Microbiology and Immunology

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BSE, scrapie, and CJD: recent advances in research WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY

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familial disease (determined by genetic testing, by identifying
two or more first-degree relatives with CJD or, if there is no
information, by a precautionary assumption of familial dis-
ease); recipients of products derived from human pituitary
glands; and recipients of corneal or dura-mater grafts.
The risk of transmission of CJD through blood, blood
products, and organ or tissue transplants, is being addressed
by, for example, the Laboratory Centre for Disease Control
(LCDC) in Canada. They are planning to initiate an enhanced
surveillance system for CJD throughout Canada. Cases will be
reported to the surveillance system by specialists in neurology,
neuropathology and geriatrics. Through record review, inter-
view, genetic sequencing and neuropathological examination,
extensive information about every person suspected of having
CJD will be collected and compared with data from a control
population to ascertain the relative risk of CJD associated with
exposure to blood and blood products. In addition, Canada has
been invited to participate in European Concerted Action on
CJD, an international surveillance program for variant CJD
coordinated by investigators in Edinburgh. This obviously has
ethical implications for patient privacy and it is questionable if
such extreme measures are really necessary. The prion agent is
not new unlike HIVand other emerging agents and there is an
absence of any recorded cases of CJD among people with
hemophilia and recipients of multiple transfusions or people
who abuse injection drugs. Also, a small case-controlled study
in Britain revealed no risk for the subsequent development of
CJD associated with receiving blood.

See alsoBSE and CJD: recent advances in research; Public
health, current issues

BSE, SCRAPIE, ANDCJD: RECENT

ADVANCES IN RESEARCHBSE, scrapie, and CJD: recent advances in research

Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in cows, scrapie in
sheep, and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in humans are
examples of prion diseases. The central event in the pathogen-
esis of these fatal disorders is hypothesized to be the post-
translational conversion of a normal host protein of unknown
function, termed PrPC into an abnormal isoform called PrPSc.
The idea that protein alone can carry information sufficient to
ensure its own propagation was an unprecedented challenge to
the “central dogma” of molecular biologywhich essentially
states that nucleic acids, not proteins, are the biological infor-
mation carriers. The work that led to current understanding of
prion diseases originated more than four decades ago. In the
1960s, Tikvah Alper and her co-workers reported that the
scrapie agent was extremely resistant to treatments that nor-
mally destroy nucleic acids, but sensitive to procedures that
damage proteins. Furthermore, the minimum molecular size
needed in maintaining infectivity was too small to be a virus
or other known infectious agent. These results led J. Griffith to
propose that the material responsible for transmitting scrapie
could be a protein that has the unusual ability to replicate itself
in the body. Extensive work by Stanley Prusinerfinally led to

the purification of the PrP protein. For the next two decades,
most research on prion diseases has focussed on the abnormal
PrPSc and consequently, the functional role of PrPC has
remained an enigma. Recent advances in the field of prion
research, however, suggest that PrPC is a copper binding pro-
tein and has a modulating role in brain oxidative homeostasis.
On the basis of in vitrostudies by D. R. Brown at the
University of Cambridge, it would appear that PrPC may act
as an antioxidant enzyme in a similar manner to superoxide
dismutase. The presence of the copper ion is essential for such
a function.
Much recent evidence suggests that alterations in metal-
lochemical processes could be a contributing factor for the
pathological process in neurodegenerative disorders, includ-
ing Alzheimer’s disease and now possibly prion diseases. The
PrPC protein has recently been found to have a region at its N-
terminus, which is able to bind copper tightly and other met-
als, such as nickel, zinc and manganese, less tightly. One of
the biochemical differences between the PrPC and PrPSc that
was recognized very early is the surprising resistance of PrPSc
to proteases (enzymesable to degrade proteins). In vitrostud-
ies have shown that if manganese ions replace the copper ions
in the PrPC protein, it undergoes a structural change and
becomes protease resistant. Furthermore, the binding of man-
ganese to PrP dramatically reduces its superoxide-dismutase
activity, suggesting that its cellular function may be affected
under these conditions. Whether these in vitro changes
brought about by different metal ions resemble the changes in
PrP during prion disease is still to be confirmed, but the results
are certainly suggestive. Research in this direction is pro-
gressing in several institutions in the UK at the moment.
High concentrations of metals are found in the brain and
to prevent neuronal damage triggered by these elevated con-
centrations, the brain has evolved efficient mechanisms to reg-
ulate the availability of these metals. Metals are required for
the normal functioning of the brain, such as the proper trans-
mission of synaptic signals, which involve the release of zinc,
copper and iron by neurons. At the same time, metals are an
integral part of the cellular defense system, as they are often
bound to antioxidant proteins and protect the brain from dam-
age by free radicals. Although metals are essential to the nor-
mal functioning of the brain, perturbation in metal levels can
upset cellular protein behaviour and possibly lead to neuro-
logical disorders. In Alzheimer’s disease, for example, the lev-
els of copper, zinc, and iron were found to alter in severely
degenerated brain regions. In the hippocampus and amygdala
regions, the levels of both zinc and iron were increased while
the levels of copper were decreased.
In the 1970s, Pattison and Jebbett showed that when
mice were fed with cuprizone, a copper chelator, it induced
histopathological changes reminiscent of scrapie in sheep and
further analysis indicated similar biochemical changes. Also a
recent report by Mark Purdey showed that in the ecosystem
supporting isolated clusters of sporadic prion diseases in
Colorado, Iceland, and Slovakia, a consistent elevation of
manganese concentration in relation to normal levels recorded
in adjoining prion disease-free localities were detected.
Evidence has also emerged concerning the metal content of

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