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PRIONS THE INFECTIOUS PROTEINS. Paras Yadav*, Jaspreet Singh Arora*, Sachinandan De*, Tirtha Kumar Datta*, Surender Lal Goswami*, Aarti Bhardwaj $ , Shalini Jain # and Hariom Yadav #
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PRIONS THE INFECTIOUS PROTEINS Paras Yadav*, Jaspreet Singh Arora*, Sachinandan De*, Tirtha Kumar Datta*, Surender Lal Goswami*, Aarti Bhardwaj$, Shalini Jain# and Hariom Yadav# *Animal Biotechnology, #Animal Biochemistry Division, National Dairy Research Institute, Karnal-132001, Haryana, India $Meerut Institute of Engeenering and Technology, Meerut, U.P., India
INTRODUCTION • Stanley B. Prusinercoined the term proin from Proteinaceous infective particle • and changed to prion to sound it rhythmic. • Prion diseases were caused by misfolded proteins. • Elucidated the gene and mechanism by which wild type protein bring about the • clinical disease.
Kuru Fatal Familial Insomnia (FFI) Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) Scrapie Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) Human Animal Prion Diseases
Classification of prion diseases • Infectious/Exogenous • e.g., Kuru, BSE (mad cow disease), Scrapie • Spread by • Consumption of infected material. • Transfusion. • Sporadic • Familial/Hereditary • Due to autosomal dominant mutation of PrP.
Differences between cellular and scrapie proteins • PrPCPrPSC Solubility • Soluble Non soluble Structure • Alpha-helical Beta-sheeted Multimerisation state • Monomeric Multimeric Infectivity • Non infectious Infectious Susceptibility to Proteinase K • Susceptible Resistant
Post-translational processing of PrP S S A C B
Cellular trafficking and cleavage of PrP ER Golgi Endosome
Model for the function of LRP- LR as the receptor for PrP BDII (aa 53-93) Heparan sulfate chain (HS) BDI (aa 144-179) HSPG Dependent binding domain Direct binding domain (aa 161-179) LRP/LR Proteoglycan moiety Sulfated domains PrP HSPG GPI
Functions of Prion protein • Antioxidative • PrPC + Cu (Copper) • • Antioxidant activity • • Resistance to oxidative stress • • Prevent neuronal dysfunction • (Brown et al., 2002) • Other functions
Endoplasmic Reticulum Plasma membrane/ Endocytic Pathway Time taken for Transformation of mutant PrPc to a PrPSc state <10 min BFA 180C 0.5-1 hr 1-6 hr Synthesis of Mutant PrPc PIPLC- resistant Detergent insoluble Protease- resistant
Model of the cellular pathways involved in generation of PrPSc
Proposed model of PrPc aggregation and induction of CtmPrP
What are Calpains? • They generate a C-terminal fragment(C2) which has molecular weight of 27-30 kDs. • Increase in intracellular levels of Calcium increase production of terminal fragments . • Calpastatin prevents production of C2. • Inhibitors of lysosomal proteases has no effect on C2 production. Telling et al.,2004
Role of Caspases • It was proposed that prion-associated toxicity involves altered trafficking of PrPc. • Inhibition of ubiquitin-proteasome system(UPS). • Deposition of aggresomes of PrPSc in nerve cells. • Induction of Apoptosis with activation of Caspase 3 and Caspase 8. • Complete molecular basis for neuronal death is not known. • Aggregates of over expressed PrPc does not cause cell death. Tabrizi et al., 2005
Factors Responsible for Prion Propagation The AGAAAAGA Palindrome in Prion Generation Norstrom & Mastrianni, 2005
Factors Responsible for Prion Propagation cont… • PrPc association with lipid rafts in the early secretory pathway. • Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (CJD) in Libyan Jews, linked to the E200K • mutation in PRNP (E200KCJD).
Model for chaperone-supervised PrP conversion E.g. Hsp70, GroEL
Factors that prevent Prion Replication • Phospholipase A2 Inhibitors prevent prion replication. • Platelet-activating Factor Antagonists also inhibits prion replication. Bate et al.,2004 • Drugs which share a N-benzylidene-benzohydrazide core structure. • Trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO), can prevent formation of PrPSc. Bertsch et al.,2005 Bennion, 2004
Gross and Microscopic Changes • Gross changes • Grossly there is Cortical atrophy and ventricular dilatation may also be present.
Scrapie BSE Kuru CJD • Microscopic changes
Other microscopic changes • Gliosis within plaques. • Loss of oligodendrocytes within plaques. • Axons usually remain intact in plaques. • Both CD4+ and CD8+ lymphocytes are present in active • lesions. • (Kretzschmar et al.,1996, Wilesmith et al., 1997).
Diagnosis • Diagnosis can be made by: • 1. Clinical signs and Symptoms. • 2. Detection of Scrapie • Associated fibrils. • 3. Detection of Abnormal Prion protein (PrPsc) by Western blotting. • 4. Two dimensional Gel Electrophoresis. 5. Imunodiagnosis of Prion disease. • 6. Bioassay in Mice. • Scrapie Associated fibrils.
Mechanism of plaque formation PrPC PrPC PrPSC
Molecular hallmark of the disorder is the accumulation of abnormal prion protein(PrPSc). • Physiological functions of cellular prion protein (PrPc) is not clear. • Identity of intracellular compartment where PrPc to PrPSc occurs is not established. • Prion peptide of 106-126 residues is found to be neurotoxic. • Studies on prion protein will open the avenues for treatment of other neurodegenerative disorders. Conclusion