Publication Detail
The publication detail shows the title, authors (with indicators showing other profiled authors), information on the publishing organization, abstract and a link to the article in PubMed. This abstract is what is used to create the fingerprint of the publication. If any grants are referenced by the publication, they will be listed here as well.
Species specificity in the cell-free conversion of prion protein to protease-resistant forms: a model for the scrapie species barrier.
D A Kocisko; S A Priola; G J Raymond; B Chesebro; P T Lansbury; B Caughey (Profiled Author: Lansbury, Peter T)
Laboratory of Persistent Viral Diseases, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases, Hamilton, MT 59840,USA.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1995;92(9):3923-7.
Scrapie is a transmissible neurodegenerative disease that appears to result from an accumulation in the brain of an abnormal protease-resistant isoform of prion protein (PrP) called PrPsc. Conversion of the normal, protease-sensitive form of PrP (PrPc) to protease-resistant forms like PrPsc has been demonstrated in a cell-free reaction composed largely of hamster PrPc and PrPsc. We now report studies of the species specificity of this cell-free reaction using mouse, hamster, and chimeric PrP molecules. Combinations of hamster PrPc with hamster PrPsc and mouse PrPc with mouse PrPsc resulted in the conversion of PrPc to protease-resistant forms. Protease-resistant PrP species were also generated in the nonhomologous reaction of hamster PrPc with mouse PrPsc, but little conversion was observed in the reciprocal reaction. Glycosylation of the PrPc precursors was not required for species specificity in the conversion reaction. The relative conversion efficiencies correlated with the relative transmissibilities of these strains of scrapie between mice and hamsters. Conversion experiments performed with chimeric mouse/hamster PrPc precursors indicated that differences between PrPc and PrPsc at residues 139, 155, and 170 affected the conversion efficiency and the size of the resultant protease-resistant PrP species. We conclude that there is species specificity in the cell-free interactions that lead to the conversion of PrPc to protease-resistant forms. This specificity may be the molecular basis for the barriers to interspecies transmission of scrapie and other transmissible spongiform encephalopathies in vivo.
Scientific Context
This section shows information related to the publication - computed using the fingerprint of the publication - including related publications, related experts and related grants with fingerprints representing significant amounts of overlap between their fingerprint and this publication. The red dots indicate whether those experts or terms appear within the publication, thereby showing potential and actual connections.
Related Grants
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1.
Rogers, Jack T
RNA Targeted Screens of the Prion 5'UTR
30 September 2008 - 31 August 2010
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS AND STROKE
Total Funding: $ 269,917
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2.
LANSBURY, PETER T
PROTEIN CHEMISTRY OF SCRAPIE AND RELATED DISEASES
4 April 1996 - 31 January 2000
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS AND STROKE
Total Funding: $ 719,904
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3.
Frangione, Blas
CONFORMATIONAL DISORDERS--AMYLOID AND PRION PROTEINS
1 September 1978 - 31 March 2006
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ARTHRITIS AND MUSCULOSKELETAL AND SKIN DISEASES
Total Funding: $ 3,600,812
Related Publications
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1.
1987B Hay; R A Barry; I Lieberburg; S B Prusiner; V R Lingappa
Molecular and cellular biology 1987;7(2):914-20. -
2.
1989T Haraguchi; S Fisher; S Olofsson; T Endo; D Groth; A Tarentino; D R Borchelt; D Teplow; L Hood; A Burlingame
Asparagine-linked glycosylation of the scrapie and cellular prion proteins.
Archives of biochemistry and biophysics 1989;274(1):1-13. -
3.
1995R A Bessen; D A Kocisko; G J Raymond; S Nandan; P T Lansbury; B Caughey
Non-genetic propagation of strain-specific properties of scrapie prion protein.
Nature 1995;375(6533):698-700.
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