| Literature DB >> 29572672 |
Franc Llorens1,2,3, Tomás Barrio4,5, Ângela Correia6, Anna Villar-Piqué6, Katrin Thüne6,7, Peter Lange6, Juan José Badiola4,5, Matthias Schmitz6,7, Ingolf Lachmann8, Rosa Bolea4,5, Inga Zerr6,7.
Abstract
The analysis of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers in patients with suspected prion diseases became a useful tool in diagnostic routine. Prion diseases can only be identified at clinical stages when the disease already spread throughout the brain and massive neuronal damage occurs. Consequently, the accuracy of CSF tests detecting non-symptomatic patients is unknown. Here, we aimed to investigate the usefulness of CSF-based diagnostic tests in pre-clinical and clinical naturally occurring scrapie. While decreased total prion protein (PrP) levels and positive PrP seeding activity were already detectable at pre-symptomatic stages, the surrogate markers of neuronal damage total tau (tau) and 14-3-3 proteins were exclusively increased at clinical stages. The present findings confirm that alterations in PrP levels and conformation are primary events in the pathology of prion diseases preceding neuronal damage. Our work also supports the potential use of these tests in the screening of pre-symptomatic scrapie and human prion disease cases.Entities:
Keywords: 14-3-3 protein; Biomarkers; Cerebrospinal fluid; Prion disease; Prion protein; Scrapie; Tau protein
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29572672 DOI: 10.1007/s12035-018-1014-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Neurobiol ISSN: 0893-7648 Impact factor: 5.590