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Publication : Spontaneous generation of rapidly transmissible prions in transgenic mice expressing wild-type bank vole prion protein.

First Author  Watts JC Year  2012
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  109
Issue  9 Pages  3498-503
PubMed ID  22331873 Mgi Jnum  J:288558
Mgi Id  MGI:6433517 Doi  10.1073/pnas.1121556109
Citation  Watts JC, et al. (2012) Spontaneous generation of rapidly transmissible prions in transgenic mice expressing wild-type bank vole prion protein. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 109(9):3498-503
abstractText  Currently, there are no animal models of the most common human prion disorder, sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), in which prions are formed spontaneously from wild-type (WT) prion protein (PrP). Interestingly, bank voles (BV) exhibit an unprecedented promiscuity for diverse prion isolates, arguing that bank vole PrP (BVPrP) may be inherently prone to adopting misfolded conformations. Therefore, we constructed transgenic (Tg) mice expressing WT BVPrP. Tg(BVPrP) mice developed spontaneous CNS dysfunction between 108 and 340 d of age and recapitulated the hallmarks of prion disease, including spongiform degeneration, pronounced astrogliosis, and deposition of alternatively folded PrP in the brain. Brain homogenates of ill Tg(BVPrP) mice transmitted disease to Tg(BVPrP) mice in approximately 35 d, to Tg mice overexpressing mouse PrP in under 100 d, and to WT mice in approximately 185 d. Our studies demonstrate experimentally that WT PrP can spontaneously form infectious prions in vivo. Thus, Tg(BVPrP) mice may be useful for studying the spontaneous formation of prions, and thus may provide insight into the etiology of sporadic CJD.
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