[HTML][HTML] Chronic wasting disease prion trafficking via the autonomic nervous system

DM Seelig, GL Mason, GC Telling… - The American journal of …, 2011 - Elsevier
DM Seelig, GL Mason, GC Telling, EA Hoover
The American journal of pathology, 2011Elsevier
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a fatal spongiform encephalopathy that is efficiently
transmitted among members of the mammalian family Cervidae, including deer, elk, and
moose. Typical of prion diseases, CWD is characterized by the conversion of the native
protease-sensitive protein PrP C to a protease-resistant isoform, denoted PrP RES. In native
species, spread of the disease likely results from the ingestion of prion-containing excreta,
including urine, saliva, or feces. Although cervid prion protein-expressing transgenic [Tg …
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a fatal spongiform encephalopathy that is efficiently transmitted among members of the mammalian family Cervidae, including deer, elk, and moose. Typical of prion diseases, CWD is characterized by the conversion of the native protease-sensitive protein PrPC to a protease-resistant isoform, denoted PrPRES. In native species, spread of the disease likely results from the ingestion of prion-containing excreta, including urine, saliva, or feces. Although cervid prion protein-expressing transgenic [Tg(CerPrP)] mice have been shown to be effective surrogates of natural CWD, uncertainties remain regarding the mechanisms by which CWD prions traffic in vivo, including the manner by which CWD prions traffic from the gastrointestinal tract to the central nervous system. We used elk prion protein-expressing transgenic [Tg(CerPrP-E)] mice, infected by three different routes of inoculation, and tissue-based IHC to elucidate that centripetal and centrifugal CWD prion transit pathways involve cells and fibers of the autonomic nervous systems, including the enteric nervous system and central autonomic network. Moreover, we identified CWD PrPRES associated with the cell bodies and processes of enteric glial cells within the enteric nervous system of CWD-infected Tg(CerPrP-E) mice. The present findings demonstrate the importance of the peripheral and central autonomic networks in CWD neuroinvasion and neuropathogenesis and suggest that enteroglial cells may facilitate the shedding of prions via the intestinal tract.
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