Literature DB >> 9500237

Comparison of scrapie-associated fibril detection and Western immunoblotting for the diagnosis of natural ovine scrapie.

W A Cooley1, J K Clark, M J Stack.   

Abstract

Detergent- and proteinase K-treated extracts of grey matter were prepared from four regions of the brains of 106 sheep with scrapie, diagnosed clinically and by the demonstration of spongiform encephalopathy. The extracts were examined by electron microscopy for the presence of scrapie-associated fibrils and by Western immunoblotting for the disease-specific abnormal prion protein (PrPSc). As a diagnostic method, Western immunoblotting proved to be more sensitive than electron microscopy, the detection rates in the 106 sheep being 97 and 91% respectively (medulla), 99 and 76% (cerebellum), 95 and 88% (frontal cerebral cortex) and 93 and 61% (occipital cerebral cortex). Neither fibrils nor PrPSc could be detected in comparable brain extracts from 25 control sheep which had shown no clinical or histopathological evidence of scrapie.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9500237     DOI: 10.1016/s0021-9975(98)80026-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Comp Pathol        ISSN: 0021-9975            Impact factor:   1.311


  3 in total

1.  Evaluation of Western blotting methods using samples with or without sodium phosphotungstic acid precipitation for diagnosis of scrapie and chronic wasting disease.

Authors:  Hongsheng Huang; Jasmine Rendulich; Dan Stevenson; Katherine O'Rourke; Aru Balachandran
Journal:  Can J Vet Res       Date:  2005-07       Impact factor: 1.310

2.  Cellular Prion Protein Expression in the Brain Tissue from Brucella ceti-Infected Striped Dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba).

Authors:  Clotilde Beatrice Angelucci; Roberto Giacominelli-Stuffler; Marina Baffoni; Cristina Esmeralda Di Francesco; Gabriella Di Francesco; Ludovica Di Renzo; Manuela Tittarelli; Antonio Petrella; Carla Grattarola; Sandro Mazzariol; Eva Sierra; Antonio Fernández; Giovanni Di Guardo
Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2022-05-19       Impact factor: 3.231

3.  Different prion disease phenotypes result from inoculation of cattle with two temporally separated sources of sheep scrapie from Great Britain.

Authors:  Timm Konold; Yoon Hee Lee; Michael J Stack; Claire Horrocks; Robert B Green; Melanie Chaplin; Marion M Simmons; Steve A C Hawkins; Richard Lockey; John Spiropoulos; John W Wilesmith; Gerald A H Wells
Journal:  BMC Vet Res       Date:  2006-10-17       Impact factor: 2.741

  3 in total

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