cause TSEs with specific phenotypic traits, including time course to disease, neuropathological features and PrPSc biochemical properties. There is compelling evidence that prion strain diversity reflects stable differences in PrPSc conformations, at the level ofthe tertiary and/or quaternary structure [3-5].A wide range of mammals like ruminants, pigs, rodents, carnivores or primates can be naturally and/or experimentally infected with prions. Prions are usually easy to transmit between individuals ofthe same species. Prions can also transmit between species, as exemplified by the emergence of variant CJD, following dietary exposure ofhumansto BSE prions. However, such events are restricted by a so-called ‘species’ or ‘transmission’ barrier, the strength of which depends essentially on interactions between host PrPC and the infecting prion strain type(s) [3, 4]. The force ofthe transmission barrier is classically gauged by the appearance of disease-specific, clinical signs and/or PrPSc in the brain and, sometimes, extraneural tissues ofthe new host. Their concomitant absence would usually suggest a resistance toinfection or a disease incubation time exceeding that ofthe exposed host life span [6-9]. Rabbits have long been recognized as one ofthe best examples of a species refractory to TSEs agents as attempts to transmit Kuru, CJD, sheep scrapie, TME isolates and mouse adapted scrapie strains repeatedly failed [6, 10]. In marked contrast, cell-free PrPSc-templated conversion ofPrPC by assays such asthe protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA, [11]) revealed that rabbit PrPC was fully convertible into rabbitPrPSc by seeds from scrapie infected, BSE and mouse scrapie brain sources ([12-14]). Yet, the amplified agents propagated with limited success in rabbits [12], leading support for the hypothesis that rabbit may barely develop clinical TSEs.Numerous transgenetic studies in mice have demonstrated that mouse resistance to foreign prions can be abrogated by introducing in themurine genome the corresponding PRNP gene (the gene encoding PrPC). Transgenes can be introduced in animals knocked out for their own Prnp gene or on a murine wild-type background (reviews: [15, 16]). Vidal et al. demonstrates that transgenic mice expressing rabbitPrP are permissive to a broad panel of TSE sources from different species [14], strongly advocating for the full convertibility ofrabbit PrPC into disease-associated isoforms. While transgenesis on a murinePrnp knockout background usually abolishes the transmission barrier, co-expression ofthe transgene with the wild-type Prnp gene can interfere with prion replication [17-19]. In sheep, different PRNP alleles tightly modulate the incidence and pathogenesis of classical scrapie. Three codons (for amino acids at positions 136, 154, and 171) act as major determinants, the V136R154Q171 allele conferring the highest susceptibility [20-22]. Experimental transmission of scrapie prions was markedly improved in transgenic mice overexpressing this allele [3, 23].In this study, we report that rabbits engineered to express transgenetically the V136R154Q171 ovine PRNP allele develop a TSE syndrome upon experimental inoculation with scrapie. Disease occurred at full attack rate, with no apparent interfering effect oftherabbit wild-type PrPC.
Material and Methods
Ethics statement
All the experiments involving animals were done in strict accordance with the European Community Council Directive 86/609/EEC. The French committee for GMO,-formerly the governmental "Commission de Génie Génétique" that belonged tothe French Ministry for Education, Research and Technology-, has approved the creation and experimental infection with prions oftherabbittransgenic animal model. The agreement number is 2992-II. It was issued the 12th of November 1998.
Generation of transgenic rabbits
A fragment ofthesheep genome containing the V136R154Q171 allele ofthePrnp gene was cloned in a bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) vector previously used to generate thetg338mouse line [23, 24]. This 125 kb insert, including 40 kb upstream and 60 kb downstream ofthePRNP gene, was purified following a Not1 digestion and microinjected into New Zealand White rabbit embryos. Approximately 700 hundred embryos (from 41 donor females) were microinjected (mostly in the male pronuclei). 600 embryos were implanted into 30 pseudo-pregnant females. There were 28 live births, of which one was transgenic, as identified by PCR. Rabbit DNA was extracted by digesting ear fragments using proteinase K-SDS method. Digestion was followed by a DNA precipitation by ethanol. The two primers used to identify thesheepPRNP gene were TAGGCAGTTGGATCCTGGTT and CCCTATCCTACTATGAGAAA. The primers used to identify the control endogenous αS1-casein gene were CACTCCCTTGTTGAAAACTCTCCTCAG and ATTTTGTGGTTTCAGATCAACCAATAGG.
RT-qPCR analyses
To estimate the concentration of ovine and rabbitPRNP RNA in ovine PrPtransgenicrabbits (TgOv), RT-qPCR analyses were performed on 3 animals per line, as previously described [25]. Two micrograms of total RNA (extracted from brain tissue) were reverse-transcribed with random adapters, following the manufacturer’s instructions [25]. Quantification was achieved by SYBR Green quantitative PCR (Applied Biosystems) using sets of primers specific tothePRNP ovine and rabbit sequences, resulting in the amplification of 100 bp long fragments, respectively. Two sets of primers were used for rabbitPRNP, owing the existence of two variants (with or without exon 2). The sequences ofthe specific primers were as follows: forward primer: 5’- TCATGGTGAAAAGCCACATAGG-3’, reverse primer: 5’- CCTCCGCCAGGTTTTGGT-3’ for ovine PRNP; forward primer: 5’-TCCTCTCGGCAGCTGTCAT-3’, reverse primer: 5’-GCTTCGGCCGCTTCTTG-3’ for RabbitPRNP without exon 2; forward primer: 5’-AGAGGCCCCAGTCCAGTGTA-3’; reverse primer: 5’-CACTCCACGTGGCCACAA-3’ for RabbitPRNP with exon 2. These primers were chosen so that they are located in different exons. The primers for β-actin were as follows: forward: 5’- CCGCATGCAGAAGGAGATCA-3’; reverse: 5’-AGAGCGAGGCCAGGATGGA-3’. For each sample, RNA concentration normalization was achieved using RT-qPCR on β-actin, as previously described [24]. It is thus given by the formula 2(CtPRNP-Ctβ-actin).
Scrapie inoculation of transgenic rabbits
Eighteen tgOvrabbits (9 males and 9 females) and 6 wild type (WT) rabbits (3 males and 3 females) aged 103 to 132 days (all bred at INRA Nouzilly) were selected for the experiment. Among them, twelve individually identified tgOv animals and six WT rabbits were injected with 50 μL of a 1% (wt/vol in 5% glucose) brain homogenate from tg338miceinfected with the LA21K fast strain. As controls, six tgOv animals were injected similarly with 50 μL of a 10% brain homogenate from a healthy tg338mouse.The inocula were prepared in a class II microbiological cabinet using disposable equipment, with strict safety rules, and immediately inoculated tothe animals by theintracerebral route, at the level ofthe right parietal cortex (depth: 1 cm). Inoculations were performed under general anesthesia by injecting a mixture ofxylazine (Rompun, Bayer, France) and ketamine (Imalgene, Merial, France) by the intramuscular route. All inoculations were carried out in compliance with ethics and animal welfare according to regulation requirements. The LA21K fast strain has been obtained through serial transmission and biological cloning by limiting dilutions ofthe Langlade field scrapie isolate (INRA Toulouse [26]) totg338mice. The LA21K fast infectious titer is 109.4 50% lethal doses (LD50)/g oftg338 brain [26].Rabbits were housed in individual cages, in a dedicated biosafety level-3 facility. They were monitored using a video system and monitored daily for clinical signs and food consumption, by different investigators. Any death arising during the experiment was recorded and animals were necropsied. At clinical stage, rabbits were sacrificed by carbon dioxide suffocation and autopsied for brain and spleen collection. One half of each brain and spleen was stored at –20°C for immunoblotting and biochemical analyses, while the other half of organs was fixed in neutral-buffered 4% formalin for 1 week before paraffin-embedding for immunohistochemistry and histology.
Immunoblotting
Brains and spleens were analyzed for the presence of either PrPC or PrPSc by Western blotting as previously described [27]. Briefly, homogenates were prepared with a tissue homogenizer (Precellys, Bertin Technologies, France) in a 5% glucose solution. PrP was purified and concentrated using the Bio-Rad TeSeE purification kit. When needed, suspensions were treated with 100 μg/mL of proteinase K (Roche diagnostics, Germany) for 30 min at 37°C and the final pellet was suspended in Laemmli buffer. Samples were denatured at 100°C for 10 minutes, centrifuged at 20 000 g for 5 minutes and the supernatants were run on 12% SDS-PAGE gels. When two-dimensional gel electrophoresis was performed, as previously described [28], the second dimension was run on a 6–16% linear gradient SDS-PAGE. After transfer onto nitrocellulose membranes, samples were probed with Sha31 anti-PrP monoclonal antibody (generous gift of J. Grassi, CEA, Saclay, France, [29]), which binds tothe YEDRYYRE amino acid sequence ofthePrP protein (amino acid (aa) residues 146 to 153 oftherabbitPrP, Fig 1). This step was followed by the addition of a horseradish peroxidase-conjugate. Peroxidase activity was revealed using a chemiluminescent substrate (SuperSignal West Dura, Pierce, USA), and the signals were captured with a digital imager (Fluorchem 8900, Alpha Innotech, USA) or GeneGnome digital imager (Syngene, Frederick, Maryland, United States). ThePrP levels and glycoforms ratios were quantified with the GeneTools software.
Fig 1
PrP amino acid sequences from New Zealand White rabbit and the sheep (VRQ allele).
Fragments identified by mass spectrometry in the brains of scrapie-diseased tgOv rabbit and specific of the sheep sequence are colored. Bold: Sha31 anti-PrP epitope.
PrP amino acid sequences from New Zealand White rabbit and the sheep (VRQ allele).
Fragments identified by mass spectrometry in the brains ofscrapie-diseased tgOv rabbit and specific ofthesheep sequence are colored. Bold: Sha31 anti-PrP epitope.Expression levels ofPrPC in brains and spleens ofrabbits and sheep were compared. Immunoblots revealed with the mAb Sha31 were quantified using the Alpha-Ease software (Alpha-Innotech, USA). Brain samples were diluted and PrP amounts were calculated according to a dilution curve of full-length recombinant ovine PrP (a generous gift of D. Marc, INRA, Tours, France), used as a reference.
Immunohistochemistry
Rabbit brain sections (5 μm thick) were treated as described previously [30]. Briefly, after being deparaffinised and rehydrated, tissue sections were incubated in 98% formic acid (MERCK) for 30 min at room temperature, then autoclaved for 15 min at 121°C in 10 mM citrate buffer (pH 6.1) and allowed to cool for 20 min. Sections were then subjected to a 15 min proteolysis at 37°C with 20 μg/mL of proteinase K. Endogenous peroxidase was inhibited using 0.3% hydrogen peroxide in methyl alcohol for 30 min at room temperature. Immunostaining was performed on a DAKO Autostainer according tothe manufacturer’s instructions using themouse monoclonal anti-PrP antibody 2G11 (gift from J. Grosclaude, INRA, Jouy-en-Josas, France, [30]) as primary antibody, followed by the DAKO EnVision+ System labelled polymer-HRP anti-mouse with 3, 3’-diaminobenzidine (DAB) as chromogen. After immunostaining, sections were counterstained with Mayer’s haematoxylin and cover-slipped. The 2G11 antibody was selected for optimal results with TSE-infected-tgOv rabbit brains without any background staining on tissue sections from both uninfected-tgOv and–WT rabbits.
Paraffin-embedded tissue blot (PET blot)
PET blot were performed using a method previously described [31]. Immunodetection was performed with Sha31 monoclonal antibody (4 μg/mL), followed by application of an alkaline phosphatase labeled secondary antibody (Dako, 1/500 final dilution). Enzymatic activity was revealed using NBT/BCIP substrate chromogen.
Histology
Paraffin-embedded sections were mounted on glass microscope slides and stained with hematoxylin and eosin.
Mass spectrometry
The equivalent of 6 mL of 20% brain homogenate from tgOv and WT rabbit, treated or not with proteinase K and denatured (see above) were resuspended in 100 mM NaCl, 10 mM EDTA, 10 mM TrisHCl pH 7.8, 0.5% DOC, 0.5% Igepal (Sigma). Monoclonal antibody Sha31 coupled to magnetic beads (Dynabeads M-280 Tosylactivated, Dynal) was added at the rate of 100 μL beads/240 mg tissue equivalent and reacted for 2 hours at 37°C. Beads were collected with a magnet, washed twice with PBS buffer and denatured in Laemmli buffer (10 min at 99°C). Samples were loaded on a 12% acrylamide gel, before electrophoresis and either immunoblotted (60 mg of tissue equivalent) or silver stained (1140 mg of tissue equivalent). Thesilver stained gels were compared tothe western blot and protein bands that were at the same molecular masses than thePrPSc reactive bands were cut, rinsed and then reduced with dithiothreitol and alkylated with iodoacetamide. Samples were incubated overnight at 37°C with 12.5ng/μl trypsin (sequencing grade, Roche, Meylan, France) in 25 mM NH4HCO3 [28]. Tryptic peptides were analyzed by nanoLC-MS/MS with Q-q-TOF and Linear Ion trap.For CapLC system coupled to Q-TOF Ultima Global (Waters Micromass, Manchester), the digested peptides were loaded on a precolumn (300μm i.d x 5mm, packed with C18 PepMap, LC Packings, Dionex) and desalted. Peptide separations were conducted on a C18 column (Atlantis dC18, 75mm I.D x 150 mm Nano Ease, Waters). Peptides were eluted with a 5–60% linear gradient with water/acetonitrile 98/2 (v/v) containing 0.1% formic acid in buffer A and water/acetonitrile 20/80 (v/v) containing 0.1% formic acid inbuffer B. Mass data were acquired using one MS survey followed by MS/MS scans onthe 3 most intense ions detected. Data were processed using ProteinLynx Global server 2.2. The peptide and fragment masses were matched in database (nrNCBI) using MASCOT software (http://www.matrixscience.com). The mass tolerance was 0.2 Da for both precursor and fragment ions.For Ettan MDLC system (GE Healthcare, Germany) coupled to LTQ Linear Ion Trap Mass Spectrometer (Thermo Electron, US), each sample was desalted using Zorbax 300-SB C18 trap column, 300μm i.d x 5 mm (Agilent Technologies, Germany). Peptide separations were conducted on a Zorbax 300-SB C18 column, 75 μm i.d x 150 mm (Agilent Technologies, Germany). Buffer A consisted ofwater with 0.1% formic acid while buffer B was 84% acetonitrile with 0.1% formic acid. Separation was performed by applying gradient of 15–55% B for 60 minutes at a flow rate of 400 nL/min. Mass data were acquired using one MS survey (m/z 500–2000) followed by MS/MS scans onthe 3 most intense ions detected using Collision Induced Dissociation fragmentation mode. Identification was then performed with Bioworks 3.2 (Thermo Finnigan, San Jose, CA) software. MS/MS spectra were searched against the non-redundant Uniprot database (2006_12) and analysed using TurboSEQUEST (Thermo Finnigan, San Jose, CA). Search parameters included differential amino acid mass shifts for oxidized methionine (+16 Da) and carbamidomethylation oncystein (+57 Da). The output data were evaluated in term of Xcorr magnitude up to 1.7, 2.2 and 3.5 for charge states 1+, 2+ and 3+, respectively.
Cell culture
Confluent Rov cells (P2FJ6 clone, [26, 32]) were grown for 2 days in single wells of 12-well plates. Rov cells were incubated in culture medium containing 10 μL of 20% brain homogenate from tgOvrabbits, WT rabbits and tg338mice challenged with LA21K fast prions, and from uninfected tgOv rabbits. After 2 days, the medium was removed; the cells were rinsed in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and split into 25 cm2 flasks. Each week, one flask was used for subpassaging, whereas another was used to prepare a cell lysate for PrP content analysis (see above). The total protein content was estimated by using a protein assay kit (bicinchoninic acid assay (BCA); Pierce).
Accession number
The Swiss-Prot accession numbers for the proteins mentioned in the text are sheep (P23907) and rabbitPrP (Q95211).
Results
Production and characterization of transgenic rabbits
One transgenicrabbit founder animal was obtained following microinjection of an ovine BAC DNA insert encompassing the entire PRNP transcription unit. This insert has already been used to produce various mousetransgenic lines that express the PrPVRQ allele [23]. For animal production, thetgOvtransgenic founder was mated with a WT rabbit. Transmission ofthe transgene was of about 50% indicating that therabbit founder was not a mosaic. Thetransgenic F1 rabbits were mated with WT rabbits giving birth to 39 offspring including 50% of heterozygous transgenicrabbits and 50% of non-transgenic control rabbits. Health oftherabbits did not appear to be affected by the presence ofthe ovine PRNP transgene (period of observation > 700 days).The concentration of ovine PRNP RNA relative to that ofrabbitPRNP RNA was estimated by RT-qPCR analyses on brain tissue extracts oftgOv rabbits and WT rabbits. In WT and tgOvrabbits, two rabbitPRNP RNA variants were found, as expected, resulting from the splicing (or not) of exon 2. The values were cumulated to obtain the total concentration ofrabbitPRNP transcripts. In tgOvrabbits, ovine PRNP RNA levels were 1.5–2 fold higher than those ofrabbitPRNP RNA (n = 3 rabbits analyzed). RabbitPRNP RNA levels were similar between WT and TgOvrabbits, suggesting that expression of ovine PRNPhas no interfering effects onthe transcription ofrabbitPRNP.In the absence ofrabbit-specific anti-PrP antibody, it was not possible to quantify the relative expression levels of ovine versus endogenous rabbit PrPC in tgOvrabbits. Immunoblots analyses indicate that the total levels ofPrPC in brain oftgOvrabbits were approx. 1.5–2 fold higher than those found in the brain of their WT counterparts or sheep carrying the VRQ allele (Fig 2A), in agreement with the transcriptional analysis. TgOvrabbits expressed about 50 fold more PrPC in the brain than in the spleen, which compares with the ratio of about 60 found in WT rabbit.
Fig 2
Imunoblot analyses of PrP in the brains of wild-type and ovine PrP transgenic rabbits.
(a) PrPC electrophoretic pattern and level of expression in the brain of wild-type, sheep (VRQ allele), tgOv rabbit and tg338 mice. The amounts of material loaded are indicated. (b) Two-dimensional electrophoretic gel analysis of PrPC from wild-type and tgOv rabbit. The equivalent of 1mg of brain extract was used for comparison (Acidic side at left). Blots were probed with Sha31 anti-PrP antibody.
Imunoblot analyses of PrP in the brains of wild-type and ovine PrP transgenic rabbits.
(a) PrPC electrophoretic pattern and level of expression in the brain of wild-type, sheep (VRQ allele), tgOvrabbit and tg338mice. The amounts of material loaded are indicated. (b) Two-dimensional electrophoretic gel analysis ofPrPC from wild-type and tgOvrabbit. The equivalent of 1mg of brain extract was used for comparison (Acidic side at left). Blots were probed with Sha31 anti-PrP antibody.Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis was performed to determine whether any change in the isoforms pattern ofPrPC was visible between WT and tgOvrabbits. Equivalent amounts of brain extracts were separated and transferred to nitrocellulose and probed with the Sha31 antibody (Fig 2B). Both extracts gave similar 2D patterns and none ofthe isoforms appeared specific or quantitatively different between the two types ofrabbits.
Transgenic rabbits expressing ovine PrP are susceptible to scrapie
TgOv and WT rabbits were intracerebrally inoculated with LA21K fast scrapie strain, a fast strain that kills tg338mice in less than 2 months [26].This agent induced a neurological disease in all inoculated tgOvrabbits (n = 12). The behavioral and clinical signs were invariant from animal to animal. The first behavioral signs were a drop in food consumption and restlessness. Early neurological signs (referred toas moderate in the S1 Video) were characterized by amaurosis and decreased time of random exploration in the cage. With disease progression, more severe neurological and behavioral signs were progressively observed, including loss of balance, disordered gait, paparesis, drop in food consumption and more severe amaurosis, (S2 Video). Animals were euthanized as soon as at least 3 of these signs were recorded. Neither pruritus nor tremor was observed. The clinical phase lasted less than 2 weeks. Animals were euthanized between 161 and 239 days post-inoculation (mean ± SEM incubation time: 192 ± 8 days; Fig 3). None ofthe mock-infected tgOv rabbits (n = 6) or LA21K fast-challenged WT rabbits (n = 6) presented any clinical signs during the time course ofthe experiment (Fig 3, S3 Video). They were euthanized healthy at 701 days post-inoculation, except two animals from each control group that were sacrificed, for comparison purpose with scrapie-sick animals.
Fig 3
Survival time of ovine PrP transgenic rabbits infected with scrapie.
Kaplan-Meier survival plots of wild-type and tgOv rabbits inoculated intracerebrally with LA21K fast scrapie prions or with healthy brain homogenates. Animals were monitored for clinical signs and analyzed for the presence of PrPSc either by WB or immunohistochemistry. LA21K fast-inoculated tgOv rabbits: red symbol; LA21K fast-inoculated-WT rabbits: blue symbol; mock-inoculated tgOv rabbits: green symbol.
Survival time of ovine PrP transgenic rabbits infected with scrapie.
Kaplan-Meier survival plots of wild-type and tgOvrabbits inoculated intracerebrally with LA21K fast scrapie prions or with healthy brain homogenates. Animals were monitored for clinical signs and analyzed for the presence ofPrPSc either by WB or immunohistochemistry. LA21K fast-inoculated tgOvrabbits: red symbol; LA21K fast-inoculated-WT rabbits: blue symbol; mock-inoculated tgOvrabbits: green symbol.The brains of diseased tgOv animals were analyzed by immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry for the presence ofPrPSc. Proteinase-K resistant PrPSc (PrPres) was readily detected in all infected tgOv rabbits (Figs 4 and 5), consistent with the efficient transmission. All controls remained PrPres negative (Fig 4A and 4B). In the absence of PK-treatment, PrPSc was essentially detected as full-length PrPSc (Fig 4A) as in tg338 brain [33], suggesting absence of endogenous cleavage generating the so-called C2 fragment [33]. Remarkably, LA21K fast electrophoretic pattern was conserved in tgOvrabbits with regards to apparent molecular mass and relative proportions of glycoforms (Fig 4B and 4C). None ofthe animals ofthe experiment, including positive transgenicrabbits, showed any detectable PrPres deposits in the spleen (Fig 4B). LA21K fast, as other fast ovine strains is lymphotropic in tg338mice ([34], Fig 4B). It is likely that disease after intracerebral inoculation has occurred too rapidly in therabbitsto allow centrifugal spreading and replication of LA21K fast scrapie prions in the spleen.
Fig 4
Brain PrPSc in ovine PrP transgenic rabbit infected with LA21K fast scrapie prions.
(a) Western blot analyses of the brain from wild-type and tgOv rabbits mock-infected or inoculated with LA21K fast prions for the presence of proteinase K (PK)-resistant PrPSc. The equivalent of 2 mg brain tissue were loaded in lane 1–6, 3 mg in lanes 7 and 8. (b) Electrophoretic pattern and (c) glycoform ratios (plotted as means ± SEM(c)) of PrPres in the brains and spleens of tgOv rabbit and tg338 mice infected with LA21K fast prions. The same amount of brain (0.5 mg) and spleen (3 mg) tissue equivalent was loaded on the gel.
Fig 5
Pathological PrP deposition and vacuolation in the brains of wild-type and tgOv rabbits inoculated with LA21K fast scrapie prions.
Midbrain sections from tgOv (a-b, e-f) and wild-type (c, g-i) rabbits challenged with LA21K fast scrapie prions and from a mock-infected tgOv rabbit (d, i-j). (a-d) PET blot analyses using monoclonal antibody Sha31 showed PrPres accumulation solely in LA21K fast challenged tgOv rabbits. (e-j) Hematoxylin and eosin-stained section at the level of the thalamus (e, g, i) and hippocampus (f, h, j) showing vacuolation, predominantly in the thalamus (e) and to a lesser extend in the hippocampus (f) of the LA21K fast challenged tgOv rabbits, but none in the control animals (g-j). Scale bar: 100 μm.
Brain PrPSc in ovine PrP transgenic rabbit infected with LA21K fast scrapie prions.
(a) Western blot analyses ofthe brain from wild-type and tgOv rabbits mock-infected or inoculated with LA21K fast prions for the presence of proteinase K (PK)-resistant PrPSc. The equivalent of 2 mg brain tissue were loaded in lane 1–6, 3 mg in lanes 7 and 8. (b) Electrophoretic pattern and (c) glycoform ratios (plotted as means ± SEM(c)) of PrPres in the brains and spleens oftgOvrabbit and tg338miceinfected with LA21K fast prions. The same amount of brain (0.5 mg) and spleen (3 mg) tissue equivalent was loaded onthe gel.
Pathological PrP deposition and vacuolation in the brains of wild-type and tgOv rabbits inoculated with LA21K fast scrapie prions.
Midbrain sections from tgOv (a-b, e-f) and wild-type (c, g-i) rabbits challenged with LA21K fast scrapie prions and from a mock-infected tgOv rabbit (d, i-j). (a-d) PET blot analyses using monoclonal antibody Sha31 showed PrPres accumulation solely in LA21K fast challenged tgOvrabbits. (e-j) Hematoxylin and eosin-stained section at the level ofthe thalamus (e, g, i) and hippocampus (f, h, j) showing vacuolation, predominantly in the thalamus (e) and to a lesser extend in the hippocampus (f) ofthe LA21K fast challenged tgOvrabbits, but none in the control animals (g-j). Scale bar: 100 μm.PrPres distribution in the brain was examined by PET blot analyses and immunohistochemistry. The greatest levels of PrPres deposits were observed in the thalamus, hippocampus and frontal cortex ofscrapie-sick TgOv rabbits (Fig 5A and 5B). Sparse or moderate PrPSc deposition was seen in the cerebellum, obex and medulla oblongata (Table 1, analysis of 9 animals). Aged, uninfected tgOv rabbits and LA21K fast-challenged WT rabbits remained PrPres negative (Fig 5C and 5D).
Table 1
Regional distribution of PrPres and vacuolation in the brain of transgenic rabbits expressing ovine PrP challenged with LA21K fast prions.
Brain Regions
PrPres deposits
Spongiosis
Cortex
+++
-
Hippocampus
+++
+
Thalamus
+++
++
Cerebellum
+/-
+/-
Obex
+
+/-
Medulla oblongata
+
+
-: no staining, no vacuolation; +/-: low; +: moderate; ++: pronounced; +++, intense staining or spongiosis.
-: no staining, no vacuolation; +/-: low; +: moderate; ++: pronounced; +++, intense staining or spongiosis.Examination of histopathologic lesions in several brain areas ofscrapie-sick TgOv rabbits (5 animals analyzed) indicated that spongiosis was prominent in the thalamus (Fig 5E). Mild spongiosis was also observed in the hippocampus (Fig 5F). Sparse spongiosis was observed in the medulla oblongata, obex and cerebellum (Table 1). The cortex was not vacuolated. There was no evidence of vacuolation in aged, uninfected tgOv rabbits and LA21K fast-challenged WT rabbits (Fig 5H–5J).Collectively, these data indicate that scrapie infected tgOv rabbits exhibited the major clinical, biochemical and neuropathological hallmarks of TSEs.
Diseased transgenic rabbits accumulate only ovine PrPSc
To determine which oftherabbit or the ovine PrPC had been converted in scrapie-sick tgOv rabbits, immunoprecipitated brain extracts ofhealthy and infected tgOv rabbits,—treated or not with PK-, were analyzed by two techniques of mass spectrometry. Both analyses allowed detecting PrP fragments in the different gel bands corresponding tothe western blot immunoreactive bands. In PK-treated, LA21K fast infected tgOv rabbit brains, five fragments were identified: ESQAYYQR; GENFTETDIK; VVEQMCITQYQR; GENFTETDIKIMER; EHTVTTTTKGENFTETDIK. Only one fragment VVEQMCITQYQR was identified in mock-infected tgOv rabbit, while no fragments were obtained from WT rabbits. All these fragments were located within the C-terminal part ofthePrP protein and two could be assigned without ambiguities tothesheepPrP sequence (ESQAYYQR; VVEQMCITQYQR; Fig 1). Thus, PrPres molecules that accumulate in the brain ofscrapie-sick tgOv rabbits was essentially of ovine origin, suggesting limited conversion, if any of endogenous rabbit PrPC during disease pathogenesis.
Prions from diseased transgenic rabbits readily infect Rov cells
LA21K fast scrapie prions can be efficiently passaged in Rov cells expressing ovine PrP [26, 32, 35]. We examined whether the prions produced in the brain of LA21K fast-sick tgOvrabbits would infect Rov cells with similar efficacy. Rov cells were exposed to similar amounts of brain homogenate from LA21K fast-infected tgOv rabbit and tg338mice, and grown for up to 4 passages. At each passage, PrPres accumulation was monitored to assess the success oftheinfection and compare the levels of protein produced. In parallel, cells were exposed to brain extracts from aged, uninfected tgOv rabbits and from LA21K fast-inoculated WT rabbits. While immunoblots analyses of PK-digested cell lysates failed to detect PrPres in these controls, cells exposed to LA21K fast prions from either tgOvrabbit or tg338mouse origin accumulated similar levels of PrPres at each passage (Fig 6). LA21K fast prions derived from tgOvrabbits and tg338mice exhibit therefore similar efficacy to infect Rov cells. These data would further sustain the view that the prions produced in the brains oftgOvrabbits are of ovine origin.
Fig 6
Infection of Rov cells with TgOv- and tg338-passaged LA21K fast prions.
Western blot analyses for the presence of PrPres in lysates from Rov cells exposed to brain homogenates from WT, tgOv rabbits and tg338 mice that were mock infected or challenged with LA21K fast prions. Analysis was performed two (left panel) and four passages (right panel) after initial exposure of the cells. The loaded samples were normalized relative to total protein concentration.
Infection of Rov cells with TgOv- and tg338-passaged LA21K fast prions.
Western blot analyses for the presence of PrPres in lysates from Rov cells exposed to brain homogenates from WT, tgOvrabbits and tg338mice that were mock infected or challenged with LA21K fast prions. Analysis was performed two (left panel) and four passages (right panel) after initial exposure ofthe cells. The loaded samples were normalized relative to total protein concentration.
Discussion
The limited number ofprion-permissive cell models, the prolonged incubation time in farm species and the low susceptibility of conventional mouse lines to TSEs agents have favored development ofmouse transgenesis in the TSE field. Some ofthePrnp
0/0 mouse lines used to demonstrate the key role ofPrPC in susceptibility to prions [36] were eventually engineered to (over)express PRNP genes from a wide range ofmammalian species. These models considerably improved our knowledge onprion diversity, and most particularly onthe molecular determinants ofthe transmission barrier during interspecies prion transmission [3]. A side effect of these studies was that transmission barriers that were considered as strong or ‘absolute’ were essentially abrogated [19, 23, 37, 38]. Here, we applied the same strategy totherabbit species to clarify the respective roles ofrabbit PrPC and non-PrP host factors in their pronounced, albeit not absolute [12], resistance to TSEs. We show that transgenicrabbits expressing a scrapie-susceptible ovine PRNP allele develop, at full attack rate, classical hallmarks of TSEs upon inoculation with scrapie prions, including fatal neurological diseases, clinical signs, PrPres deposition and vacuolation in the brain. This demonstrates that rabbits do not bear non-PrP factors that make them intrinsically resistant to prions.The strategy used to generate thetg338mouse line, a model highly susceptible tosheep scrapie sources [3, 23, 26, 34], was transposed torabbit. At variance with thetg338mouse line, transgenesis was performed on a wild type rabbit background, asPrnp
0/0 rabbits are not available, leading tothe likely expression of both rabbit and sheepPrP proteins. Analyses ofthePRNP transcripts indicated that ovine PRNP transcripts were present in tgOvrabbit brain at levels 1.5–2 fold higher than those ofrabbitPRNP. Consistently, expression level of total PrPC in tgOvrabbit brains was 1.5–2 fold higher than that in WT rabbit and sheep. Co-expression of two different prion proteins can have a strong inhibitory effect onthe conversion into prions ofthetransgenicPrPC protein, resulting in either no transmission, or a marked increase ofthe incubation time or no clinical disease [17–19, 39]. Here, scrapie developed at full attack rate in tgOvrabbits. The molecular, LA21K fast strain-specific [3] signature was conserved upon passage to another species expressing the same transgene in a different genetic background. The potential of LA21K fast prions to infect Rov cells [26, 32] was unaltered by the intermediate passage ontoTgOvrabbits. Collectively, these data support the view that transgenic expression ofthe ovine PrPVRQ allele abrogated therabbit species barrier to LA21K fast scrapie prions. Demonstrating formally that the species barrier has been fully abrogated and/or that co-expression ofrabbit and sheepPrPC had no major interfering effects on scrapie pathogenesis would necessitate further subpassaging ontgOvrabbitsto measure a potential reduction in incubation time, if any [3]. This experiment hasnot been done. However, it can be noticed that the mean incubation time observed at primary passage in tgOvrabbits (<200 days) is within the range of incubation time observed in sheep and transgenic mice expressing physiological levels of ovine PrP upon intracerebral infection, at the same dose, of fast scrapie prions ([23, 30]; 140 ± 5 days (6/6) in tg335 mice [23]).While scrapie-infected tgOv rabbits showed characteristic signs of prion diseases, their WT counterparts remained healthy for more than 700 days, with neither detectable signs nor lesions or PrPSc deposits. This confirmed with another natural TSEs source the pronounced resistance oftherabbit species to foreign prions [6, 10]. We also showed by mass spectrometry that most if not all ofthe converted PrPC molecules in the brains ofscrapie-sick tgOv rabbits were of ovine origin, indicating that conversion ofrabbit PrPCwas not favored by the conversion of ovine PrPC at vicinity. Collectively, these data suggest that rabbit PrPC is poorly convertible into LA21K fast PrPSc in vivo. Consistently, cell-free conversion ofrabbit PrPC by SSBP/1 prions,-which exhibit a LA21K fast phenotype in tg338mice (mean survival time of 63 ± 1 days in 6/6 tg338miceon primary passage)-, necessitated a relatively high number of PMCA rounds as compared to other prion sources [12]. To further address the issue ofthe presence ofrabbitPrPSc in the brain ofdiseased tgOv rabbits, secondary passage totransgenic mice expressing rabbit PrPC are planned ([12] and the accompanying paper by Vidal et al.).The common shared view that rabbits were resistant toprioninfectionwas not only attributed torabbit PrPC sequence but also to its genetic background [12, 40–42]. Vidal and Castilla’s groups demonstrate by using transgenic modeling that rabbit PrPC, as many other mammalianPrPC, is fully convertible into disease-specific isoforms after infection with a broad panel of TSE sources [14]. Thus, taken separately, rabbit genetic background and rabbit PrPC cannot explain the apparently low susceptibility ofrabbits to prion infection. What makes therabbit species comparatively resistant toprion disease remains to be clarified. Onthe one hand, the diversity ofprion sources inoculated to this species has remained too limited [6, 10] to definitely conclude that rabbits are poor acceptor for prions. The difficulty in identifying TSEs agents able to replicate on certain PrP sequence has been recently exemplified by studies on scrapie prions zoonotic potential. Such evidence (contrarily to a common- shared view) was provided because a panel of diverse scrapie sources was inoculated tohumanPrPtransgenic mice [43]. Onthe other hand, it is possible that prion disease in rabbit would develop too slowly to be observed, because of a low conversion rate ofrabbit PrPC. Transgenic modeling with mice expressing PrP at variable levels may help to verify this hypothesis [23, 44].To summarize, we found that rabbit expressing ovine PrP at near physiological levels can develop a bona fide TSE upon infection with scrapie prions. The low susceptibility ofrabbits to prion infection is not enciphered within therabbit genetic background. Owing to its sensitivity and intermediate size, this model may be a valuable tool for studying TSE pathogenesis, most notably prionemia.
Moderate clinical signs in tgOv rabbits infected with LA21K fast scrapie prions.
(MOV)Click here for additional data file.
Severe clinical signs in tgOv rabbits infected with LA21K fast scrapie prions.
The animals were euthanized at that stage.(MOV)Click here for additional data file.
Absence of neurological signs in age-matched mock-infected tgOv rabbits.
Authors: D Vilette; O Andreoletti; F Archer; M F Madelaine; J L Vilotte; S Lehmann; H Laude Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Date: 2001-03-20 Impact factor: 11.205