| Literature DB >> 27825366 |
Marion M Simmons1, Melanie J Chaplin2, Timm Konold2,3, Cristina Casalone4, Katy E Beck2, Leigh Thorne5, Sharon Everitt2, Tobias Floyd2, Derek Clifford2,3, John Spiropoulos2.
Abstract
Apart from prion protein genotype, the factors determining the host range and susceptiblity for specific transmissible spongiform encephalopathy agents remain unclear. It is known that bovine atypical L-BSE can transmit to a range of species including primates and humanised transgenic mice. It is important, therefore, that there is as broad an understanding as possible of how such isolates might present in food animal species and how robust they are on inter- and intra-species transmission to inform surveillance sytems and risk assessments. This paper demonstrates that L-BSE can be intracerebrally transmitted to sheep of several genotypes, with the exception of ARR/ARR animals. Positive animals mostly present with a cataplectic form of disease characterized by collapsing episodes and reduced muscle tone. PrP accumulation is confined to the nervous system, with the exception of one animal with lymphoreticular involvement. In Western blot there was maintenance of the low molecular mass and glycoform profile associated with L-BSE, irrespective of ovine host genotype, but there was a substantially higher N-terminal antibody signal relative to the core-specific antibody, which is similar to the ratio associated with classical scrapie. The disease phenotype was maintained on experimental subpassage, but with a shortened survival time indicative of an original species barrier and subsequent adaptation. Passive surveillance approaches would be unlikely to identify such cases as TSE suspects, but current statutory active screening methods would be capable of detecting such cases and classifying them as unusual and requiring further investigation if they were to occur in the field.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27825366 PMCID: PMC5101820 DOI: 10.1186/s13567-016-0394-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Res ISSN: 0928-4249 Impact factor: 3.683
Summary of inoculation outcomes with survival times and rates
| Passage | Recipient genotype | No positive/challenged | Individual survival times (dpi) for positive sheep | Mean ip (±SD) of clinically positive sheep | Mean survival times (+SD) of negative sheep |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | VRQ/VRQ | 4/5 | 1183, 1337, 1439,1963a, | 1320 ± 129 | 1964 |
| VRQ/ARQ | 5/5 | 803b, 864, 957, 1056, 1389 | 1014 ± 231 | ||
| ARQ/ARQ | 5/5 | 956, 959, 1186, 1531, 1649 | 1256 ± 321 | ||
| AFRQ/AFRQ | 4/5 | 1186b, 1236, 1267, 1334 | 1256 ± 62 | 867c | |
| ARR/ARR | 0/5 | 2001 ± 3 | |||
| Subpassage: Donor ARQ/VRQ | ARQ/VRQ | 5/5 | 433, 454, 462, 478, 478 | 461 ± 19 | |
| AFRQ/AFRQ | 5/5 | 503, 505, 527, 552, 552 | 528 ± 24 | ||
| Subpassage:Donor AFRQ/AFRQ | ARQ/VRQ | 5/5 | 461, 488, 496, 501, 531 | 495 ± 25 | |
| AFRQ/AFRQ | 5/5 | 473, 519, 520, 520, 539 | 514 ± 25 |
aPreclinical animal, detected at end of study cull (not included in mean survival time calculation).
bAnimals used as donors for the sub-passage study.
cIntercurrent disease loss.
Clinical syndromes in sheep challenged with L-type BSE
| Passage | Animal ID | Genotype | Syndrome | Other neurological and behavioural signs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | 456/11 | VRQ/VRQ | Cataplectica | None |
| 113/12 | Cataplectic | Ataxia | ||
| 167/12 | Cataplectic | Head tremor, occasionally horizontal nystagmus during collapsing episodes, teeth grinding | ||
| 1591/10b | VRQ/ARQ | Undefined, (possibly pruritic) | Seizure-like episode, positive scratch test | |
| 58/11 | Cataplectic | Dullness, ataxia, loss of balance | ||
| 4/12 | Cataplectic | Head tremor, ataxia | ||
| 140/11 | Cataplectic | Positive scratch test, head tremor, ataxia | ||
| 267/11 | Cataplectic | Positive scratch test, ataxia | ||
| 63/11 | ARQ/ARQ | Pruritic | Dullness, head tremor, ataxia, loss of balance | |
| 3/11 | Cataplectic | Positive scratch test, ataxia, loss of balance | ||
| 182/12 | Pruritic | Positive scratch test, ataxia, loss of balance | ||
| 3/13 | Cataplectic | Dullness, teeth grinding, absent menace response, ataxia, loss of balance | ||
| 455/11 | Cataplectic | Positive scratch test, ataxia | ||
| 98/11b | AFRQ/AFRQ | Cataplectic | Ataxia | |
| 457/11 | Cataplectic | Head tremor, ataxia | ||
| 26/12 | Cataplectic | Head tremor, ataxia, loss of balance | ||
| 112/12 | Cataplectic | Positive scratch test, head tremor, ataxia | ||
| Subpassage: donor VRQ/VRQ | 112/14 | ARQ/ARQ | Cataplectic | Dullness, positive scratch test, absent menace response, head tremor, ataxia, loss of balance, circling |
| 120/14 | Cataplectic | Positive scratch test, absent menace response, head tremor, ataxia, circling, teeth grinding | ||
| 119/14 | Cataplectic | Positive scratch test, head tremor, ataxia, loss of balance, circling | ||
| 107/14 | Cataplectic | Absent menace response, head tremor, ataxia, teeth grinding | ||
| 108/14 | Cataplectic | Head tremor, ataxia, circling | ||
| 79/14 | ARQ/VRQ | Cataplectic | Positive scratch test, head tremor, loss of balance | |
| 78/14 | Cataplectic | Positive scratch test | ||
| 76/14 | Cataplectic | Head tremor | ||
| 6/14 | Cataplectic | Ataxia | ||
| 73/14 | Cataplectic | Absent menace response, head tremor, loss of balance | ||
| Subpassage: donor AFRQ/AFRQ | 109/14 | ARQ/ARQ | Cataplectic | Absent menace response, head tremor |
| 110/14 | Cataplectic | Absent menace response, head tremor, ataxia | ||
| 111/14 | Cataplectic | Absent menace response, head tremor, ataxia | ||
| 118/14 | Cataplectic | Absent menace response, head tremor, ataxia | ||
| 77/14 | Cataplectic | Absent menace response, ataxia | ||
| 81/14 | ARQ/VRQ | Cataplectic | Head tremor, loss of balance | |
| 80/14 | Cataplectic | Head tremor, teeth grinding | ||
| 117/14 | Cataplectic | Head tremor, ataxia, loss of balance | ||
| 82/14 | Cataplectic | Head tremor, ataxia, loss of balance, circling |
aCataplexy is spontaneous collapse due to complete atonia of skeletal muscles, often associated with narcolepsy (disorder of normal sleep mechanism, usually excessive sleep). The latter may also be a feature in affected L-type BSE-inoculated sheep but is difficult to diagnose.
bAnimals selected for subpassage.
Figure 1Vacuolar lesion profiles. A Primary transmission of bovine L-BSE to sheep. Square = AFRQ/AFRQ recipients (n = 4), diamond = ARQ/ARQ recipients (n = 5), triangle = ARQ/VRQ recipients (n = 5), circle = VRQ/VRQ recipients (n = 3). B Subpassages of ovine L-BSE to sheep. Square = ARQ/VRQ recipient, ARQ/VRQ donor (n = 5), diamond = AFRQ/AFRQ recipient, AFRQ/AFRQ donor (n = 5), triangle = ARQ/VRQ recipient, AFRQ/AFRQ donor (n = 5), circle = AFRQ/AFRQ recipient, ARQ/VRQ donor (n = 5). X-axis: brain areas from Ligios et al. [31]. 1–11 brainstem areas, 12, 13 the cerebellum, 15–19 midbrain and thalamus, 20–22 the basal ganglia and frontal cortex. Y-axis: mean vacuolation score. Vacuolation is consistently greater in the more rostral brain areas than in the brainstem, regardless of genotype or passage history, with a slight but consistent increase in the intensity of vacuolation throughout the brain following sub-passage.
Figure 2Immunohistochemistry representative of ovine L-BSE. All figures illustrate labelling with mAb 2G11, except B. Neuronal and particulate labelling is present in the DNV with mAb 2G11 (A), but absent with mAb P4 (B) (case 455/11). Particulate labelling and small aggregates are abundant in many areas, such as the thalamic nuclei (C) (case 1591/10). Perineuronal labelling in the putamen is a consistent and striking feature of ovine L-BSE (D) (case 1591/10), as is intracellular labelling of oligodendrocytes, seen here in the spinocerebellar tract (rostral medulla) (E) (case 58/11). Intraneuronal labelling is also present in the DRG (F) (case 4/12). Heavy labelling in muscle spindles is also visible (G) (case 267/11) and also in occasional myocytes (H) (case 98/11). Labelling was also present in the LRS (I) and ENS (J) of one VRQ/VRQ recipient (case 48/13).
Figure 3Schematic non-quantitative representation of the neuroanatomical distribution of PrP immunolabelling. Every area that was positive contained particulate labelling, so this has been omitted from the figure to make the presence and distribution of the other labelling types easier to see. This map is based on a single case (case 455/11) as representative of all positive animals.
Peripheral tissue immunolabelling following primary passage of sheep with L-BSE
| Animal ID | Genotype | Clinical status | Survival time (days) | Ganglia | Lymphoid tissues | Muscle | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trige-minal | Nodose | Cranial cervical | Stellate | Coeliaco-mesenteric | ENS | LRLN | MLN | RAMALT | Spleen | PP | Extra-ocular | ||||
| 457/11 | AFRQ/AFRQ | + | 1236 | + | + | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | +a |
| 112/12 | + | 1334 | + | + | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | + | |
| 26/12 | + | 1267 | + | + | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | + | |
| 98/11 | + | 1186 | + | + | – | nr | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | +a | |
| 1606/10 | + | 867 | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | |
| 3/11 | ARQ/ARQ | + | 959 | nr | + | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | + |
| 182/12 | + | 1531 | + | + | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | +a | |
| 63/11 | + | 956 | nr | + | – | nr | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | + | |
| 455/11 | + | 1186 | + | + | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | +a | |
| 3/13 | + | 1649 | + | + | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | +a | |
| 223/13 | ARR/ARR | – | 1998b | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| 224/13 | – | 1999b | nr | nr | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | |
| 10/14 | – | 2005b | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | |
| 8/14 | – | 2000b | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | |
| 9/14 | – | 2005b | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | |
| 4/12 | ARQ/VRQ | + | 1389 | + | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | +a |
| 140/11 | + | 957 | + | + | + | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | + | |
| 1591/10 | + | 803 | + | + | – | – | – | – | – | – | nr | – | – | + | |
| 267/11 | + | 1056 | nr | + | inc | inc | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | + | |
| 58/11 | + | 864 | + | + | – | nr | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | +a | |
| 225/13 | VRQ/VRQ | – | 1964b | – | nr | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| 113/12 | + | 1337 | + | + | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | +a | |
| 456/11 | + | 1183 | + | nr | + | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | + | |
| 48/13 | – | 1963b | nr | nr | – | inc | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | |
| 167/12 | + | 1439 | + | + | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | + | |
nr: not retrieved; inc: inconclusive, ENS: enteric nervous system, distal ileum, LRLN: lateral retropharyngeal lymph node, MLN: mesenteric lymph node, RAMALT: recto-anal mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue, PP: Peyer’s patches of the distal ileum.
aOccasional positive myocytes in addition to spindle labelling.
bKilled at end of study. No clinical signs.
Comparative ELISA results for primary challenge animals
| OD (±SD) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IDEXX Herdchek BSE/Sc EIA | BioRad | |||
| SRB-CCa | CCb | S&Gc | TeSeE | |
| Ovine L-BSE primary challenge (all genotypes) ( | 2.61 (±0.024) | 2.62 (±0.031) | 2.68 (±0.057) | 2.67 (±0.062) |
| Ovine C-BSE | 2.636 | 2.668 | 2.631 | 2.661 |
| Ovine scrapie | 2.632 | 2.672 | 2.599 | 2.635 |
| Ovine negative | 0.022 | 0.026 | 0.029 | 0.036 |
| Bovine L-BSE | 2.630 | 2.668 | 0.063 | 2.617 |
aSmall ruminant brain conjugate concentrate.
bBovine brain conjugate concentrate.
cSheep and goat.
dClinical cases only. The pre-clinical VRQ/VRQ is not included.
Figure 4WB images from primary passage samples. A and B Nine representative recipients, homozygous for alanine (codon 136) detected by Sha31 (A), or P4 (B). (Lane 1, 63/11; lane 2, 3/11; lane 3, 457/11; lane 4 26/12; lane 5 112/12; lane 6, 182/12; lane 7, 3/13; lane 8, 98/11; lane 9, 455/11; AB + , donor bovine L-BSE; B + , bovine C-BSE; S + , ovine Scrapie; BS + , experimental ovine CBSE; S-, negative sheep; M, molecular mass markers. A 1 min exposure, B 10 min exposure). C and D Eight representative recipients homozygous or heterozygous for valine (codon 136), detected by Sha31 (C) or P4 (D), (Lane 1, case 1591/10; lane 2, case 58/11; lane 3, 140/11; lane 4, 267/11; lane 5, 456/11; lane 6, 113/12; lane 7, 4/12; lane 8, 167/12; markers and controls as for A and B. C 1 min exposure, D 10 min exposure). There is low molecular mass migration of the unglycosylated band (arrow), similar to that of the donor bovine L-BSE (AB+), for all but one of the ovine recipients (VRQ/VRQ Lane 8 C, D) regardless of genotype. Similar di-;mono-glycosylated band ratios are also seen in all cases when detected by mAb Sha31 (see Additional file 4). All recipient samples, irrespective of genotype, are also detected with mAb P4 (B, D). In contrast the donor L-BSE case (AB+) is not. Following extraction with a Proteinase K digestion step, may contain a mixture of varying molecular mass fragments, partly due to multiple cleavage sites and variability in resistance of PrPSc to the concentration of the enzyme. The two additional lower bands observed in these profiles are regularly observed in diagnostic samples processed in this way. For diagnostic analysis they are disregarded. Only the standard three bands pertaining to the di, mono and un-glycosylated forms of PrPSc are considered relevant.
Figure 5WB for ARQ/VRQ subpassage recipients. A Sha31 and P4 blots of the ARQ/VRQ donor and its ARQ/VRQ recipients. (Lane 1, case 1591/10 (ARQ/VRQ Donor), Lane 2, case 6/14; Lane 3, case 73/14; Lane 4, case 76/14 Lane 5, case 78/14; Lane 6, case 79/14 M, Molecular marker; B+, Bovine BSE; S+, Classical Ovine Scrapie. This panel comprises a mixture of 1 and 10 min exposures). B Sha31 and P4 blots of the AFRQ/AFRQ donor and its ARQ/VRQ recipients (Lanes 1 and 2, case 98/11 (AFRQ/AFRQ Donor); Lane 3, case 80/14; Lane 4, case 81/14; Lane 5, case 82/14; Lane 6, case 75/14; M, molecular marker; S+, classical ovine scrapie; B+, bovine BSE. This panel comprises a mixture of 1 and 10 min exposures). In contrast the donor L-BSE case (AB+)molecular characteristics described for primary passage (Figure 4; Additional files 4 A–E) are retained on subpassage for all recipient animals regardless of the donor.
Figure 6WB of brain and LRS from 48/13 (the VRQ/VRQ recipient with LRS involvement). A Detection with mAb Sha31; B detection with mAb P4. (M, molecular markers; B+, bovine C-BSE control; S+, ovine classical scrapie control; Lane 1, ovine C-BSE brain; Lane 2, ovine C-BSE lymphoid tissue; Lane 3, ovine L-BSE lymphoid tissue (case 48/13); Lane 4, ovine L-BSE brain (case 48/13). 1 min exposure). The lymphoid tissue from the ovine C-BSE sample (lane 2) and L-BSE recipient (lane 3) show similar but not identical molecular profiles to each other with an overall higher mass migration pattern. However only the L-BSE sample is detected by mAb P4. The ovine C-BSE brain sample exhibits the expected profile characteristics of a low molecular mass migration, predominant diglycosylated band and mimimal detection with mAb P4. The ovine L-BSE brain sample (lane 4) exhibits a molecular mass migration that is higher than expected when compared to the primary and sub passaged results (Figures 4 and 5), appearing similar to the ovine scrapie control. However, the equal intensity of di and monoglycosylated bands can be observed. The sample was also detected by mAb P4.