Literature DB >> 8104352

The scrapie enigma: insights from radiation experiments.

T Alper.   

Abstract

Scrapie is the prototype of the Spongiform Encephalopathies (SEs), now often referred to as "prion diseases." They are unique in being both familial and transmissible, even between species. Proof of transmissibility led to the assumption that the agent was a slow virus, but standard virological techniques failed to determine its size. Using radiation target theory, we found that, if the agent were nucleic acid, it is too small to code for even a single protein. Concurrently we found that the agent was effectively transparent to germicidal UV radiation. Our subsequently constructed action spectrum confirms that the mode of replication cannot involve coding by nucleic acid, nor can the information-conveying component be protein, as some investigators have assumed. Results of radiation chemistry-type experiments provide support for the Gibbons and Hunter hypothesis that the transmitting agent is a fragment of nerve cell plasma membrane. That hypothesis requires modification to take account of recent work on PrP, a plasma membrane protein originally identified by its co-purification with the agent; but normal mammalian nervous tissue also contains PrP. Polymorphisms in the normal PrP amino-acid sequence are associated with the origin of familial forms of the SEs, so I postulate that disease arises in the first instance through failure of aberrant PrP to be recognized by its receptors, with consequent failure to be incorporated into the cell's plasma membrane. The membrane domain lacking PrP will in its turn fail to recognize and incorporate even normal PrP, leading to a cycle of infectivity and to that accumulation of PrP in the brain which is now known to be the cause of the clinical aspects of the Spongiform Encephalopathies.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8104352

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Radiat Res        ISSN: 0033-7587            Impact factor:   2.841


  5 in total

1.  Self-propagating beta-sheet polypeptide structures as prebiotic informational molecular entities: the amyloid world.

Authors:  C P J Maury
Journal:  Orig Life Evol Biosph       Date:  2009-03-20       Impact factor: 1.950

Review 2.  Role of lipid in forming an infectious prion?

Authors:  Fei Wang; Jiyan Ma
Journal:  Acta Biochim Biophys Sin (Shanghai)       Date:  2013-04-12       Impact factor: 3.848

Review 3.  The contribution of women to radiobiology: Marie Curie and beyond.

Authors:  Anna Gasinska
Journal:  Rep Pract Oncol Radiother       Date:  2015-12-29

Review 4.  Prion diseases.

Authors:  Edward McKintosh; Sarah J Tabrizi; John Collinge
Journal:  J Neurovirol       Date:  2003-04       Impact factor: 2.643

Review 5.  Prion hypothesis: the end of the controversy?

Authors:  Claudio Soto
Journal:  Trends Biochem Sci       Date:  2010-12-03       Impact factor: 13.807

  5 in total

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