| Literature DB >> 28387370 |
Veronica Redaelli1, Edoardo Bistaffa1,2, Gianluigi Zanusso3, Giulia Salzano2, Luca Sacchetto4, Martina Rossi1,2, Chiara Maria Giulia De Luca1, Michele Di Bari5, Sara Maria Portaleone6, Umberto Agrimi5, Giuseppe Legname2,7, Ignazio Roiter8, Gianluigi Forloni9, Fabrizio Tagliavini1, Fabio Moda1.
Abstract
Fatal Familial Insomnia (FFI) is a genetic prion disease caused by a point mutation in the prion protein gene (PRNP) characterized by prominent thalamic atrophy, diffuse astrogliosis and moderate deposition of PrPSc in the brain. Here, for the first time, we demonstrate that the olfactory mucosa (OM) of patients with FFI contains trace amount of PrPSc detectable by PMCA and RT-QuIC. Quantitative PMCA analysis estimated a PrPSc concentration of about 1 × 10-14 g/ml. In contrast, PrPSc was not detected in OM samples from healthy controls and patients affected by other neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease and frontotemporal dementia. These results indicate that the detection limit of these assays is in the order of a single PrPSc oligomer/molecule with a specificity of 100%.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28387370 PMCID: PMC5384244 DOI: 10.1038/srep46269
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Serial dilutions of FFI brain homogenate (D178N/129M) were analyzed by means of PMCA and RT-QuIC for estimating their ability to detect PrPSc.
(A) Ten % bank vole brain homogenates (BvBH) were spiked with serial dilution of FFI brain homogenate (from 10−5 to 10−12). The signal of PrPSc was assessed by means of Western blotting, after PK digestion, with the 6D11 antibody. Mw refers to the molecular weight. PrPC refers to normal bank vole brain homogenate not digested with PK. (B) Serial dilutions of FFI brain homogenate were analyzed by means of RT-QuIC reactions using BvPrP (90-231) as substrate. Average ThT fluorescence were plotted against time. AD brain homogenate (dilution 10−5) was used as negative control. BvPrP refers to unseeded recombinant protein.
Figure 2PrPSc detection in OM of FFI subjects using PMCA and RT-QuIC assays.
(A) Representative image of PMCA analysis of olfactory mucosa samples (n = 28) that were blindly performed. After three rounds of amplification PrPSc could be detected in two samples (FFI-OM#1 and FFI-OM#2) that belong to subjects that were symptomatic at the time of OM collection. 10−5 and 10−8 refer to dilutions of FFI brain homogenate in PMCA substrate that were used as positive control for reaction. The signal of PrPSc was assessed by means of Western blotting, after PK digestion, with the 6D11 antibody. Numbers in the right indicate the position of Mw. PrPC refers to normal bank vole brain homogenate that was not digested with PK. Dashed line indicates cropped images from separate gels. (B) RT-QuIC reactions were seeded with olfactory mucosa specimens of all patients. FFI brain homogenate (FFI-BH 10−8) was used as positive control for the reaction. Two OM samples were found positive before the threshold set at 30 hours. Average ThT fluorescence were plotted against time.
Figure 3Amplified OM-PrPSc comparison with that of FFI or sCJD-type 1 and sCJD-type 2 brain homogenates.
(A) Western blot of the final products of RT-QuIC reaction seeded with brain homogenates or olfactory mucosa from sCJD, iCJD, FFI, AD, PD patients and healthy controls (HC). Samples were digested with PK [50 μg/mL] and immunoblot was probed with the C-terminal antibody SAF-84. Number in the right indicates the position of Mw. (B) Biochemical profile of amplified products (both brain homogenates and olfactory mucosa) was compared to that of FFI, sCJD-type 1 and sCJD-type 2 brain homogenates assessed before and after PMCA. FFI brain homogenate was concentrated 20-fold for PrPSc detection. The signal of PrPSc was assessed by means of Western blotting, after PK digestion, with the 6D11 antibody. Numbers in the right indicate the position of Mw: 21 kDa refers to type 1 PrPSc, while 19 kDa refers to type 2 PrPSc.