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Publication : A newly identified type of scrapie agent can naturally infect sheep with resistant PrP genotypes.

First Author  Le Dur A Year  2005
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  102
Issue  44 Pages  16031-6
PubMed ID  16239348 Mgi Jnum  J:102929
Mgi Id  MGI:3608242 Doi  10.1073/pnas.0502296102
Citation  Le Dur A, et al. (2005) A newly identified type of scrapie agent can naturally infect sheep with resistant PrP genotypes. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 102(44):16031-6
abstractText  Scrapie in small ruminants belongs to transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs), or prion diseases, a family of fatal neurodegenerative disorders that affect humans and animals and can transmit within and between species by ingestion or inoculation. Conversion of the host-encoded prion protein (PrP), normal cellular PrP (PrP(c)), into a misfolded form, abnormal PrP (PrP(Sc)), plays a key role in TSE transmission and pathogenesis. The intensified surveillance of scrapie in the European Union, together with the improvement of PrP(Sc) detection techniques, has led to the discovery of a growing number of so-called atypical scrapie cases. These include clinical Nor98 cases first identified in Norwegian sheep on the basis of unusual pathological and PrP(Sc) molecular features and 'cases' that produced discordant responses in the rapid tests currently applied to the large-scale random screening of slaughtered or fallen animals. Worryingly, a substantial proportion of such cases involved sheep with PrP genotypes known until now to confer natural resistance to conventional scrapie. Here we report that both Nor98 and discordant cases, including three sheep homozygous for the resistant PrP(ARR) allele (A(136)R(154)R(171)), efficiently transmitted the disease to transgenic mice expressing ovine PrP, and that they shared unique biological and biochemical features upon propagation in mice. These observations support the view that a truly infectious TSE agent, unrecognized until recently, infects sheep and goat flocks and may have important implications in terms of scrapie control and public health.
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