|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Complement facilitates early prion pathogenesis.

First Author  Klein MA Year  2001
Journal  Nat Med Volume  7
Issue  4 Pages  488-92
PubMed ID  11283678 Mgi Jnum  J:125467
Mgi Id  MGI:3758556 Doi  10.1038/86567
Citation  Klein MA, et al. (2001) Complement facilitates early prion pathogenesis. Nat Med 7(4):488-92
abstractText  New-variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and scrapie are typically initiated by extracerebral exposure to the causative agent, and exhibit early prion replication in lymphoid organs. In mouse scrapie, depletion of B-lymphocytes prevents neuropathogenesis after intraperitoneal inoculation, probably due to impaired lymphotoxin-dependent maturation of follicular dendritic cells (FDCs), which are a major extracerebral prion reservoir. FDCs trap immune complexes with Fc-gamma receptors and C3d/C4b-opsonized antigens with CD21/CD35 complement receptors. We examined whether these mechanisms participate in peripheral prion pathogenesis. Depletion of circulating immunoglobulins or of individual Fc-gamma receptors had no effect on scrapie pathogenesis if B-cell maturation was unaffected. However, mice deficient in C3, C1q, Bf/C2, combinations thereof or complement receptors were partially or fully protected against spongiform encephalopathy upon intraperitoneal exposure to limiting amounts of prions. Splenic accumulation of prion infectivity and PrPSc was delayed, indicating that activation of specific complement components is involved in the initial trapping of prions in lymphoreticular organs early after infection.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

21 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression