Combining vaccination with genetic resistance to protect caribou against CWD
Dalia Abdelaziz, Hanaa Ahmed Hassan, Byron Kruger, Kevin Low, Mariam Ansari, Maria
Arifin, Sabine Gilch and Hermann M. Schätzl
Department of Comparative Biology and Experimental Medicine, Faculty of Veterinary
Medicine & Hotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) in cervids and BSE in cattle are prion diseases
that negatively affect economy, ecology as well as animal and possibly human health
in Canada and elsewhere. CWD incidence is reaching 15% in mule deer in Alberta hunting
areas doing testing, a tenfold increase over the last 10 years. Caribou are still
free of CWD, but transmission into caribou will happen soon. Caribou are a major food
source for Native and Northern populations, so food security and safety are at risk.
We described genetic factors in the prion protein (PrP) that likely provide caribou
relative resistance to CWD. Based on our previous work, we propose that vaccination
combined with relative genetic resistance creates additive effects. Our long-term
goal is to develop a CWD vaccine to protect caribou and other cervids against CWD.
Material and Methods: We have established a solid proof-of-concept in rodent models
that vaccination provides relative protection in CWD challenge models. We recently
developed knock-in (KI) mice with different PrP genotypes that recapitulate CWD pathogenesis
as found in cervids. Recombinant prion proteins in monomeric and dimeric form will
be expressed in E.coli, purified and used as immunogens, with CpG as adjuvant. In
addition, immunogens and adjuvant will be co-encapsulated into nanospheres, to generate
nanovaccines for oral vaccination. Mice and reindeer will be immunized as described
previously, and blood collected for determining humoral and cellular immune responses.
Vaccinated and unvaccinated KI mice will be infected with reindeer-derived CWD, and
vaccine effects on incubation time and prion shedding analyzed.
Results: The first part of our work analyzes the effect of PrP codon 138 on vaccination
followed by CWD challenge in KI mice. Mice were vaccinated and challenge with CWD
prions (i.p. route) is ongoing. Vaccination results will be discussed. These experiments
will show that vaccination extends time to prion disease in KI mice infected with
CWD prions. This work will also analyze whether vaccination reduces CWD shedding.
Vaccination studies are done in parallel in reindeer to test vaccination efficacy
in cervids and prepare the stage for vaccination of caribou.
Additional work will determine effects of oral vaccination on CWD pathogenesis and
prion shedding, using nanovaccines and vector-based vaccines. CWD challenge studies
will be done with white-tailed deer in different settings.
Conclusions: Our work will result in tools that help to protect caribou and other
cervid species against CWD infection.
Funded by: The Alberta Prion Research Institute/Alberta Innovates, Canada; Alberta
Environment and Parks; National Institutes of Health, USA.
Grant number: 212200714, 201600023, 1R01AI156037.
Acknowledgement: We thank the University of Calgary animal facilities staff for animal
care.
Cerebrospinal fluid levels of prodynorphin and proenkephalin are differentially altered
in sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease subtypes and reflect the divergent neuronal
targeting
Samir Abu-Rumeileha, Peggy Barschkeb, Patrick Oecklb,c, Simone Baiardid,e, Angela
Mammanad, Andrea Mastrangelod,f, MHD Rami Al Shweikib, Petra Steinackera, Anna Ladoganag,
Sabina Capellarid,f, Markus Ottoa and Piero Parchid,e
aDepartment of Neurology, Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg, Halle, Germany;
bDepartment of Neurology, Ulm University Hospital, Ulm, Germany; cGerman Center for
Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE e.V.), Ulm, Germany; dIRCCS Istituto delle Scienze
Neurologiche di Bologna, Bologna, Italy; eDepartment of Experimental Diagnostic and
Specialty Medicine (DIMES), University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy; fDepartment of
Biomedical and NeuroMotor Sciences (DIBINEM), University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy;
gDepartment of Neuroscience, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Rome, Italy
Aims: Prodynorphin (PDYN) and proenkephalin (PENK) are peptides mainly produced by
the striatum and, to a lesser extent, by the cerebral cortex. Previous studies reported
dysregulated metabolism and altered cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) levels of PDYN and PDYN
in neurodegenerative diseases, such as Huntington’s disease and dementia with Lewy
bodies. Here, we investigated, for the first time, CSF PDYN and PENK values in the
phenotypic spectrum of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD).
Material and Methods: We measured CSF PDYN- and PENK-derived peptide concentrations
in 63 patients with the most prevalent molecular subtypes of sCJD [MM(V)1, VV2 and
MV2K], and in 25 controls using a liquid chromatography−multiple reaction monitoring
mass spectrometry. Additionally, we performed a semiquantitative analysis of neuronal
loss and astrogliosis in sCJD MM(V)1, VV2, and MV2K brains.
Results: sCJD MV2K showed selectively decreased CSF PDYN-derived peptides compared
to the other subtypes. Accordingly, the semiquantitative analysis of cortical and
striatal neuronal loss and astrogliosis revealed a more widespread overall pathology
in the MV2K group than the sCJD MM(V)1 and the VV2 groups. We detected decreased levels
of one of the PENK-derived peptides in all CJD subtypes, without difference between
subtypes. PENK and PDYN were associated with CSF biomarkers of neurodegeneration.
However, PENK and PDYN did not correlate with disease stage and survival and yielded
a poor diagnostic value in sCJD.
Conclusions: Despite the poor diagnostic and prognostic performance of CSF PDYN and
PENK-derived peptides, we speculate that the observed differential alteration of CSF
peptide levels between sCJD subtypes might reflect the divergent neuronal targeting
and might help to understand better the basis of sCJD phenotypic heterogeneity.
Funded by: This research was funded by grants from the Italian Ministry of Health
(‘Ricerca corrente’), the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (projects:
FTLDc 01GI1007A), the EU Joint Programme-Neurodegenerative Diseases networks Genfi-Prox
(01ED2008A), the Foundation of the State Baden-Württemberg (D.3830), the EU (Moodmarker)
program (01EW2008), the German Research Foundation/DFG (SFB1279), the Boehringer Ingelheim
Ulm University BioCenter (D.5009) and the Thierry Latran foundation (D.2468).
Acknowledgement: The authors wish to thank Stephen Meier, Barbara Polischi, M.Sc.
and Benedetta Carlà M.Sc. for their valuable technical assistance.
BSE pathogenesis in the ileal Peyer’s patches and the central and peripheral nervous
system of young cattle 8 months post oral BSE challenge
Ivett Ackermanna, Reiner Ulrichb, Kerstin Tauscherc, Olanrewaju I. Fatolaa, Christine
Fasta, Markus Kellera, James C. Shawulua,d, Mark Arnolde, Stefanie Czubf, Martin H.
Groschupa, and Anne Balkema-Buschmanna
aFriedrich-Loeffler-Institut, Institute of Novel and Emerging Infectious Diseases,
Greifswald-Insel Riems, Germany; bInstitute of Veterinary Pathology, Faculty of Veterinary
Medicine, Leipzig University, Germany; cFriedrich-Loeffler-Institut, Department of
Experimental Animal Facilities and Biorisk Management, Greifswald-Insel Riems, Germany;
dDepartment of Veterinary Anatomy, University of Abuja, Nigeria; eAnimal and Plant
Health Agency Sutton Bonington, Sutton Bonington, Loughborough, England; fCanadian
Food Inspection Agency, Lethbridge Laboratory, Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada
Aims: After oral exposure of cattle with classical bovine spongiform encephalopathy
(C-BSE), the infectious agent ascends from the gut to the central nervous system (CNS)
primarily via the autonomic nervous as the first entry port to system. However, the
early timeline of the progression from the gut to the brain has so far remained widely
undetermined. To shed light on the early BSE pathogenesis in unweaned calves, we orally
infected calves at six to eight weeks of age with a high dose of classical BSE, and
followed the pathogenesis within the first eight months post infection.
Material and Methods: 18 unweaned Simmental calves aged 4 to 6 weeks were orally challenged
with 100 g each of a classical BSE brainstem pool, while two calves served as negative
controls. The animals were euthanized and necropsied at predetermined time points
of 1 week as well as 2, 4, 6 and 8 months post infection (mpi). Two infected cattle
were kept until the development of clinical symptoms of BSE and served as positive
controls. For each of the 18 infected and two negative control calves, samples of
the ileal Peyer’s patches as well as the CNS and peripheral nervous system (PNS) were
examined by immunohistochemistry (IHC), protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA)
and by transgenic Tgbov XV mouse bioassay.
Results: In the ileal Peyer’s patches, BSE prions were detectable as early as two
mpi by PMCA and transgenic mouse bioassay. From four mpi, PrPScaccumulation was detectable
by IHC in tingible body macrophages (TBMs) of the IPP follicles and already in follicular
dendritic cells (FDCs). We were also able to show that as early as 8 mpi, the thoracic
spinal cord as well as the parasympathetic nodal ganglion of these animals may contain
PrPBSEand BSE infectivity. The positive control animals developed clinical signs of
BSE after incubation periods of 32 mpi and 36 mpi, respectively.
Conclusions: Our study demonstrates for the first time PrPBSE(by PMCA) and prion infectivity
(by mouse bioassay) in the ileal Peyer’s patch (IPP) of young calves as early as 2 months
after infection. From 4 mpi nearly all calves showed PrPBSEpositive IPP follicles
by IHC. We could also show that the centripetal prion spread starts early after challenge
at least in this age group, which represents an essential piece of information for
the risk assessments for food, feed and pharmaceutical products produced from young
calves.
Funded by: This research was funded by WALA Heilmittel GmbH. The sponsors had no role
in the design, execution, interpretation, or writing of the study.
Acknowledgement: We thank the Scientific Advisory Group (SAG), namely Thierry Baron
(ANSES Lyon), Michael Beekes (RKI Berlin), Jim Hope, Marion Simmons, John Spiropoulos
(all APHA Weybridge) and Paul Brown (NINDS Bethesda, USA) for their advice and input
regarding the design and interpretation of this study. Julia Neumeister, Daniel Balkema
and Bärbel Hammerschmidt are acknowledged for their skillful technical assistance.
We are thankful to Lukas Steinke, Nicole Sinkwitz, Kerstin Kerstel and Doreen Fiedler
for their excellent care of the bioassay mice. We are grateful to Stefanie Marzahl,
Ben Schiller and Volker Netz for the great care and handling of the experimental cattle.
The combinatorial effect of chronic drug intake and microgravity on Amyloid formation
Shimon Amselema, Yariv Marmurb, Natalia Szenkierc, Ami Navonc, Atan Grossc, Lawrence
Steinmand,e, Jonathan Rothbardd,e, and Marcela Viviana Karpujb
aSpacePharma R & D – A Bio-Space Co., Israel, bDepartment of Industrial Engineering
and Management, Ort Braude, Karmiel, Israel, cDepartment of Biological Regulation,
The Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel, dDepartment of Neurology and Neurological
Sciences & Pediatrics, Stanford Univ, Stanford USA, eDepartment of Biotechnology Engineering,
Ort Braude, Karmiel, Israel
Environmental factors such as temperature, and pH affect amyloid formation. Very little
is known regarding the impact of gravity on these aggregates. Here, we demonstrate,
using an in vitro model, the effect of microgravity on amyloid formation in the presence
and absence of newly identified anti-amyloidogenic drugs. This includes drugs that
are known to penetrate the BBB as well as Nutraceuticals that could be approved quickly
if found to be effective in more advanced models. We identified drugs that reverse
existing as well as inhibit the formation of amyloid structures. Unexpectedly we identified
two drugs that are known to be chronically taken and induce the formation of these
aggregates. Interestingly, the impact of some of these drugs was attenuated under
microgravity conditions. Our findings are important since when traveling to space
it might be important to utilize this screening method to test the potential harmful
effect of the combinatorial effect of microgravity and certain drugs. The opportunity
to study drugs and cells at microgravity permits exploration into chemical and biological
properties that might not be present at usual conditions due to the masking effects
of gravity forces.
Biobank of genetic CJD in Israel
Alice Anane, and Victor Novack
CJD Foundation Israel, and Soroka University Medical Center, Israel
Aims: A sharing longitudinal biobank of samples and values of genetic families with
E200K mutation and patients.
Material and Methods: The world prevalence of the disease is 1:500,000–1,000,000 a
year. About 85% are sporadic cases, and about 15% are genetic. In Israel, there is
the highest prevalence in the world of the genetic form (gCJD), estimated by about
1:200,000 a year, due to a common mutation that induces the risk, at the Libyan-Tunisian
community at Israel, which is characterized by many members at each family. The estimation
is thousands of families with the genetic risk, concentrate in rather small area of
the state of Israel.
My name is Alice Anane, a daughter of a father, who died from this disease at a young
age (49). After discovering I and my siblings are carriers, I founded the association
in 2008 and I am very active worldwide to advance research for this horrible and devastating
disease. We unite a community of the genetic families. Our registry counts more than
400 members (representatives of families) and it grows constantly.
Our partner – Prof. Victor Novack, Clinical Epidemiologist. MD, Ph.D. Head of The
Research Authority, Supervising Negev Bio Bank (NBB), a high-quality biorepository
of biological samples that operates with MIDGAM, a national Israeli infrastructure
for biomedical research and includes five Israeli medical centers, which located in
different areas and works as biobanking sites. NBB will be in charge of managing and
maintaining the samples of CJD from all the sites in its facilities. We invite researchers
to apply and initiate new research on our human samples, sharing values of results
with us, for conducting AI of Big Data research.
Results: Longitude studies for biomarkers, early diagnosis and therapeuties for gCJD.
Conclusions: Conducting and sharing data on the same specific samples for longitude
studies can bring a revelation for science and for us at the shortest time in the
most efficient way. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8UQTpoBYvdU&t=10s
Comprehensive Characterization of Genetic Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease Caused by the
E200K Mutation in the U.S.
Brian S. Applebya, Megan Piazzab,c, Melissa Keinathb, Alberto Bizzid, Curtis Tatsuokae,
Thomas W. Priorb, Keisi Kotobellia, Wenquan Zoua, Mark L. Cohena, and Ignazio Calia
aNational Prion Disease Pathology Surveillance Center, Case Western Reserve University,
Cleveland, OH, USA; bCenter for Human Genetics, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical
Center, Cleveland, OH, USA; cPrevention Genetics, Marshfield, WI, USA; dFondazione
IRCCS, Istituto Neurologico Carlo Besta, Milan, Italy; eDepartment of Population and
Quantitative Health Sciences, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA
Aims: E200K is the most common cause of genetic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (gCJD) worldwide.
Most are of the E200K-129 M haplotype and information regarding the clinicopathologic
profile of E200K-129 V is limited. The objective of this project was to systematically
evaluate all E200K cases submitted to the National Prion Disease Pathology Surveillance
Center (NPDPSC).
Material and Methods: The NPDPSC database was queried for cases submitted to the NPDPSC
from 1997–2018 with a final diagnosis of gCJD due to E200K. Demographic, clinical,
diagnostic, and neuropathologic data were collected and analyzed. Cases were divided
into four genotypes dependent on the PRNP codon 129 polymorphic variations.
Results: 181 autopsy-confirmed E200K cases were used for this study. Most cases were
of the E200K-129 M haplotype (n = 156, 88%) and 21 (12%) were E200K-129 V. The mean
age at death was 61 years (STD: 10.1, range: 37–85) and did not differ significantly
between haplotypes. There was a statistically significant difference in mean illness
duration between genotypes, with E200K-129 MM having the quickest duration (3.7 ±
3.1 months) and E200K-129 MV having the longest duration (11.1 ± 10 months) (p < 0.001).
Codon 129 heterozygotes had a longer mean disease duration (10.4 ± 9.2 months) compared
to homozygotes (3.8 ± 3.3 months), regardless of haplotype (p < 0.001). Codon 129
homozygotes were less likely to have a known family history compared to heterozygotes
(78.5% vs 93.6%, p = 0.021). Mean age at death varied by presenting symptoms (p = 0.014).
E200K-129 M had lower mean cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) tau levels compared to E200K-129 V
(4,997 vs 10,221, p = 0.037). Codon 129 homozygotes experienced sleep disorders more
commonly than heterozygotes, regardless of haplotype (23% vs 10%, p = 0.038), had
more cases with elevated CSF 14-3-3 protein (46% vs 23%, p = 0.003) and periodic sharp
wave complexes on electroencephalogram (51% vs 21%, p = 0.033). All cases that underwent
CSF real time quaking induced conversion were positive, except for one case in which
the sample was slightly bloody. Initial brain magnetic resonance imaging was suggestive
of CJD in 50% of subjects. E200K-129 M differed from E200K-129 V with respect to histologic
lesion profiles and immunohistochemical features. Five histological subtypes were
identified across all cases.
Conclusions: We will summarize clinicopathologic characteristics of the largest autopsy
confirmed group of E200K cases. E200K haplotypes demonstrated different histologic
profiles and disease durations. Homozygosity at codon 129, regardless of haplotype,
was associated with several important clinical and diagnostic features. Codon 129
polymorphic changes should be considered when evaluating and studying individuals
with the E200K mutation.
Funded by: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and National Institutes of Health
Grant number: CDC 1 NU38CK000480 (Appleby) and NIH AG068359 (Cali)
Acknowledgement: NPDPSC staff, CJD Foundation, referring physicians, patients, and
families
Heterozygosity at cervid Prnp codon 138 progressively blocks prion conversion in vitro
and partly confines prion propagation to the periphery in knock-in mice
Maria I. Arifina, Doris Zenga, Samia Hannaouia, Michael Beekesb, Gordon Mitchellc,
Sylvie Benestadd, Lech Kacmarczyke, Walker Jacksone, and Sabine Gilcha
aDepartment of Comparative Biology and Experimental Medicine, University of Calgary,
Calgary, Canada; bPrion and Prionoid Research Unit, Centre for Biological Threats
and Special Pathogens, Robert Koch Institute, Berlin, Germany; cNational and OIE Reference
Laboratory for Scrapie and CWD, Canadian Food Inspection Agency, Ottawa, Canada; dNorwegian
Veterinary Institute, OIE Reference Laboratory for CWD, Ås, Norway; eWallenberg Center
for Molecular Medicine, Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Linkoping
University, Linköping, Sweden
Aims: A serine to asparagine amino acid substitution at Prnp codon 138, unique to
reindeer/caribou and fallow deer, has been associated with reduced susceptibility
to chronic wasting disease (CWD). We aim to determine the susceptibility of transgenic
‘knock-in’ mice expressing this 138 N cervid Prnp variant to various CWD isolates
and to establish the molecular mechanisms behind their partial resistance to the disease.
Material and Methods:
In vivo studies: knock-in mice expressing cervid Prnp, instead of mouse Prnp, with
either serine and/or asparagine at codon 138 (138 S/S [wild-type], S/N or N/N) were
intracerebrally or intraperitoneally inoculated with tissue homogenates from CWD-positive
white-tailed deer from North America, reindeer from an experimental study, and reindeer,
moose, or red deer from Norway. Brain, spleen, spinal cord, and feces were harvested
upon euthanasia when the mice reached terminal prion disease. The presence of prions
was detected by proteinase-K (PK) digestion followed by Western blotting (WB) and/or
real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC) assay.
In vitro studies: we used brain homogenates from naïve 138 S/S, S/N, or N/N knock-in
mice as substrates in protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA) assay to determine
whether the 138 N Prnp allele affects prion conversion in vitro. Reactions were seeded
with brain homogenates from CWD-positive wild-type reindeer or knock-in mice, then
subjected to PK digestion followed by WB to determine the presence of PK-resistant
prions (PrPres).
Results:
Knock-in mice expressing at least one N allele at codon 138 (138 S/N and 138 N/N)
were resistant to clinical CWD, except when inoculated with the moose isolate from
Norway. PrPreswas not detected in the brains and spinal cords of these non-clinical
mice. However, seeding activity was detected using RT-QuIC predominantly in the mice
spleens, regardless of inoculation route.
PrPCharboring the 138 N allele was less efficiently converted to PrPresin PMCA, even
upon serial passaging (sPMCA). Interestingly, PrPCfrom heterozygous 138 S/N mice brains
but not 138 N/N mice, lost their conversion ability upon sPMCA, with PrPresno longer
detectable by passage 3.
Conclusions: Our results suggests that free-ranging reindeer/caribou carrying the
138 N Prnp variant, particularly in the heterozygous state (138 S/N), are more resistant
to CWD than their homozygous wild-type or even 138 N/N counterparts. However, if infected
with CWD prions, these animals also have the potential to be silent carriers and may
shed prions throughout their lifespan, raising concerns for intra- and interspecies
transmission.
Funded by: Genome Canada, Genome Alberta, Alberta Prion Research Institute, Margaret
Gunn Foundation for Animal Research, University of Calgary Seed Grant, Alberta Graduate
Excellence Scholarship (International)
Acknowledgement: We would like to thank Debbie McKenzie and Trent Bollinger for providing
us with the white-tailed deer isolates.
Loss of prion protein control of glucose metabolism contributes to neurodegeneration:
dichloroacetate as a promising medicine to treat Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
Hélène Arnoulda,b, Vincent Baudouina,b, Anne Baudrya,b, Luiz W. Ribeiroa,b, Mathéa
Pietria,b, Hector Ardila-Osorioa,b, Carole Crozetf, Fatima Djouadig,h, Mireille Laforgea,b,
Gildas Berthoc,d, Odile Kellermanna,b, Jean-Marie Launayi,j, Gerold Schmitt-Ulmse,
and Benoit Schneidera,b
aINSERM, UMR-S 1124, Paris, France; bUniversité Paris Cité, UMR-S 1124, Paris, France;
cCNRS, UMR 8601, Paris, France; dUniversité Paris Cité, UMR 8601, Paris, France; eUniversity
of Toronto, Tanz Centre for Research in Neurodegenerative Diseases, Canada; fIRMB,
Université de Montpellier, INSERM, CHU de Montpellier, Montpellier, France; gINSERM,
UMR-S 1138, Paris, France; hUniversité Paris Cité, UMR-S 1138, Paris, France; iAssistance
Publique des Hôpitaux de Paris, INSERM UMR942, Hôpital Lariboisière, Paris, France;
jPharma Research Department, Hoffmann La Roche Ltd, Basel, Switzerland
Aims: The cellular prion protein (PrPC) is well known for its central role in Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease and has also been implicated in the two most prevalent neurodegenerative diseases,
Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases. Yet, despite considerable interest in this protein,
the role of PrPCis still partially understood and debated. We aimed to identify novel
cell functions governed by PrPCand investigate whether dysregulation of those functions
contributes to prion diseases.
Material and Methods: To this purpose, we compared the proteome and metabolome of
PrPCexpressing 1C11 neuronal cells to those of PrPnull-1C11 cells stably repressed
for PrPCexpression and analyzed the phenotype of primary cultures of hippocampal neurons
isolated from PrP+/+- and PrP0/0-FVB mice. The status of novel cell functions governed
by PrPCwas then probed in prion-infected C57Bl/6 J mice.
Results: We show that PrPCcontributes to the regulation of the energetic metabolism
by orienting cells towards mitochondrial oxidative degradation of glucose. Through
its coupling to cAMP/protein kinase A signaling, PrPCtones down the expression of
the pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4 (PDK4) and optimizes the activity of the mitochondria
pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. Such PrPCaction favors the transfer of cytosolic pyruvate
into mitochondria and its conversion into acetyl-CoA to produce ATP, which thereby
limits fatty acid β-oxidation and subsequent onset of oxidative stress conditions.
The corruption of PrPCmetabolic regulatory role by pathogenic prions PrPSccauses in
the mouse brain an imbalance between glucose oxidative degradation and fatty acid
β-oxidation in a PDK4-dependent manner. The metabolic reprogramming of the prion-infected
brain towards fatty acid β-oxidation promotes neurodegeneration. The inhibition of
PDK4 with the medicine dichloroacetate (DCA) at a late stage of the disease counteracts
PrPSc-induced metabolic derangements, attenuates neurodegeneration in the brain, and
extends the survival of prion-infected mice.
Conclusions: Our study reveals a new role of PrPCin the control of the glucose energetic
metabolism whose dysregulation by PrPSccontributes to prion diseases. Our work introduces
PDK4 as a potential therapeutic target to combat prion diseases. Our data further
suggest DCA, a medicine already approved for the treatment of congenital lactic acidosis
and tested in diverse clinical trials for an anti-cancer action, would be used as
a symptom-modifying drug for treating Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease patients.
Funded by: INSERM, the French Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) and the ARSLA
foundation.
Grant number: ANR-16-CE16-0021-01, ANR-14-JPCD-0003-01, ARSLA n°J19D08DOC026.
Acknowledgement: We thank the Cytometry and Molecular Biochemistry-Biology core facility
(Cyto2BM) of BioMedTech Facilities INSERM US36 | CNRS UMS2009 | Université Paris Cité.
Prion propagation is dependent upon key N-terminal amino acids within the prion protein
P Arora, MLD Rayner, P Klöhn, C Schmidt, J Collinge and P Jat
MRC Prion Unit at UCL, London W1W 7FF, UK
Aims: To identify residues within the unstructured N-terminal domain of the prion
protein that are critical for efficient prion propagation. Previous work suggested
that most of the N-terminal residues could be disregarded whereas the C-terminal region
of the protein mediated formation of infectious prions. However subsequent studies
involving reconstitution of Prnp0/0
mice with amino-terminal deletion mutants indicated that the N-terminus was essential
for efficient prion propagation.
Material and Methods: We have generated derivatives of PK1 and CAD5 cells, PK1-KD
and CAD5-KD, stably knocked-down for PrPCexpression to a level that renders them fully
resistant to prion infection, but regain susceptibility to infection upon restoring
PrP expression. A library of single, double, or triple alanine replacements within
residues 23–111 were prepared and used to stably reconstitute PK1-KD cells. The reconstituted
cells were challenged with RML prions in scrapie cell assays (SCA) to identify mutants
that affected prion propagation. PrP mutants that identified key residues were stably
transduced into CAD5-KD cells and challenged with ME7, 22 L and MRC2 prions to identify
residues required for their propagation. Identification of key residues was refined
by replacing single amino acids (aa) with alanine, expressing them in CAD5-KD cells
and challenging them in a SCA.
Results and Conclusions: Alanine replacement of aa within 105–111, in Charge Cluster
2, were required for propagation of RML, ME7, 22 L and MRC2 prions. Replacement of
other residues exhibited strain-specific effects or had no effect. Replacements in
Charge Cluster 2 (90–111) including aa 105–111 dominantly inhibited prion propagation
in the presence of endogenous wild type PrPCwhilst other changes were not inhibitory.
None of the alanine mutants blocked prion propagation when expressed in chronically
prion-infected cells. Analysis of single alanine replacements within aa 105–111 indicated
that efficient prion propagation was dependent on leucine 108 and valine 111 acting
alone or lysine 105, threonine 106 and asparagine 107 acting together at the infection
stage. This is highly interesting in light of the 2.7 Å cryo-EM structure of ex vivo
RML prion fibrils indicating that K105, T106, N107 are part of the positively charged
patch on the surface of proto filaments whereas L108 and V111 are hydrophobic and
face inwards forming hydrophobic interactions with P136 and I138 for stability of
the prion fibrils.
Funded by: MRC Prion Unit core funding.
Grant number: PR-R17- 0916- 23,004
Understanding the Conformational Dynamics of Infectious Prion Fibrils
Efrosini Artikis and Byron W. Caughey
Laboratory of Persistent Viral Diseases, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute
of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Hamilton, MT USA
Aims: The conformational conversion of endogenous cellular prion protein (PrPC) into
misfolded protein assemblies (PrPSc) is a signature of prion disease. The mechanism
by which PrPCadopts the misfolded PrPSctemplate and undergoes structural conversion
remains unknown. We aim to elucidate aspects of the conversion process by first understanding
the structural elements of infectious PrPScfibrils (263 K, aRML). The identification
of structural ‘hot spots’ on the fibrillar surface will provide insight into the recruitment
and binding of PrPCmonomers. Furthermore, the systematic comparison of the key conformational
regions among different strains will illuminate the requirements for conversion fidelity.
Secondly, investigating the presence of lipids and neutralizing cofactors will clarify
why and how these factors help push the PrPCaway from its native fold.
Material and Methods: A variety of molecular dynamics (MD) techniques are employed
to probe conformational changes, cofactor and lipid interactions, and strain variations.
Results: High resolution cryo-EM structures have demonstrated that infectious PrPScfibrils
contain common structural elements. Our MD simulations have identified regions of
conformational plasticity within conserved structural motifs which may aid in the
initial interaction and recruitment with PrPC.Although the fibrillar surface contains
highly charged and hydrophobic patches, segments of these potential binding sites
are occluded by the accumulation of divalent cations and water molecules. Pores and
pockets within the fibril may play important roles in the propagation mechanism. Furthermore,
in silico mutagenesis of single amino acid residues that are important in conversion
implicates nuanced structural changes that can be allosteric and long-range. Specifically,
we have identified hydrogen bonding networks and persistent aromatic interactions
as vital aspects of structural integrity. Lastly, accelerated MD allows for simulations
in the microsecond time regime where we can observe interactions between monomeric
PrPCand a GPI-anchored 263 K fibril inserted in a neuronal lipid bilayer.
Conclusions: Understanding the structural underpinnings of prion conversion allows
for insight into the molecular pathogenesis and strain diversity of prion diseases.
Such knowledge will ultimately aid in the rational design of conversion inhibitors.
Funded by: Division of Intramural Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases
Grant number: ZIA AI000580
Pathomorhological analysis and atomic force microscopy examination of infectious prion
protein, isolated from the brain with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
Andrei N. Astashonoka, Sergei A. Guzovb, Тatyana V. Dokukinac, Michael V. Mackhrovc,
and Nikolai N. Poleshchuka
aThe Republican Research and Practical Center for Epidemiology and Microbiology, Minsk,
Belarus; bBelarusian State Medical University, Minsk, Belarus; cRepublican Research
and Practice Mental Health Center, Minsk, Belarus
Aims: To perform neuropathological analysis in case of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and
characterize the nanostructural organization of misfolded prion protein by atomic
force microscopy
Material and Methods: We report here a neuropathological examination of case of Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease from Belarus. Neuropathological analysis was performed by standard protocols.
For an in-depth description of pathological features, fragments of the human brain,
containing cortex, thalamus, hippocampus, cerebellum, globus pallidus, etc., were
analyzed by electron microscopy (JEM-1011, Japan). Using tapping mode atomic force
microscopy (Nanoscope 3D Multimode) the purified brain fractions, containing protease-resistant
prion protein, were investigated.
Results: The neuropathological findings were characterized by spongiform changes in
gray matter, extensive loss of neurons, synaptic abnormalities, astocytic and microglial
proliferation. Multiple vacuoles in different size, containing the fragments of structurally
modified membranes, in cerebral cortex were found. Using the purified brain fractions,
treated with proteinase K, we found the presence of prion rods (100–200 nm) and globules
(10–25 nm). Atomic force microscopy analysis also revealed differences in height of
prion rods, which were characterized by inhomogeneous relief areas. At the same time,
the central part (core), as a rule, did not have sharp changes in roughness compared
to the peripheral areas.
Conclusions: The obtained data, in our opinion, are important for understanding the
role of conformational rearrangements in infectology, and may also be useful in the
creation of recombinant prions. In addition, we hope that this study will help clarify
strain differences in CJD and possibly other prion disorders.
Funded by: This work was supported by State Applied Research Program (registration
number 20,210,323, Belarus)
Acknowledgement: We are grateful the clinical specialists, who performed the instrumental
diagnostics (MRI), EEG and some laboratory analysis.
Different α-Synuclein Prion Strains Cause Dementia with Lewy Bodies and Multiple System
Atrophy
Jacob I. Ayersa,b, Joanne Leea, Octovia Monteiroa, Amanda L. Woermana,b, Ann A. Lazarc,
Carlo Condelloa,b, Nick A. Parasa,b, and Stanley B. Prusinera
aInstitute for Neurodegenerative Diseases, Weill Institute for Neurosciences, University
of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA; bDepartment of Neurology, Weill Institute
for Neurosciences, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA; cDivision
of Biostatistics, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA; dDepartment
of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco,
CA
Aims: The aim of this study was to characterize α-synuclein prion activity from the
brains of multiple system atrophy (MSA), dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), and Parkinson’s
disease (PD) patients.
Materials and Methods: We first employed detergent extraction and limited proteolysis
followed by sodium phosphotungstic acid (PTA) precipitation to increase the concentration
of the putative PD and DLB α-synuclein prions. We then tested their infectivity in
several HEK293 T cell lines overexpressing wild-type (WT) α-synuclein or one of three
familial PD–causing mutations (A53T, A30P, and E46K).
Results: The modified protocol to digest and purify α-synuclein prions from patient
brain samples resulted in the detection of α-synuclein prion activity from DLB samples.
Low α-synuclein prion levels in PD samples prevented reliable characterization. Contrary
to the finding that MSA prions were unable to infect the E46K-expressing cell line,
DLB α-synuclein prions were capable of replicating in all four of the α-synuclein
cell models tested.
Conclusions: Our findings argue that the MSA strain of α-synuclein prions differs
from those that accumulate in PD/DLB. Manipulating dominant negative inhibition of
α-synuclein prion replication has created a new approach to identifying novel prions
and deciphering the features of prion multiplication.
Funded by:/Grant number: This work was supported by a grant from the National Institutes
of Health (AG002132) (S.B.P.), as well as by support from the Sherman Fairchild and
Sergey Brin Foundations (S.B.P.).
Acknowledgement: We acknowledge the very special expertise of Dr. Jill Ostrem in helping
us with the complex nosology of the synucleinopathies. We thank Roy Vaz for assisting
with computational modeling. We also thank Shoko Honzumi and Jisoo Lee for optimization
of our HTRF and cell assays. Synucleinopathy and control tissue samples were supplied
by the neuropathology core of the Massachusetts Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center
(AG005134); the Parkinson’s UK Brain Bank at Imperial College London, funded by Parkinson’s
UK, a charity registered in England and Wales (948,776) and in Scotland (SC037554);
and the Banner Sun Health Research Institute Brain and Body Donation Program of Sun
City, AZ, funded by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (U24
NS072026 National Brain and Tissue Resource for Parkinson’s Disease and Related Disorders),
the National Institute on Aging (P30 AG19610 Arizona Alzheimer’s Disease Core Center),
the Arizona Department of Health Services (contract 211,002, Arizona Alzheimer’s Research
Center), the Arizona Biomedical Research Commission (contracts 4001, 0011, 05–901,
and 1001 to the Arizona Parkinson’s Disease Consortium), and the Michael J. Fox Foundation
for Parkinson’s Research.
Inside the kuru-plaque variant (MV2K) of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease: a detailed
clinical and histo-molecular appraisal
Simone Baiardia,b, Angela Mammanab, Marcello Rossib, Sofia Dellavalleb, Giorgio Giacconec,
Anna Ladoganad, Sabina Capellarib,e, and Piero Parchia,b
aDepartment of Experimental, Diagnostic and Specialty Medicine (DIMES), University
of Bologna, Bologna, Italy; bIRCCS, Istituto delle Scienze Neurologiche di Bologna,
Bologna, Italy; cFondazione I.R.C.S.S. Istituto Neurologico Carlo Besta, Milano, Italy;
dDepartment of Neuroscience, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Rome, Italy; eDepartment
of Biomedical and Neuromotor Sciences (DIBINEM), University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy
Aims: To investigate in-depth the clinicopathological heterogeneity characterizing
the kuru-plaque variant (MV2K subtype) of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD).
Material and Methods: We evaluated neurological histories, results of cerebrospinal
fluid (CSF) biomarker studies (RT-QuIC, 14-3-3 protein, total-tau, NfL), brain diffusion-weighted
resonance imaging (DW-MRI), and electroencephalographic recordings (EEG) in 126 patients
with a definite (n = 87) or probable (n = 39) diagnosis of sCJDMV2K. In the definite
cases, the histo-molecular assessment included PrPSctyping by western blot, standard
histologic staining, and PrP immunohistochemistry in several brain areas. We also
investigated the prevalence and topographic extent of mixed histotypes (i.e., MV2K+MM2C)
and the number of cerebellar kuru plaques and their effect on clinical phenotype.
Results: The mean disease duration was 18.0 ± 11.8 months. Duration correlated positively
with the severity of pathologic change and the number of cerebellar kuru plaques (rho = 0.397,
p = 0.002). At the clinical onset and in the early stages patients manifested prominent,
often mixed, cerebellar symptoms and cognitive complaints (mainly memory loss), variably
associated with behavioral/psychiatric, and sleep disturbances. Gait instability was
the most frequent isolated presentation (19.8%). Full-blown dementia was rare in the
early stage. No significant clinical differences were detected by comparing pure and
mixed histotypes (MV2K+MM2C). CSF prion RT-QuIC was positive in 74/76 (97.3%) cases,
while 14-3-3 protein and total-tau (cut-off >1250 pg/ml) in 52.6% and 75.9% respectively.
NfL was increased in all tested cases (mean 8447.6 ± 4772.6 pg/ml). Brain DW-MRI showed
hyperintensity of striatum, cerebral cortex, and thalamus in 81.4%, 49.3%, and 33.8%
of cases, and a profile typical for CJD in 71 out 77 (92.2%). An abnormal cortical
signal was most frequently detected in mixed MV2K+MM2C than pure MV2K (64.7% vs. 16.7%,
p = 0.007). EEG revealed periodic sharp-wave complexes in only 8.7% of cases.
Conclusions: sCJDMV2K is a relatively common subtype showing some ‘atypical’ features.
Consequently, often patients do not fulfill diagnostic criteria in the early disease
stages. Atypical features include the long disease duration, the relative slow worsening
of cognitive decline, and the poor sensitivity of some diagnostic tests such as CSF
14-3-3 protein detection and EEG. Moreover, this subtype uniquely accumulates PrP
in the form of cerebellar amyloid kuru plaque. Clinicians should consider sCJDMV2K
in any patient presenting (or early developing) mixed cognitive and cerebellar dysfunctions.
CSF prion RT-QuIC and brain DW-MRI represent the most sensitive diagnostic tests.
These data strongly suggest that, despite some atypical features, sCJDMV2K can be
clinically diagnosed accurately based on clinical data, DW-MRI, CSF prion RT-QuIC
assay, and codon 129 genotyping.
Incidences Trends of Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease in Israel
Yacov Balasha, Meir Walkerb, Esther Kahanac,d, Hadeel Nabale, Emilia Anise, Hanna
Rosenmannf, Ron Miloc,d, and Amos D. Korczynb
aDepartment of Neurology, Kaplan Medical Center, Rehovot, Israel; bSackler Faculty
of Medicine, Tel-Aviv University, Tel-Aviv, Israel; cDepartment of Neurology, Barzilai
University Medical Center, Ashkelon, Israel; dFaculty of Health Sciences, Ben Gurion
University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel; eDivision of Epidemiology, Ministry of
Health, Jerusalem, Israel; fDepartment of Neurology, the Agnes Ginges Center for Human
Neurogenetics, Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel
Aims: Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (s-CJD) is a rare, fatal neurodegenerative
disorder. Familial cases of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (f-CJD) due to mutations in
the PRNP gene are even rarer around the world; however, in Israel there is an unusual
focus of f-CJD patients carrying the E200K mutation. The number of E200K mutation
carriers in Israel is increasing, which raised the suspicion of CJD transmission from
person to person. If such transmission does occur, the incidence of s-CJD is expected
to increase.
Materials and Methods: Using data from the national CJD registry and official statistics
on the Israeli population, we studied incidence rates of f-CJD and s-CJD for the period
from 1985 to 2018 applying the SEER (Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results) statistical
packet elaborated in the US National Cancer Institute
Results: In total, we identified 621 CJD patients (405 f-CJD and 216 s-CJD) cases.
In the cohort of f-CJD patients the mean age-adjusted annual incidence rate over the
above-mentioned period was 1.88 ± 0.09 (95% CI: 1.7–2.08) per 1,000,000. In the cohort
of s-CJD patents the mean age-adjusted incidence rate over the same period was 0.93 ± 0.06
(95% CI: 0.81–1.06) per 1,000,000 people. No significant time trends were found according
to the permutation test of joinpoint regression in either of them.
When both cohorts were combined, the mean annual age-adjusted incidence of CJD in
Israel was 2.81 ± 0.11 (95% CI: 2.58–3.04) per 1,000,000. From 1985 to 2018, there
was a borderline increase in incidence of 0.8% per year, (95% CI: 0–1.6, p = 0.37),
which is non significant.
Conclusions: Israel has a great predominance of f-CJD compared to s-CJD. The mean
incidence of s-CJD in Israel is similar to most countries. Between 1985 and 2018,
the annual age adjusted incidence rates for both forms of CJD have remained stable.
There is no evidence for transmission of the disease.
Glycans are not necessary to maintain the pathobiological features of Bovine Spongiform
Encephalopathy
Tomás Barrioa,*, Alicia Oterob,*, Hasier Erañac,d,e, Jorge M. Charcoc,d,e, Marina
Betancorb, Carlos M. Díaz-Domínguezc, Olivier Andréolettia, Juan María Torresf, Qingzhong
Kongg, Juan José Badiolab, Rosa Boleab, and Joaquín Castillac,e,h
aUMR INRAE-ENVT 1225 Interactions Hôtes-Agents Pathogènes (IHAP), École Nationale
Vétérinaire de Toulouse, Toulouse, France; bCentro de Encefalopatías y Enfermedades
Transmisibles Emergentes, Facultad de Veterinaria, Instituto Agroalimentario de Aragón
– IA2 (Universidad de Zaragoza-CITA), Zaragoza, Spain; cCenter for Cooperative Research
in Biosciences (CIC bioGUNE), Basque Research and Technology Alliance (BRTA), Bizkaia
Technology Park, Derio, Spain; dATLAS Molecular Pharma, S.L., Derio, Spain; eCentro
de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades infecciosas (CIBERINFEC), Carlos
III National Health Institute, Madrid, Spain; fCentro de Investigación en Sanidad
Animal (CISA-INIA), Madrid, Spain; gDepartments of Pathology and Neurology & National
Center for Regenerative Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH,
USA; hIKERBASQUE, Basque Foundation for Science, Bilbao, Spain
*These authors contributed equally to this work.
Aim: The role of the glycosylation status of PrPCin the conversion to its pathological
counterpart and on cross-species transmission of prion strains has been widely discussed.
Here, we assessed the effect of glycosylation on the strain characteristics of BSE
isolates with different transmission histories upon propagation on a model expressing
a non-glycosylated human PrPC.
Material and methods: Bovine, ovine and porcine-passaged BSE, and vCJD isolates were
used as seeds/inocula in both in vitro and in vivo propagation assays using a non-glycosylated
human PrPC-expressing mouse model (TgNN6h).
Results: On PMCA, all isolates maintained the biochemical characteristics of BSE.
On bioassay, all PMCA-propagated BSE prions were readily transmitted to TgNN6h mice,
in agreement with our previous in vitro results. TgNN6h mice reproduced the characteristic
neuropathological and biochemical hallmarks of BSE, suggesting that the absence of
glycans did not alter the pathobiological features of BSE prions. Moreover, back-passage
of TgNN6h-adapted BSE prions to transgenic mice expressing bovine PrPC(BoTg110) mice
recovered the full BSE phenotype.
Conclusions: Our results support the notion that the glycosylation of human PrPCis
not essential for the preservation of the human transmission barrier for BSE prions
or for the maintenance of BSE strain properties.
Funded by: MINECO Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (Spanish Government)
Grant number: AGL2015-65,560-R
Funded by: Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (Spanish Government)
Grant number: RTI2018-098711-B-I00, RTI2018-098515-B-I00
Funded by: European Region Development Fund (ERDF)
Grant number: POCTEFA EFA148/16
Acknowledgement: The authors want to acknowledge the excellent technical assistance
of Patricia Piñeiro, Sandra Felices and Daniel Romanos. We also thank MINECO for the
Severo Ochoa Excellence Accreditation (SEV-2016-0644). We thank the Biobank from Fundación
Hospital Alcorcón de Madrid (Madrid – Spain) and Basque Biobank – Fundación Vasca
de Innovación de Investigación Sanitaria (Bizkaia – Spain) for providing the human
samples.
Translational profiling of neuronal subtypes in pre-symptomatic fatal familial insomnia
mice reveals TOR signaling in somatostatin-expressing neurons
Susanne Bauera, Lars Dittrichb, Lech Kaczmarczyka,b, Melvin Schleifb, Rui Benfeitasc,
and Walker S. Jacksona,b
aWallenberg Center for Molecular Medicine, Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences,
Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden; bGerman Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases
(DZNE), Bonn, Germany; cDepartment of Biochemistry
and Biophysics, Science for Life Laboratory, National Bioinformatics Infrastructure
Sweden (NBIS), Stockholm University, Sweden
Aims: Analysis of cell type-specific gene expression changes in pre-symptomatic stages
of genetic prion diseases fatal familial insomnia (FFI) and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
(CJD).
Material and Methods: To determine how distinct neurons respond to different mutations
in the prion protein gene at pre-symptomatic stages, we used RiboTag to isolate cell
type-specific, translating mRNA from GABAergic, glutamatergic, somatostatin- (SST)
and parvalbumin- (PV) expressing neurons of 9-month-old knock-in mouse models of FFI
and CJD. Differential gene expression analysis followed by gene set enrichment analysis
(GSEA) was performed for all cell types in both diseases. We further constructed an
undirected weighted gene co-expression network for SST neurons to identify functional
models and hub genes.
Results: SST+neurons showed the most prominent gene expression changes in both diseases,
especially in FFI, with high similarities between the two diseases. GSEA demonstrated
similar enrichment patterns of functional terms for GABAergic cell types in both FFI
and CJD, whereas responses in glutamatergic neurons were disease specific. For SST+neurons,
functional analysis revealed upregulation of ribosomal biogenesis, mitochondrial function
and neurodegenerative disease pathways, and downregulation of synaptic function and
small GTPase mediated signaling in FFI. Analysis of an SST co-expression network revealed
a disease-associated module, functionally associated with autophagy and TORC1 signaling.
Of the identified module hub genes, three were further significantly differentially
expressed in FFI SST neurons, including Depdc5, a component of mTOR regulator complex
GATOR1, and Nucleosome Remodeling Deacetylase complex component Mta3. Importantly,
the molecular changes reported here were very different from those reported for an
acquired prion disease model.
Conclusions: This study identifies SST neurons as an early affected cell type, showing
similar responses in both FFI and CJD with downregulation of mTOR signaling as a potential
explanatory mechanism underlying many of the observed changes. The observation that
FFI and CJD have such similar cellular and molecular signatures indicates that a common
therapy may be effective for multiple inherited prion diseases, but possibly less
effective for acquired prion disease.
Funded by: This work was supported by the Knut and Alice Wallenberg foundation and
the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE).
Correlation between bioassay and PMCA for human prion decontamination studies
Maxime Bélondradea, Christelle Jas-Duvala,b, Simon Nicota, Lilian Bruyère-Ostellsa,
Charly Mayrana, Laetitia Herzogb, Fabienne Reineb, Juan Maria Torresc, Chantal Fournier-Wirtha,
Vincent Béringueb, Sylvain Lehmannd, and Daisy Bougarda
aPathogenesis and control of chronic and emerging infections, Université de Montpellier,
Etablissement Français du Sang, Inserm, Université des Antilles, Montpellier, France;
bVIM INRA, Université Paris-Saclay, Jouy-en-Josas, France; cCentro de Investigación
en Sanidad Animal, Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria
(CISA-INIA), Madrid, Spain; dCHRU de Montpellier and Université de Montpellier, IRMB,
INSERM U1183, Laboratoire de Biochimie Protéomique Clinique, Montpellier, France
Aims: To date, about 500 iatrogenic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease cases have been reported
worldwide. The unusual resistance of prions to decontamination processes, its large
tissue distribution, and the uncertainty about the prevalence of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease (vCJD) in the general population, raise the possibility that some surgical
procedures may be at risk of iatrogenic CJD transmission in healthcare facilities.
It is therefore vital that decontamination procedures applied to medical devices before
their reprocessing are thoroughly validated. We previously described an in vitro assay,
based on PMCA technology associated to steel wires as a surface model, called Surf-PMCA.
This method allowed us to classify prion decontamination treatments according to their
effectiveness on vCJD prions and highlight the lack of efficacy of several marketed
reagents to inactivate human vCJD prions. The objective of the present study is to
confirm previous results obtained in vitro by in vivo transmission studies in transgenic
mice susceptible to vCJD prions.
Material and Methods: We used here a transgenic mouse line permissive to variant CJD
prions (tgBov) to study the correlation between a residual seeding activity measured
in vitro by Surf-PMCA and residual in vivo infectivity. Stainless steel wires, used
as carrier models of prions for inactivation studies by mimicking surfaces of surgical
instruments, were contaminated by contact with vCJD infected brain homogenate. The
presence of residual prion infectivity after several decontamination methods was evaluated
by inoculated processed wires in the brain of tgBov mice.
Results: The use of NaOH 1 N, NaClO 0.2 or 2% and 134°C steam sterilization led to
100% survival of the animals confirming their full efficacy on vCJD prions. Regarding
the partially effective treatments, 1/10 mouse died in the NaOH 0.1 N group and 2/8
mice died in the group inoculated with steel wires sterilized at 121°C. Results obtained
with 6 marketed reagents were well-correlated to previous ones obtained by Surf-PMCA
and show that 4 of them had a low efficacy to remove vCJD prions.
Conclusions: In this study, we demonstrate a good correlation between our previous
in vitro results with infectivity studies in transgenic mice susceptible to vCJD prions.
These experiments emphasize the strength of the Surf-PMCA method as a rapid and sensitive
assay for the evaluation of prion decontamination procedures and also confirm the
lack of efficacy of several marketed reagents on vCJD prions decontamination.
Large-scale PMCA screening of retropharyngeal lymph nodes and in white-tailed deer
and comparisons with ELISA and IHC: the Texas CWD study
Rebeca Benaventea, Paulina Sotoa, Mitch Lockwoodb, and Rodrigo Moralesa
aDepartment of Neurology, McGovern Medical School, University of Texas Health Science
Center at Houston, Texas, USA; bTexas Park and Wildlife Department, Texas, USA
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy that affects
various species of cervids, and both free-ranging and captive animals. Until now,
CWD has been detected in 3 continents: North America, Europe, and Asia. CWD prevalence
in some states may reach 30% of total animals. In Texas, the first case of CWD was
reported in a free-range mule deer in Hudspeth and now it has been detected in additional
14 counties.
Currently, the gold standard techniques used for CWD screening and detection are ELISA
and immunohistochemistry (IHC) of obex and retropharyngeal lymph nodes (RPLN). Unfortunately,
these methods are known for having a low diagnostic sensitivity. Hence, many CWD-infected
animals at pre-symptomatic stages may be misdiagnosed. Two promising in vitro prion
amplification techniques, including the real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC)
and the protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA) have been used to diagnose
CWD and other prion diseases in several tissues and bodily fluids. Considering the
low cost and speed of RT-QuIC, two recent studies have communicated the potential
of this technique to diagnose CWD prions in RPLN samples. Unfortunately, the data
presented in these articles suggest that identification of CWD positive samples is
comparable to the currently used ELISA and IHC protocols. Similar studies using the
PMCA technique have not been reported.
Aims: Compare the CWD diagnostic potential of PMCA with ELISA and IHC in RPLN samples
from captive and free-range white-tailed deer.
Material and Methods: In this study we analyzed 1,003 RPLN from both free-ranging
and captive white-tailed deer collected in Texas. Samples were interrogated with the
PMCA technique for their content of CWD prions. PMCA data was compared with the results
obtained through currently approved techniques.
Results: Our results show a 15-fold increase in CWD detection in free-range deer compared
with ELISA. Our results unveil the presence of prion infected animals in Texas counties
with no previous history of CWD. In the case of captive deer, we detected a 16% more
CWD positive animals when compared with IHC. Interestingly, some of these positive
samples displayed differences in their electroforetic mobilities, suggesting the presence
of different prion strains within the State of Texas.
Conclusions: PMCA sensitivity is significantly higher than the current gold standards
techniques IHC and ELISA and would be a good tool for rapid CWD screening.
Funded by: USDA
Grant number: AP20VSSPRS00C143
A miRNA fingerprint in Plasma-derived extracellular vesicles of hSOD1G93A transgenic
swine
V Benedettia, E Berronea, M Garofalob,c, C Tessaroloa, S Gagliardib, L Messab,d, S
Carellid,e, V Cartaa, G Cagnottif, C Testoria, M Galloa, C Gallig, A Perotag, R Duchig,
L Bergamaschig, C Ceredab, C Casalonea, and C Coronaa
aSC Neuroscienze, Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale del Piemonte Liguria e Valle
d’Aosta; Turin, Italy; bGenomic and post-Genomic Unit, IRCCS Mondino Foundation, Pavia,
Italy; cDepartment of Biology and Biotechnology ‘L. Spallanzani’, University of Pavia,
Pavia, Italy; dDepartment of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ‘L. Sacco’, University
of Milan, Milan, Italy; ePediatric Clinical Research Center Fondazione ‘Romeo ed Enrica
Invernizzi’, University of Milan, Milan, Italy; fDepartment of Veterinary Science,
University of Turin, Grugliasco (TO), Italy; g Avantea, Cremona, Italy
Aims: Two goals of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) research are: i) validation
of new experimental models ii) identification of diagnostic biomarkers, in order to
speed up the diagnosis, to monitor its progression and to assess whether a new therapy
may be effective. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) and their content may be reliable clinical
biomarkers for ALS, as they have yet been used for the diagnosis and prognosis of
various diseases. In this context, we developed a hSOD1G93A transgenic swine characterized
by a reproducible preclinical and clinical phase in order to clarify certain ALS etiopathogenetic
aspects. In particular, EVs characterization in this animal model could elucidate
their role in relation to key elements of the pathological process. Therefore, this
study aimed at evaluating of miRNA into EVs isolated from hSOD1G93A transgenic swine
plasma, in preclinical and clinical phase.
Material and Methods: EVs were isolated from plasma of hSOD1G93A and control pigs
by a modified precipitation method. EVs were characterized by Nanosight, flow cytometry
and Western blotting. miRNAs were sequenced on a NextSeq 500/550.
Results: Phenotype characterization confirmed that the majority of EVs were exosomes
expressing the typical exosome markers (CD63, TSG101, Flotillin 1, Alix). As regard
miRNA analysis, some miRNAs were deregulated in transgenic swine, associated to a
specific expression pattern in the model. Furthermore, an evident up-regulation of
miR-206 was observed. This miRNA is involved in the proper formation and regeneration
of the mature neuromuscular junction. Interestingly, its increased exosomal expression
was also detected comparing hSOD1G93A samples at clinical phase with their corresponding
preclinical samples. Nonetheless, miR-206 was up-regulated in homozygous transgenic
swine compared to heterozygous ones.
Conclusions: In conclusion, these data show that in the swine model, biomarkers already
associated to ALS are expressed and that miRNAs may be used as monitoring tools for
disease severity.
Funded by: Supported by Compagnia di San Paolo grant n.2016.0097, Regione Lombardia
and Italian Ministry of Health
Grant number: ‘INnovazione, nuovi modelli TEcnologici e Reti per curare la SLA’ –
ID 1157625
Acknowledgement: The project has been co-funded by the 2014–2020 ROP ERDF resources
A multiparametric imaging-based cellular assay sensitive to the toxicity of prion-infected
brain tissue demonstrates that purified highly infectious scrapie prions are not directly
neurotoxic
Iryna V. Benilova, Madeleine Reilly, Aline T. Marinho, Emmanuel Risse, Isabella Sheikh,
Parmjit S. Jat, and John Collinge
MRC Prion Unit at University College London, Institute of Prion Diseases, London,
UK
Aims: Prions are misfolded multichain assemblies of cellular prion protein (PrPC).
Prion diseases are associated with accumulation of a broad range of PrP assemblies,
a minority of which meet the biochemical criteria of classical infectious prions PrPSc,
resistant to proteinase K digestion. Infectious prions can accumulate to a high titre
without signs of neurodegeneration, a process known as subclinical infection. Studies
of prion pathogenesis in mice showed that prion infectivity and neurotoxicity follow
distinct pathways and can be uncoupled, suggesting that the onset of neuropathology
is driven by a toxic species distinct from the infectious species. To test this hypothesis,
we aimed at developing an assay that could discriminate between toxicity of prion-infected
and uninfected brain tissue.
Material and Methods: We developed a multiparametric, imaging-based cellular assay
sensitive to the toxicity of crude brain homogenates (BH) prepared from scrapie-sick
CD1 mice inoculated with the Rocky Mountain Laboratory (RML) strain of scrapie. Uninfected
CD1 BH was used as a control. RML BH was also used for purification of highly infectious
prion rods according to an established protocol (Wenborn et al, Scientific Reports
2015).
Toxicity assay consisted of time course studies of neurite retraction on IncuCyteS3
imaging system followed by an end-point analysis of other morphological features such
as dendritic spine density and neurite fragmentation using Opera Phenix platform (Benilova,
Reilly et al, PNAS 2020; Reilly et al., Scientific Reports, in press).
Results: Prion-infected BH caused a multitude of dose-dependent changes of neuronal
phenotype that were quantified in a high-throughput automatic fashion. Purified RML
prions at titres exceeding the titre of RML BH eliciting maximal neurodegeneration
were not acutely neurotoxic, whether dissolved in cell culture medium or brain homogenate
from PrP-expressing or null mice. As a prerequisite for undertaking fractionation
of the toxic species from RML BH, we also searched for a detergent compatible with
toxicity. Pretreatment of RML BH with sarkosyl abolished toxicity without diminishing
the infectious titre. Moreover, we showed that ICSM18, a mouse monoclonal antibody
against amino acid residues 143–153 of murine PrP, known to cure infected cells and
delay the onset of prion disease in infected mice, lacked inherent neurotoxicity and
blocked toxicity of RML BH.
Conclusions: The lack of detectable direct toxicity of highly infectious prions or
sarkosyl-treated infectious BH is consistent with models of prion neurotoxicity being
mediated by toxic species distinct from infectious prion assemblies.
Funded by: The High-Content Biology Platform at the MRC-UCL Laboratory for Molecular
Cell Biology University Unit is supported by the MRC Dementia Platform UK (MR/M02492X/1)
and MRC core funding (MC_U12266B).
Efficient propagation and strain diversity of prions from pure synthetic origin
V. Béringuea, L. Herzoga, F. Reinea, N. Aronb, J. Torrenta, A. Igela, M. Moudjoua,
P. Sibillea, O. Andréolettib, D. Martina, and H. Rezaeia
aUniversité Paris-Saclay, INRAE, UVSQ, VIM, Jouy-en-Josas, France; bINRAE, ENV Toulouse,
IHAP, Toulouse, France
Aims: The pathogenic activity of bacterially-derived recombinant PrP (recPrP) refolded
in vitro into amyloid fibrillar assemblies has been key to the demonstration of prion
proteinaceous nature. While a global consensus on the bona fide infectivity of recPrP
fibrils exists, minimalistic amyloid preparations most often trigger incomplete attack
rates, with long incubation periods or asymptomatic disease on primary transmission
to susceptible hosts. This was interpretated as i) limited conversion capacity of
recPrP fibrils due to conformational mismatch, necessitating serial transmission for
conformational switch and adaptation (‘deformed templating’), and/or ii) low proportion
of infectious conformers in the fibrils preparation, and/or iii) and/or necessity
of co-factor(s) assisting the conversion or conferring infectivity.
Material and Methods: We generated co-factor free preparations of recPrP assemblies
from three different species (hamster, human and mouse) and inoculated them by intracerebral
route to transgenic mice expressing hamster PrP. In parallel, we characterized their
ultra-structure and morphology by atomic force microscopy (AFM).
Results: The three preparations of recPrP assemblies induced a clinical disease with
a 100% attack rate in hamster PrP transgenic mice. Serial passaging allowed identification
of divergent synthetic prion strains. Their selection/propagation appears to be determined,
as for natural prions, by the potential presence of a species barrier. Remarkably,
these synthetic strains were formed from short PrPScfragments from ~140 to 230 amino
acid residues. Depending on the strain type, these short fragments were found alone
or co-propagated with ‘classical’ PrPScforms. AFM analyses of the three recPrP assemblies
preparations with a 10 Å nominal cantilever revealed an overall fibrillar shape. However,
numerous spherical objects were observed, staked on the fibrils as protrusions or
at the vicinity of the fibers or as isolated objects.
Conclusions: The obtention of these ‘mini-prions’ stands in striking contrast to many
previous studies pointing to region ~90-140 as key to prion infectivity and has important
implications for the ongoing debate on prion structure(s). The ultrastructure of the
recPrP fibers is heterogeneous and remarkably differs from homogeneous fibrillar structures
observed so far. Collectively, these studies offer unprecedented opportunities for
further structural investigation of the PrP domains conferring infectivity and strain
properties.
Formation and localization of disease-associated PrP aggregates in primary neuronal
and glial culture systems
Antonio Berretta, Juan M. Ribes, Hazim Halim, George Thirlway, John Collinge, and
Peter C. Kloehn
MRC Prion Unit, UCL, London, UK
Aims: Disease-associated prion protein (PrPd) is a misfolded, aggregated, protease-resistant
and infectious conformer of the cellular prion protein (PrPc). Although accumulation
of PrPdis the main hallmark of prion diseases, cellular mechanisms that facilitate
PrP conversion are not well understood. The aim of this project is to develop primary
neuronal and glial culture systems to investigate the role of these cells in the propagation
of prion strains.
Material and Methods: Pure, mixed and co-cultures of neurons and glial cells were
prepared from E17 and postnatal mice. Cultures were infected with brain homogenates
from RML, Me7 and 22 L diseased animals or with extracellular vesicles isolated from
infected cells (PrPd-EV). By using 1) prion-infected primary cultures from PrP-knockout
animals; 2) treatments with brain homogenates from healthy animals; 3) pre-treatment
with neutralising anti-PrP antibodies were used as negative control to prevent infection.
An adapted scrapie cell assay was developed to monitor the formation of protease-resistant
PrP aggregates. Immunolabelling of cultures with anti-PrP antibodies and confocal
analysis were used to visualise fibril-like aggregates. Subsequently, antibodies against
synaptic vesicles and markers to label lipid rafts and detergent-resistant membranes
were used to identify the subcellular localisation of PrPd.
Results: In hippocampal neuronal cultures, treatments for at least 2–3 weeks with
RML and 22 L brain homogenates and with PrPd-EV resulted in prion infection. Prion
infection was corroborated using both an adapted scrapie cell assay and immunofluorescence
showing the presence of Proteinase K resistant PrPdand over several micrometers of
fibril-like aggregates, respectively. PrPdfibrils were attached to neuronal dendrites
with no apparent colocalization with glutamatergic synaptic proteins. PrPdinfection
was also observed in astrocytes in mixed cultures with neurons and in pure cultures
only if treated with cAMP, which mimics in vivo astrocytes after neuronal activity.
Conclusions: We established complementary primary culture systems for visualizing
PrPdaggregates in neurons and glial cells. Further ongoing experiments aim to identify
the subcellular localization of PrPdaggregates focusing on synapses and lipid microdomains.
Funded by: UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC, BB/V001310/1)
and UK Medical Research Council (MRC, MC_UU_00024/4)
The Amyloid Aggregation Study on board The International Space Station
E. Berronea, F. Cardoneb, C. Coronaa, M. Sbriccolib, V. Benedettia, A. Favolea, C.
Palmitessaa,F. Porrecab, A. Cornacchiab, S. Camerinib, M. Casellab, M. Crescenzib,
S. Siriguc, A. Crisafic, C. Piacenzad, G. Truscellid, D. Castagnoloe, C. Pacellif,
M. Crisconiof, G. Valentinif, G. Mascettif, S. P.f, S. Sennatog, F.A. Scaramuzzoh,
G. Melii, E. Fiorii, A. Mancai, and C. Casalonea
aIstituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale del Piemonte, Liguria e Valle d’Aosta, Turin,
Italy; bIstituto Superiore di Sanità, Rome, Italy; cAltec S.p.A., Turin, Italy; dArgotec,
Turin, Italy; eTelespazio, Naples, Italy; fItalian Space Agency (ASI), Rome, Italy;
gISC – CNR, Rome, Italy; h‘Sapienza’ University of Rome, Rome, Italy; iEuropean Brain
Research Institute, Rome, Italy
Aims: Pathological aggregates made of amyloid β (Aβ) peptides are one of the main
hallmarks of the Alzheimer disease (AD). The study of the effects of longlasting space
stays on the development of AD and other proteinopathies in astronauts is an urgent
need in view of the programs for interplanetary travels announced by national and
international space agencies. ‘Amyloid Aggregation’ is an Italian Space Agency (ASI)
simple test tube aiming to assess if and how Aβ peptides aggregation is affected by
microgravity, identifying a possible professional risk in astronauts spending long
periods in space.
Material and Methods: The experiment was performed on the International Space Station
(ISS) during the ‘BEYOND’ mission. Solubilized Aβ peptides were encapsulated in the
cap of special jars, also containing the reaction fluid in a separate lower compartment.
Once on the ISS, Aβ peptides were mixed with the reaction fluid and left to aggregate
at ambient temperature for various times. At the end of each interval, samples were
frozen and then returned to Earth. The experiment was repeated on Earth recapitulating
the same ISS conditions except for the absence of weight.
Results: We have already completed all the parts regarding the preparation of peptide
aggregates in orbit and on Earth. Four major analytical techniques (Western Blotting,
Mass Spectrometry, Atomic Force Microscopy, Dynamic Light Scattering) have been optimized
which are expected to provide insight into the structure and kinetic of aggregate
formation. Even if sample analysis has been started only a few months ago, interesting
preliminary results are summing up comparing the ISS samples with those processed
on Earth.
Conclusions: The possibility to perform experiments on board of the ISS represents
a unique opportunity to study if and how ISS microgravity influences Aβ aggregates
formation. Hopefully, results from this project will help to design more stringent
scientific studies for a better understanding of the possible risk of developing protein
aggregation diseases in astronauts and eventually to identify specific tools to protect
human health from neurodegenerative proteinopathies during long-lasting space missions.
Funded by: Italian Space Agency (ASI)
Grant number: ASI n. 2018-4-r.0
Preclinincal biomarkers in scrapie: assessment of neurogranin (Ng) and neurofilament
light chain (NfL)
Marina Betancora, Sonia Pérez-Lázaroa, Alicia Oteroa, Belén Marína, Inmaculada Martín-Burriela,b,c,
Kaj Blennowd,e, Juan José Badiolaa, Henrik Zetterbergd,e,f,g,h, and Rosa Boleaa
aCentro de Encefalopatías y Enfermedades Transmisibles Emergentes, Universidad de
Zaragoza, IA2, IIS Aragon, Zaragoza, Spain; bLaboratory of Biochemical Genetics (LAGENBIO),
Faculty of Veterinary, Institute for Health Research Aragon (IIS Aragón), AgriFood
Institute of Aragon (IA2), University of Zaragoza, Miguel Servet 177, 50013 Zaragoza,
Spain; cCentro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Neurodegenerativas
(CIBERNED), Instituto Carlos III.; dDepartment of Psychiatry and Neurochemistry, Institute
of Neuroscience & Physiology, the Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg,
Mölndal, Sweden; eClinical Neurochemistry Laboratory, Sahlgrenska University Hospital,
Mölndal, Sweden; fDepartment of Neurodegenerative Disease, UCL Institute of Neurology,
Queen Square, London, UK; gUK Dementia Research Institute at UCL, London, UK; hHong
Kong Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases, Clear Water Bay, Hong Kong, China
Aims: Prion diseases are usually diagnosed in the symptomatic stage when the neuronal
damage is spread throughout the central nervous system (CNS). The assessment of biological
molecules that allow to detect asymptomatic cases is needed, and in this context,
scrapie, where pre-symptomatic infected animals can be detected through rectal biopsy,
becomes a good model to evaluate biopathological markers of prion diseases in early
stages. Neurogranin (Ng) and neurofilament light chain (NfL) are proteins that reflect
synaptic and axonal damage, respectively, and have been studied as cerebrospinal fluid
(CSF) biomarkers in different neurodegenerative disorders. In this study, we evaluate
Ng and NfL expression both at the protein and transcript level in the CNS of preclinical
and clinical scrapie-affected sheep compared with healthy control sheep. We also assessed
the level of these proteins in ovine CSF. The possible correlation between these proteins
and the main neuropathological events in prion diseases, PrPScdeposition and spongiosis,
is also assessed.
Material and Methods: Twenty-one sheep from three groups (scrapie clinical, scrapie
preclinical and uninfected) were used. The assessment of Ng and NfL protein expression
was performed in nine CNS areas by immunohistochemistry followed by evaluation with
the Image J software. PrPScdeposition was assessed by immunohistochemistry and spongiosis
by hematoxylin-eosin, both followed by semiquantitative evaluation. The gene expression
of NRGN and NEFL was carried out in four of these same areas by real-time PCR. The
concentration of NfL and Ng in CSF was measured by internal ELISA based on monoclonal
antibodies NfL21 and NfL23 and monoclonal antibodies Ng2 and Ng36.
Results: Results showed a decrease in Ng and NfL at the protein and gene expression
levels in several brain regions as the disease progresses, and significant changes
between its levels in control and preclinical animals. On the contrary, CSF levels
of NfL increased throughout the progression of the disease. Negative correlations
between neuropathological markers of prion disease and the concentration of the studied
proteins were also found.
Conclusions: Although further research is needed, the results suggest that Ng and
NfL could act as biomarkers for neurodegeneration onset and intensity in preclinical
cases of scrapie, and therefore this could be the base for future research evaluating
its diagnostic use.
Funded by:/ Grant number: RTI2018-098711-B-I00, IU/2023/2017, POCTEFA EFA148/16
Folding Intermediates of the Cellular Prion Protein Across Disease and Therapy
Emiliano Biasini
Department CIBIO, University of Trento
Aims: Recent computational advancements in the simulation of biochemical processes
allow investigating the mechanisms involved in protein regulation with realistic physics-
based models, at an atomistic level of resolution. Using these techniques to study
the physiological regulation of different model proteins, we discovered a key functional
role played by non-native metastable states appearing along the folding pathways.
This unexpected observation led us to design a completely novel drug discovery paradigm,
named Pharmacological Protein Inactivation by Folding Intermediate Targeting (PPI-FIT),
based on the rationale of negatively regulating protein expression by targeting folding
intermediates (1). In this work, PPI-FIT was tested for the first time on the cellular
prion protein (PrP).
Material and Methods: We combined computational technologies and a wide range of in
vitro and cell-based experimental techniques to identify and characterize the pharmacological
properties of small ligands for a folding intermediate of PrP.
Results: We predicted the all-atom structure of an intermediate appearing along the
folding pathway of PrP, and identified four different small molecule ligands for this
conformer, all
capable of selectively lowering the expression of the protein by promoting its lysosomal
degradation directly from the Endoplasmic Reticulum.
Conclusions: Our data support the notion that the level of target proteins like PrP
could be modulated by acting on their folding pathways, implying a previously unappreciated
role for folding intermediates in the biological regulation of protein expression.
References: 1. Spagnolli et al. Commun Biol 2021
Funded by: Fondazione Telethon, Italy Grant number: GGP20043 Funded by: CJD Foundation,
USA Grant number: -
Granagard as an anti-aging and neuroprotective agent in animals and humans suffering
from neurological diseases
Orli Binyamina,b, Panayiota Petrouc, Kati Frida,b, Ariel Ginzbergc, Guy Keller a,b,
Ann Saadad, Dimitrios Karussisc, Ruth Gabizona
aDepartment of Neurology, The Agnes Ginges Center for Human Neurogenetics, Hadassah
Medical Center, Jerusalem, IsraelbFaculty of Medicine, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem,
Jerusalem, Israel.cMultiple sclerosis Center and cell therapies Unit, Unit and Laboratory
of Neuroimmunology and The Agnes-Ginges Center for Neurogenetics, Hadassah University
Hospital, Jerusalem.dDepartment of Genetic and Metabolic Diseases, Hadassah Medical
Center, Jerusalem Israel, Jerusalem, Israel; Faculty of Medicine, The Hebrew University
of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel.
Aims: We have shown that Granagard, a nanoformulation of pomegranate seed oil, can
delay disease advance in several models of brain diseases by neuroprotective pathways.
Since aging is the main risk factor for the manifestation of neurodegenerative diseases,
we compared the anti-aging and anti-prion activity of Granagard to that of Metformin,
an anti-diabetic drug shown to extend longevity. To this effect, both compounds were
administrated to TgMHu2ME199K mice, a model of gCJD. In parallel, we tested the safety
and clinical effect of Granagard on the cognitive function of multiple sclerosis (MS)
patients. Cognitive impairment is a common feature appearing in different studies
at 43-70% of MS patients. None of the novel MS treatments can protect against cognitive
disability in MS.
Material and Methods: Groups of TgMHu2ME199K mice and wt controls were treated for
2 weeks or 4 months with either Metformin or Granagard and followed for their appropriate
neurologic score. Subsequently, organs including brains were collected for biochemical
and pathologic evaluation of aging and prion disease hallmarks. These included levels
of phosphorylated AMPK, NRF2, GFAP, stem cell markers, disease related PrP and neurological
scores. In the human study, Granagard was administrated to MS patients in addition
to their individual immunomodulatory MS-treatments. Group-A was given GranaGard for
the first three months and then placebo pills containing soybean oil for additional
three months, while group B was given first Placebo and then Granagard. All patients
were subjected to extensive cognitive testing at the diffe rent time points.
Results: We demonstrate that administration of both Granagard and Metformin to TgMHu2ME199K
mice increased the activation of anti-aging hallmarks activities such as AMPK, the
main energy sensor of cells as well as Nrf2, Hif and COX IV-1, regulators of oxidation
and mitochondrial activity. Both compounds also reduced inflammation and increased
stem cells production, however did not decrease PrPSc accumulation. In contrast to
Granagard, Metformin had no effect on clinical prion disease features. In the human
study, there was a significant beneficial effect of GranaGard to patient's cognitive
features, including 12% improvement in the results of verbal abilities. No side effects
were reported after 6-12 months administration.
Conclusions: While Granagard compares to Metformin in its anti–aging properties, it
also presents unique beneficial clinical properties. A first pilot controlled human
trial provide indications that long term GranaGard administration to humans is safe
and may improve/stabilize cognitive disability in MS patients. Trials in other diseases
are in progress.
Funded by: Granalix Biotechnologies and The Prusiner-Abramski Research Awards
Identifying promising therapeutics drugs entering the brain for genetic prion diseases
in C. elegans
Nicolas Bizata,b*, Valeria Parralesa†, Sofian Laouesa†, Sébastien Normanta, Etienne
Levavasseura, Julian Roussela, Nicolas Privata, Alexianne Gougerota, Philippe Ravassarda,
Patrice Beaudrya, Jean-Philippe Brandela,c,Jean-Louis Laplancheb,d, and Stéphane Haïka,c*
aParis Brain Institute, Inserm U 1127, CNRS UMR 7225, Sorbonne University, Hospital
Pitié-Salpêtrière Paris, France; bFaculté de Pharmacie de Paris, Paris Cité, 4 avenue
de l’Observatoire, Paris France; cAP-HP, Cellule Nationale de Référence des Maladies
de Creutzfeldt-Jakob, University Hospital Pitié-Salpêtrière, Paris France; dInserm,
UMR-S 1144, Paris France
Aims: Human prion diseases are fatal neurodegenerative disorders that include sporadic,
infectious and genetic forms. Inherited Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease due to the E200K
mutation of the prion protein-coding gene is the most common form of genetic prion
diseases. The phenotype resembles that of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease at both
the clinical and pathological levels, with median disease duration of four months.
To date, there is no available treatment for delaying the occurrence or slowing the
progression of human prion diseases. Existing in vivo models do not allow high-throughput
approaches that may facilitate the discovery of compounds targeting pathological assemblies
of human prion protein or their effects on neuronal survival.
Material and Methods: We generated a genetic model in the nematode C. elegans, which
is devoid of any homolog of the prion protein, by expressing human prion protein with
the E200K mutation in the mechanosensitive neuronal system.
Results: Expression of E200K prion protein induced specific behavioural pattern and
neurodegeneration of GFP-expressing mechanosensitive neurons, in addition to the formation
of intraneuronal inclusions associated with the accumulation of a protease-resistant
form of the prion protein. We demonstrated that this experimental system is a powerful
tool to study the efficacy of anti-prion compounds on both prion-induced neurodegeneration
and prion protein misfolding, moreover in a human PrP context. Within a library of
320 compounds approved for human use and crossing the blood-brain-barrier, we identified
five molecules that were active against the aggregation of E200K prion protein and
the neurodegeneration it induced in transgenic animals.
Conclusions: This model breaks a technological limitation in prion therapeutic research
and provides a key tool to study the deleterious effect of misfolded prion protein
in a well-described neuronal system and genetic organism model.
Funded by: This work was supported by the CJD foundation and Santé Publique France.
Acknowledgement: We thank the Caenorhabditis Genetics Center for provided strains.
We acknowledge the technical service from the Brain Institute platforms in particular:
Delphine Boutelier and Yannick Marie (IGenSeq); David Akbar and Patrick Michel (Celis);
Dominique Langui, Aymeric Millecamps, Claire Lovo and Basile Gurchenkov (icm.Quant).
We acknowledge Vincent Galy for technical help.
Cross-disease implication of the PrPC-PDK1-TACE pathway in amyloid-based neurodegenerative
diseases
Chloé Bizingrea,b, Vincent Baudouina,b, Anne Baudrya,b, Laura M.A. Camassac, Luiz
W. Ribeiroa,b, Mathéa Pietria,b, Aurélie Alleaume-Butauxa,b, Pierre Niochea,b, Hector
Ardila-Osorioa,b, Vidar Gundersenc, Odile Kellermanna,b, Jean-Marie Launayd,e, and
Benoit Schneidera,b
aInserm UMR-S 1124, Paris, France; bUniversité Paris Cité, UMR-S 1124, Paris, France;
cCentre for Molecular Medicine Norway, University of Oslo, Norway; dInserm UMR942,
Hôpital Lariboisière, Paris, France; eHoffmann-La Roche-Ltd, Basel, Switzerland
Aims: Although amyloid-based neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s (AD),
prion (PrD), Parkinson’s (PD) diseases, and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) display
distinct etiologies and clinical manifestations, it is suspected that these diseases
share common pathocascades. We provided prime evidence for the occurrence of common
neurodegenerative pathways in PrD and AD by showing that the scrapie prion protein
(PrPSc) in PrD and Aβ peptides in AD both provoke neurodegeneration through dysregulation
of the neuroprotective PDK1 kinase – TACE α-secretase signaling pathway upon the interaction
of PrPScand Aβ with normal cellular prion protein PrPC. We aimed to assess whether
another unrelated β-sheet enriched amyloid protein, i.e., SOD1G93Amutant of ALS, also
exerts its neurotoxicity through dysregulation of the PrPC-PDK1-TACE pathway.
Material and Methods: To this purpose, we conducted experiments with (i) neuronal
cell lines (1C11 bioaminergic neuronal cells, NSC34 motor neuron-like cells) and primary
neuronal cultures that were exposed to human SOD1G93A(hSO1G93A) or endogenously expressed
hSOD1G93A, and (ii) a mouse model with ALS-like pathology (Tg-SOD1G93A).
Results: We show that PrPCis a neuronal receptor for hSOD1G93A. The interaction between
PrPCand this amyloid corrupts the PrPC-PDK1-TACE pathway leading to TACE neutralization
by internalization. Internalized TACE loses its cleavage activity towards one of its
main substrates, TNFα receptors (TNFR), whose accumulation at the neuron cell surface
renders ALS neurons hypersensitive to TNFα inflammatory stress, a strong component
of ALS pathogenesis. The silencing of PrPCor the pharmacological inhibition of PDK1
relocate TACE back to the plasma membrane where it recovers its neuroprotective cleavage
activity towards TNFR, protecting ALS neurons from neuroinflammation. In Tg-SOD1G93A
ALS mice, the intrathecal injection of a siRNA against PrP mRNA or the infusion of
the PDK1 inhibitor by the intraperitoneal route rescue TNFR shedding, which protects
spinal cord motor neurons from neurodegeneration, increases motor performance, and
extends the survival time of these mice.
Conclusions: This work supports the view that (i) PrPCis a global neuronal sensor
of amyloids, (ii) dysregulation of the PrPC-PDK1-TACE pathway is a trait of neurodegeneration
common to several unrelated amyloid-based neurodegenerative diseases, and (iii) posits
PDK1 as a potential therapeutic target with broad spectrum to combat these diseases.
Funded by: INSERM, the French Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR), the European
Joint Program on Neurodegenerative Diseases (JPND), and the ARSLA Foundation.
Grant number: ANR-14-JPCD-0003–01; ANR-16-CE16–0021–01; ARSLA n°J19D08DOC026.
Acknowledgement: Imaging experiments and mRNA/protein studies were performed at the
SCM and Cyto2BM core facilities, respectively, of BioMedTech Facilities INSERM US36/CNRS
UMS2009/Université Paris Cité.
Mechanisms of adaptation of synthetic prions in hamsters
Alyssa J. Blocka, Ronald A. Shikiyaa, Thomas E. Ecklanda, Anthony E. Kincaidb, Ryan
W. Waltersc, Jiyan Mad, and Jason C. Bartza
aDepartment of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Creighton University, Omaha, United
States; bDepartment of Pharmacy Science, Creighton University, Omaha, US; cDepartment
of Medicine, Creighton University, Omaha, US; dCenter for Neurodegenerative Science,
Van Andel Institute, Grand Rapids, US
Aims: Prion diseases are a group of neurodegenerative disorders that affect humans
and other mammals. Prions are comprised of PrPSc, the self-templating disease specific
conformation of the cellular prion protein, PrPC. Synthetic prions are generated in
vitro from minimal components and cause bona fide prion disease in animals. It is
unknown, however, if synthetic prions can cross the species barrier in vivo following
interspecies transmission or if synthetic strains recapitulate brain-derived strains.
Material and Methods: To investigate transmission, either murine wildtype (WT) or
hamster WT/mutant synthetic prions were inoculated into male Syrian hamsters. Hamsters
were monitored for onset of clinical signs including weight gain. Serial intraspecies
transmission of murine WT and hamster (WT, D54 mutant) synthetic prions was performed.
PrPScfrom hamsters inoculated with synthetic prions was biochemically characterized
by evaluating electrophoretic mobility and glycoform ratio by Western blot, conformational
stability using the denaturant guanidine hydrochloride (Gdn-HCl), and biological activity
using protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA). To analyze neuropathology, brain
sections were stained with hematoxylin and eosin to assess spongiform degeneration
and underwent immunohistochemistry to assess PrP deposition.
Results: All hamsters inoculated with murine synthetic prions (MSP) developed prion
disease at first passage, exhibiting a high uniformity in onset and clinical signs
of disease. Serial intraspecies transmission resulted in a rapid adaptation to hamsters.
Throughout adaptation in hamsters, the biochemical characteristics of PrPScfrom MSP-infected
hamsters remained constant. Interestingly, the strain that emerged shares a striking
resemblance to brain-derived strain 139 H, a hamster-adapted form of the murine strain
139A, with a similar transmission history, incubation period, clinical manifestation,
pathology and biochemical and biological features of PrPSc. In contrast, all hamsters
inoculated with hamster synthetic prions (HSP) did not develop clinical signs of prion
disease. Western blot analysis of brain homogenate from HSPWT- and HSPD54-infected
hamsters identified protease-resistant PrPSc, suggesting subclinical infection. Serial
intraspecies transmission resulted in clinical disease at second passage and a divergence
of disease phenotype between the wildtype and the D54 mutant by third serial passage.
Conclusions: Murine synthetic prions efficiently cross the species barrier and rapidly
adapt to hamsters resulting in the emergence of a single strain. The emergence of
a strain with similar characteristics to 139 H suggest the MSPs are comprised of bona
fide PrPScwith 139A-like strain properties. The decreased transmission efficiency
observed with the HSPs suggests the HSPs are not authentic PrPScand instead replicate
through the conversion model termed deformed templating.
Funded by: National Institutes of Health National Institute of Neurological Disorders
and Stroke and National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease
Grant number: R01NS103763 (NINDS) and 2P01 AI077774 (NIAID)
Acknowledgements: We would like to thank the Creighton University Animal Research
Facility for excellent animal care.
Quantitative Detection of α-Synuclein and Tau Oligomers and other Aggregates by Digital
Single Particle Counting
Lara Blömekea,c, Marlene Pilsb,c, Victoria Kraemer-Schuliena, Alexandra Dybalab,c,
Anja Schaffratha, Andreas Kulawika,b,c, Fabian Rehna, Anne Cousina, Volker Nischwitzd,
Johannes Willbolda, Rebecca Zacke, Thomas F. Tropeae,f, Tuyen Bujnickia, Gültekin
Tamgüneya,b, Daniel Weintraubf,g,h, David Irwine,f, Murray Grossmane,f, David A. Wolke,
John Q. Trojanowskif,i, Oliver Bannacha,b,c, Alice Chen-Plotkine,f, and Dieter Willbolda,b
aInstitute of Biological Information Processing (Structural Biochemistry: IBI-7),
Forschungszentrum Jülich, Jülich Germany; bInstitut für Physikalische Biologie, Heinrich-Heine-Universität
Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf Germany; cattyloid GmbH, Düsseldorf Germany; dCentral Institute
for Engineering, Electronics and Analytics, Analytics (ZEA-3), Forschungszentrum Jülich,
Jülich Germany; eDepartment of Neurology, Perelman School of Medicine at the University
of Pennsylvania, Department of Neurology, Philadelphia, PA, USA; fCenter for Neurodegenerative
Disease Research, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,
PA, USA; gDepartment of Psychiatry, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, PA, USA; hParkinson’s Disease and Mental Illness Research, Education,
and Clinical Centers, Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Philadelphia,
PA, USA; iDepartment of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Perelman School of Medicine,
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA
Aims: The pathological hallmark of neurodegenerative diseases is the formation of
toxic oligomers by proteins such as alpha-synuclein (aSyn) or microtubule-associated
protein tau (Tau). Consequently, such oligomers are promising biomarker candidates
for diagnostics as well as drug development. In this work, we measured aSyn and Tau
aggregate concentrations of 237 cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples from five cohorts:
Parkinson’s disease (PD), dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), Alzheimer’s disease (AD),
progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), and a neurologically-normal control group.
Material and Methods: We previously developed surface-based fluorescence intensity
distribution analysis (sFIDA) featuring single-particle sensitivity and absolute specificity
for aggregates. sFIDA is an ELISA-like technique using the same capture and detection
antibody but features single-particle sensitivity through a microscopy-based readout.
Results: aSyn aggregate concentration discriminates PD and DLB patients from normal
controls (sensitivity 73 %, specificity 65 %, area under the receiver operating curve
(AUC) 0.68). Tau aggregates were significantly elevated in PSP patients compared to
all other groups (sensitivity 87 %, specificity 70 %, AUC 0.76). Further, we found
a tight correlation between aSyn and Tau aggregate titers among all patient cohorts
(Pearson coefficient of correlation r = 0.81).
Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that aSyn and Tau aggregate concentrations measured
by sFIDA differentiate neurodegenerative disease diagnostic groups. Moreover, sFIDA-based
Tau aggregate measurements might be particularly useful in distinguishing PSP from
other parkinsonisms. Finally, our findings suggest that sFIDA can improve pre-clinical
and clinical studies by identifying those individuals that will most likely respond
to compounds designed to eliminate specific oligomers or to prevent their formation.
Funded by: The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research
Grant number: 14977, 009889
Strain determinant minimal substructure revealed by dissociation of PrPSc assemblies
Jan Bohla,b, Angélique Igel-Egalona, Mohammed Moudjoua, Laetitia Herzoga, Fabienne
Reinea, Frederic Halgandb, Guillaume Van der Restb, Vincent Béringuea, and Human Rezaeia
aVIM, INRAe, Université Paris-Saclay, Jouy-en-Josas, France; bICP, CNRS, Université
Paris Sud, Orsay, France
Aims: While the current prion paradigm considers the prion replication as a simple
amyloid Ends-growth process, how the strain information is encoded in prion assemblies,
their diversity and their dynamic are fare to be clear. In the prion literature, there
are multiple examples supporting the propagation of different strains on one given
PrP primary structure, indicating therefore the existence of multiple strain -structural-determinants.
How and in which PrP protein domain such diversity is structurally encoded, remain
entirely open questions.
Material and Methods: Extractive prion assemblies from seven prion strains were solubilized
in soft detergent conditions to dissociate them into their simplest infectious elementary
building block. Their quaternary structure was then studied by size exclusion chromatography.
Their infectivity and strain properties were studied by bioassay and PMCA experiments.
Results: Our studies demonstrated that PrPSc assemblies from seven different prion
strains can be dissociated into a small oligomeric conformer. Biochemical characterization
of this oligomeric object by size exclusion chromatography, static light scattering
and covalent crosslinking indicated a dimeric PrPres object. Bioassays experiments
performed on relevant transgenic mice demonstrated that these purifiable dimeric objects
were fully infectious and harbored the strain structural determinant.
Studying the disassembly dynamic at different ionic strengths or through dilution
experiments highlighted the existence of an exchange between the condensed state of
PrPScassemblies and the dimeric objects. The characterization of the hydrodynamic
radius of the dimeric objects resulting from the dissociation of seven prion strains
from three different species revealed a commune elementary building bloc quaternary
structure, highlighting thus a strain-invariant oligomerization domain.
Conclusions: The existence of such dimeric object harbouring the infectivity and strain
structural determinant leads us to conclude that the strain information is not defined
by the size of PrPScelementary brick but by the conformation of this dimer or at least
the conformation of a specific domain of this dimer. By considering the number of
prion strains identified until know by bioassay in reporter animals, it is not trivial
to imagine how such diversity could be encoded in a common quaternary structure in
a stable manner during the replication process and without affecting the stability
of the dimerization interface. We overcome this thermodynamical paradox by considering
the dimerization interface independent in term of folding from the domain encoding
the strain information.
Expression and characterization of the human full-length prion protein in Leishmania
tarentolae
Najoua Bolakhrifa,b, Lothar Gremera,b, and Dieter Willbolda,b
aInstitut für Physikalische Biologie, Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, Germany;
bInstitute of Biological Information Processing, Structural Biochemistry (IBI-7) Forschungszentrum
Juelich, Germany
Aims: Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) are also known as prion diseases,
as they are based on the conversion of the non-infectious cellular prion protein (PrPC)
into the infectious isoform, called PrP scrapie (PrPSc). Since prion diseases belong
to a group of fatal neurodegenerative diseases and the conversion is yet not fully
understood, it is crucial to get deeper insights into the structure and characterization
of the membrane bound full-length human PrP expressed by an organism enabling similar
posttranslational modifications to human (e.g. glycosylation pattern).
The aim of this project is therefore to express and characterize the full-length human
prion protein, including GPI-membrane anchoring and mammalian-like glycosylation.
Material and Methods: The following methods were used: cloning, recombinant protein
expression, gel electrophoresis, western blotting, bright-field and fluorescence microscopy.
Results and Conclusion: Diagnostic PCR proves the genomic integration of the plasmid.
The human full-length prion protein was successfully expressed in Leishmania tarentolae,
indicated by western blotting. Fluorescence microscopy demonstrate the attachment
of the prion protein on the outside of the cell membrane. These results will be used
to further analyze and characterize the mammalian-like glycosylated PrPCand its conversion
into PrPSc.
Funded by: MobilitätsFonds der Zentrale Gleichstellungsbeauftragte der Heinrich-Heine-
Universität im Rahmen der Koordination im Professorinnenprogramm III and Dieter Willbold
(Institut für Physikalische Biologie)
Improved detection of pathological α-synuclein in olfactory mucosa of patients with
Parkinson’s disease
Matilde Bongiannia, Mauro Catalanb, Daniela Perraa, Elena Fontanaa, Francesco Janesc,
Claudio Bertolottib, Luca Sacchettod, Stefano Capaldie, Matteo Tagliapietraa, Paola
Polverinob, Valentina Tommasinib, Giulia Bellavitab, Elham Ataie Kachoiee, Roberto
Barucaf, Andrea Bernardinic, Mariarosaria Valentec, Michele Fiorinia, Erika Bronzatoa,
Stefano Tamburina, Laura Bertolasia, Lorenzo Brozzettia, Maria Paola Cecchinia, Gianluigi
Giglic, Salvatore Monacoa, Paolo Manganottib, Gianluigi Zanusa
aDepartment of Neurosciences, Biomedicine, and Movement Sciences, University of Verona,
Policlinico G. B. Rossi, Verona, Italy;b Neurology Unit, Department of Medicine, Surgery
and Health Sciences, University of Trieste, Ospedale Cattinara, Trieste, Italy;c Neurology
Unit, University of Udine Academic Hospital, Udine, Italy;dDepartment of Surgical
Sciences, Dentistry, Gynecology and Pediatrics, University of Verona, Verona, Italy;e
Biocrystallography Laboratory, Department of Biotechnology, University of Verona,
Italy;f Otolaryngology Unit, Department of Medicine, Surgery and Health Sciences,
University of Trieste, Ospedale Cattinara, Trieste, Italy
Aims: To investigate whether nasal swabbing (NS) performed through OM areas with a
different concentration of olfactory neurons, such as agger nasi (AN) and middle turbinate
(MT), might improve pathological α-syn detection.
Material and Methods: OM samples were collected from 95 patients including 66 with
PD and 29 with other neurodegenerative disorders in two rounds, between September
2018 and April 2021, at three neurology units. NS were performed by local otolaryngologists
and analyzed for RT-QuIC and morphological studies. In 49 patients CSF was also obtained.
Results: At first round, 72 OM samples were tested by α–syn RT-QuIC assay and 35 resulted
positive. 32/43 positive samples were from PD patients and 3/29 from non-PD yielding
an overall sensitivity of 74% and 90% and a specificity of 90% but NS collected from
AN were positive in 27 out of 32 (84%) and only in 5 out of 11 (45%) from MT. To confirm
the influence of NS procedure on RT-QuIC results, 23 additional patients with PD underwent
NS at both AN and MT. NS samples collected at AN were positive in 18/23 (78%) while
those from MT in 10/23 (44%). We showed by immunocytochemistry that this difference
might be related to a higher representation of olfactory neural cells in AN compared
to MT. Alpha-syn and phospho-α-syn deposits were also found in NS from PD patients,
but faintly in normal controls. Finally, RT-QuIC analysis of CSF was positive in 22/24
samples from PD patients (92% sensitive) and in 1/19 non-PD (95% specific).
Conclusions: In PD patients, RT-QuIC sensitivity is significantly increased when NS
is performed at AN indicating that α-syn aggregates are preferentially found in olfactory
areas with higher representation of OM. Finally, RT-QuIC analysis of CSF showed a
high diagnostic accuracy strengthened by combination with NS.
Funded by: Fondazione Cariverona and Brain Research Verona Foundation.
Acknowledgement: We deeply thank Dr. Santina Castriciano (COPAN group) for providing
nasal swabs.
Protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA) as an ultra-sensitive technique for
the screening of CWD prions in different sample types
Francisca Bravo‐Risia,b, Paulina Sotoa,b, Rebeca Benaventea, Hunter Reedc, Mitch Lockwoodc,
Tracy Nicholsd, and Rodrigo Moralesa,b
aDepartment of Neurology, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston,
Houston, TX, USA; bCentro Integrativo de Biologia y Quimica Aplicada (CIBQA), Universidad
Bernardo O’Higgins, Santiago, Chile; cTexas Park and Wildlife Department, Texas, USA;
dVeterinary Services Cervid Health Program, United States Department of Agriculture,
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a prion disease that affects farmed and free-ranging
cervids. The infectious agent in CWD is a misfolded form of the prion protein (PrPSc)
that promotes conformational changes in the host’s cellular prion protein (PrPC).
Currently, definitive CWD status is confirmed in the brain and lymphoid tissues by
immunohistochemistry. The limitation of this technique is its poor sensitivity. Protein
misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA) and real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-
QuIC) are ultra-sensitive techniques that overcome these issues. PMCA mimics the self-
propagation of infectious prions in vitro through multiple incubation/sonication cycles,
increasing the number of prion particles present in a given sample. The detection
of proteinase K (PK) -resistant PrPScby PMCA has been performed in experimental and
natural samples that might harbor subclinical levels of prions. These samples include
several tissues, bodily fluids, excreta, and different manmade and natural materials,
including mineral licks, soils, and plants.
Aims: In this study, we highlight recent advances and contributions that our group
has performed in the detection of CWD prions from samples collected in farmed and
free-ranging cervids, as well as other specimens involving the environment that contains
CWD-infected deer.
Material and Methods: A set of diverse samples analyzed in this study were collected
by USDA and TPWD personnel in breeding and taxidermy facilities, and deer breeding
facilities. These included animal and environmental samples. Additional samples from
free-ranging animals were provided by hunters.
Results: The diverse range of samples successfully detected for CWD prion infection
in this study include blood, semen, feces, obex, retropharyngeal lymph node, fetuses
(neural and peripheral tissues) and gestational tissues, parasites, insects, plants,
compost/soil mixtures, and swabs from trash containers. Importantly, these results
helped to identify seeding-competent prions in places reported to be free of CWD.
The levels of prion infectivity in most of these samples are currently being investigated.
Conclusions: Our findings contribute to the understanding of the transmission dynamics
and prevalence of CWD. In addition, our data have helped to identify CWD in areas
previously considered to be free of CWD. We also demonstrate that PMCA is a powerful
technique for the screening of biological and environmental samples. Overall, our
research suggests that PMCA may be a useful tool to implement for the surveillance
and management of CWD.
Funded by: NIH/NIAID and USDA
Grant number: 1R01AI132695 (NIH) and AP20VSSPRS00C143 (USDA)
Detection of CWD prion in feces of naturally infected, pre-symptomatic, North American
white-tailed deer
Francisca Bravo‐Risia,b, Paulina Sotoa,b, Rebeca Benaventea, Tracy Nicholsc, and Rodrigo
Moralesa,b
aDepartment of Neurology, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston,
Houston, TX, USA; bCentro Integrativo de Biologia y Quimica Aplicada (CIBQA), Universidad
Bernardo O’Higgins, Santiago, Chile; cVeterinary Services Cervid Health Program, United
States Department of Agriculture, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, Fort
Collins, Colorado, USA
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a prion disease affecting cervids. Confirmatory testing
of CWD is currently performed postmortem in obex and lymphoid tissues. Detection of
CWD in live animals could enable the detection of CWD at earlier time points. Our
group has explored CWD-prion detection in a variety of samples using the protein misfolding
cyclic amplification (PMCA) technique. Extensive evidence demonstrates the presence
of infectious prions in feces of CWD-infected deer using in vitro prion-amplification
techniques and bioassays. In experimental conditions, this has been achieved as soon
as 6-month post- inoculation in cervids, suggesting this sample type is a candidate
for antemortem screening.
Aims: We optimized the detection of CWD prions in fecal samples from naturally infected,
pre-symptomatic, white-tailed deer (WTD). The screening results were compared with
those from blood with the purpose of identifying a suitable antemortem sample for
diagnosis in terms of sensitivity. Our analysis also considered the genetic variability
at position 96 of the prion protein.
Material and Methods: A set of 169 feces samples were collected by USDA personnel
from farmed WTD. Deer displayed different PRNP polymorphisms at position 96. PMCA
optimization for fecal samples was performed by comparing enrichment of CWD prions
by NaPTA, ultracentrifugation, and direct spiking of the sample to the PMCA reactions.
Results: Direct spiked fecal samples resulted in the best PMCA efficiency. From our
screening, fifty-eight samples were positive for CWD prions, providing a sensitivity
of 55% and a specificity of 99%. Seventy-eight fecal sample results were compared
with those from blood results (matched animals). Our data shows that at the early
pre-symptomatic stages (EPS) of disease, 28% of fecal samples were positive, compared
to the 47% of positivity in blood from the same animals. At late pre-symptomatic (LPS)
stages, positive detection in both samples was similar: 84% (feces) and 87 % (blood).
Interestingly, LPS animals coding for the 96 GG variant showed ≥ 93% of positivity
in feces and blood, while samples from PrP96 GS animals showed ~70% of positivity
in both specimens at LPS.
Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that CWD prion detection in feces performed best
in the absence of sample pre-treatments and showed that the detection of prion seeding
activity in both feces and blood is comparable at LPS stages. Overall, our findings
contribute to understand prion distribution across different biological samples and
polymorphic variants of WTD. This information is relevant for the current effort to
identify platforms to diagnose CWD.
Funded by: NIH/NIAID
Grant number: R01AI132695
Hypochlorous acid solutions reduce disease-associated tau seeding activity
Danielle F. Browne, and Allison Kraus
Department of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland,
USA
Aims: Neurodegenerative diseases, including tauopathies, often coincide with neuroinflammatory
events. However, the degree to which neuroinflammation either furthers damages or
has protective properties against neurodegenerative disease is not fully elucidated.
One means through which neuroinflammation may modulate neurodegenerative disease is
immune cell derived reactive oxygen species (ROS). ROS have been implicated in neurotoxicity
and neurodegenerative disease progression, but the mechanisms by which this may occur
are not understood. Hypochlorous acid (HOCl) is a ROS that is produced by innate immune
cells in response to pathogens and/or stress signals. HOCl has been long known for
its microbicidal activity, contributing to the clearance of unwanted bacteria, fungi,
and viruses through deactivating chemical modifications. However, it is currently
unknown if/how the production of HOCl influences the trajectory of neurodegenerative
diseases characterized by the accumulation of misfolded, self-propagating protein
pathogens. Previous data indicates HOCl pretreatment of PrP prions results in abrogation
of their seeding activity and infectivity when reintroduced to a healthy animal.aHere,
we extend these findings to investigate other self-propagating neurodegenerative disease
proteins to test if HOCl mitigates seeding activities of brain derived tau seeds.
Material and Methods: The Real Time Quaking Induced Conversion (RT-QuIC) assay is
a high-throughput, selective, in vitro seed amplification assay used to detect and
quantify protein seeds from human biospecimens. RT-QuIC was utilized to quantitate
HOCl effects on the seeding activity of tau seeds from brain tissue of Alzheimer disease
cases and primary synucleinopathies with concurrent tau pathology. SDS-PAGE analysis
was used to examine how changes in seeding activities correlated with structural changes
to the tau seeds.
Results: HOCl reduced tau seeding activities up to 10,000-fold when compared to untreated
controls. Tau seeds from primary tauopathies as well as co-pathologies in other diseases
exhibited decreased seeding activity after HOCl treatment. SDS-PAGE analysis confirmed
HOCl solutions structurally modified tau conformers derived from human brain tissue.
Conclusions: HOCl solutions modify and reduce seeding activities of disease-related
brain derived tau seeds, providing preliminary evidence that interactions with this
reactive oxygen species have the potential to drastically alter tau seed self-propagation
properties. This could have implications for how in vivo ROS generation impacts seed
accumulation and disease trajectories. With use of cell models, we will test if HOCl
generation in vivo similarly modifies seeds. Assessing whether immune cells have the
propensity to modify brain derived tau seeding activity will bolster the biological
relevance of our findings and perhaps reveal a previously unknown mechanism of disease
modulation.
Hughson A.G., Race B., Kraus A., Sangare L.R., Robins L., Groveman B.R., Saijo E.,
Phillips K., Contreras L., Dhaliwal V., Manca M., Zanusso G., Terry D., Williams J.F.,
and B. Caughey. Inactivation of Prions and Amyloid Seeds with Hypochlorous Acid. PLOS
Pathogens 12, e1005914 (2016)
Funded by: This work was supported by Case Western Reserve University.
Acknowledgement: We thank Dr. Xiongwei Zhu, Sandra Siedlak, and Dr. Mark Cohen at
Case Western Reserve University, and Drs. Douglas Galasko, David Coughlin, and Annie
Hiniker at University of California San Diego for characterization of and/or provision
of brain tissue used in this project.
Stable and highly zoonotic cervid prion strain is possible
Manuel Camacho, Xu Qi, Liuting Qing, Sydney Smith, Jieji Hu, Wanyun Tao, Ignazio Cali,
and Qingzhong Kong
Department of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, USA
Aims: Whether CWD prions can infect humans remains unclear despite the very substantial
scale and long history of human exposure of CWD in some areas. Multiple in vitro conversion
experiments and in vivo animal studies suggest that the CWD-to-human transmission
barrier is not unbreakable. A major public health concern on CWD zoonosis is the emergence
of highly zoonotic CWD strains. We aim to address the question of whether highly zoonotic
CWD strains are possible.
Material and Methods: We inoculated a few sCJD brain samples into cervidized transgenic
mice, which were intended as negative controls for bioassays of brain tissues from
sCJD cases who had hunted or consumed vension from CWD-endemic states. Some of these
mice became infected and their brain tissues were further examined by serial passages
in humanized or cervidized mice.
Results: Passage of sCJDMM1 in transgenic mice expressing elk PrP (Tg12) resulted
in a ‘cervidized’ CJD strain that we termed CJDElkPrP. We observed 100% transmission
of CJDElkPrPin transgenic mice expressing human PrP (Tg40h). We passaged CJDElkPrPtwo
more times in the Tg12 mice. We found that such second and third passage CJDElkPrPprions
also led to 100% infection in the Tg40h mice. In contrast, we and others found zero
or poor transmission of natural elk CWD isolates in humanized mice, despite that natural
elk CWD isolates and CJDElkPrPshare the same elk PrP sequence.
Conclusions: Our data demonstrate that highly zoonotic cervid prion strains are not
only possible but also can be stably maintained in cervids and that CWD zoonosis is
prion strain-dependent.
Funded by: NIH
Grant number: R01NS052319, R01NS088604, R01NS109532
Acknowledgement: We want to thank the National Prion Disease Pathology Surveillance
Center and Drs. Allen Jenny and Katherine O’Rourke for providing the sCJD samples
and the CWD samples, respectively.
Validation of Plasma- and CSF-Neurofilament light chain as a marker for sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease
Sezgi Canaslan Eyyuboglua,b, Matthias Schmitza,b, and Inga Zerra,b
aDepartment of Neurology, University Medicine Göttingen; bGerman Center for Neurodegenerative
Diseases (DZNE), Göttingen, Germany
Aims: The importance of biomarkers for the differential diagnosis of neurodegenerative
diseases is undeniable. They are not only helpful for the diagnosis of the disease
but also be quite useful to track disease progression and the efficiency of the possible
treatments. Previous findings showed that neurofilament (NfL) is one of the potential
markers for sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) diagnosis. Therefore, we investigated
NfL levels in our patient cohort. Firstly, we analysed the stability of NfL in different
conditions and inter-and intra-assay variation both in plasma and CSF. Afterward,
we measured the concentration of NfL in cohorts that include individuals with sCJD
and different controls.
Material and Methods: We have measured NfL concentration using the ultra-sensitive
method which is the Single Molecule Array (SIMOA). We have applied different conditions
like incubation at RT; 4°C and several freeze-thaw cycles to find out the stability
of NfL. We also examined the regulation of NfL in sCJD and control cohorts consisted
of neurodegenerative controls, non-neurodegenerative controls, and healthy controls.
Results: In our analysis, we found that NfL in plasma and CSF is highly stable under
defined storage conditions. Additionally, the coefficient variation of the inter-assay
and intra-assay measurement of NfL remained in an acceptable range. When we analysed
our patient cohorts, the level of NfL is visibly high in sCJD patients not only in
their CSF but also in their plasma. To determine the diagnostic accuracy, we have
applied ROC curve analysis which indicated high diagnostic accuracy for both CSF (80%
sensitivity and 87% specificity) and plasma (exhibited 83.5% sensitivity and 91% specificity)
to discriminate sCJD from controls. By virtue of a large cohort, the cut-off for CSF
is ≥ 2180 pg/mL and for plasma is ≥ 47.83 pg/mL to distinguish sCJD from controls
according to the Youden index.
Conclusions: Our findings showed and confirmed that NfL is a stable marker under different
conditions in CSF and plasma. ROC curve analysis also showed perfect AUC values, which
are 0.92 and 0.93, to distinguish sCJD from controls in CSF and plasma respectively.
Effect of the induction of chronic stress on cellular models of Amyotrophic Lateral
Sclerosis
Niccolò Candelisea,b, Henri Zenunic, Silvia Scaricamazzab, Illari Salvatoria,b, Valentina
Nescib, Tina Garofaloa, Vincenzo Matteia,d, Maurizio Soricea, Alberto Ferrib,e, Cristiana
Valleb,e, and Roberta Misasia
aDepartment of Experimental Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, ‘Sapienza’ University of
Rome, Rome, Italy; bIRCCS Fondazione Santa Lucia, Rome, Rome, Italy; cUnit of Neurology,
Department of Systems Medicine, University of Roma Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy; dBiomedicine
and Advanced Technologies Rieti Center, Sabina Universitas, Rieti, Italy; eInstitute
of Translational Pharmacology (IFT), Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR), Rome,
Italy
Aims: Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is a neurodegenerative disease affecting
the upper and lower motor neurons. The hallmark of ALS is the presence of inclusions
made of TDP-43 formed through prion-like misfolding, a common process in neurodegenerative
diseases. TDP-43 is a nuclear protein that localizes in the cytosol upon acute stress
insults. However, little is known about TDP-43 biology upon milder and prolonged insults,
a condition closer to pathology compared to acute stress. Although metabolic dysfunctions
and TDP-43 aggregates are present in ALS patients before neurodegeneration, the interplay
between TDP-43 aggregation and bioenergetic derangement is poorly understood. Hence,
we aim to set a chronic stress paradigm on neuronal cell lines that would better mirror
the long-lasting events leading to TDP-43 proteinopathy.
Material and Methods: Different paradigms of chronic stress were applied to neuronal
SH-SY5Y cultures for 72 hours and tested for cell viability by MTS assay. Stressors
included: Serum deprivation (Sd, 1% – 0,1% FBS, inducing environmental stress); Sodium
Arsenite (Ars, 10–20 µM, inducing oxidative stress); Paraquat (PQ, 0,1–0,2 mM, source
of oxidative stress); Sorbitol (Sorb, 40–120 mM, causing osmotic stress). Cell viability
from chronic stress conditions were compared with results obtained with established
acute stress paradigms (0,5 mM Ars, 1 h; 1–2 mM PQ, overnight; 0,6–1,2 M Sorb, 2 h).
Cell viability data were combined with bioenergetic parameters measured by Seahorse
analyzer. Western Blot analyses were performed after protein extraction with RIPA
buffer to assess the solubility of TDP-43 under acute and chronic stressful conditions.
TDP-43 localization after stress induction was observed by immunofluorescence.
Results: Sub-lethal concentrations of Sd, Ars, PQ and Sorb were identified by MTS
assay. Bioenergetic analyses suggested a decrease in functionality of major mitochondrial
complexes upon both acute and chronic treatment. Western Blot analyses revealed the
formation of RIPA-insoluble species of TDP-43 upon chronic treatment. Immunofluorescence
experiments showed different aggregation patterns of TDP-43, which may imply that
different pathways may be involved in response to prolonged stress.
Conclusions: Here we propose a novel cellular paradigm based on prolonged and mild
treatment for the study of TDP-43 pathology. By extension, this system may further
be suitable for the study of other proteins involved in neurodegenerative disorders
such as alpha-synuclein, prion protein and Tau.
Funded by: ‘Giovani@RicercaScientifica’ Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio di Pistoia e
Pescia.
Grant number: CUP B89J22001910007
Conformational shift as the evolutionary mechanism for classical BSE emergence from
atypical scrapie
Sara Canoyra, Alba Marín-Moreno, Juan Carlos Espinosa, Natalia Fernández- Borges,
and Juan María Torres
Centro de Investigación en Sanidad Animal, CISA-INIA-CSIC, Valdeolmos, Madrid, Spain
Aims: New prion strains emerge when the prion conformational characteristics change
during intra- or cross-species transmission. There are two main theories, non-mutually
exclusive, that could explain this phenomenon: the ‘deformed templating’ and the ‘conformational
selection model’. According to the ‘deformed templating’ or mutation model, when the
prion is unable to replicate in a new host there is a shift to a new PrPScconformation.
On the other hand, the ‘conformational selection’ theory postulates that prion isolates
are a conglomerate of conformations and during cross-species transmission the species
barrier acts as a filter.
In previous studies, we showed the emergence of the bovine spongiform encephalopathy
agent (C-BSE) due to the transmission of atypical scrapie (AS) onto bovine PrP. This
work will elucidate the evolutionary dichotomy in the AS transmission, providing supporting
evidence on the hypothesis of the origin of the epidemic C-BSE prion from AS.
Material and Methods: A panel of AS isolates with different genotypes and geographical
distribution was analyzed. To differentiate between AS and C-BSE two strain typing
features were used: thermostability and PMCA propagation. The AS isolates underwent
a heat treatment of 98°C during 2 h and were amplified in vitro by PMCA in bovine
PrPCsubstrate. The templating activity with or without heat was determine after 10
amplification rounds by western blot characterization.
In addition, we analyzed an artificial mixture of AS and C-BSE generated by diluting
C- BSE in a constant amount of AS.
Results: We observed a drastic loss in the C-BSE emergence due to the heat treatment.
The AS is a thermolabile prion. Hence, the inactivation of the AS conformers with
the ability to shift the conformation will slow down the emergence of the C-BSE.
In contrast, when we analyzed the artificial mixture C-BSE prions emerge even with
the heat treatment. Therefore, if the AS isolates had contained a minoritarian C-BSE
conformer (defended by the conformational selection model) the emergence wouldn’t
have been affected by the heat.
Conclusions: Mutation is the main evolutionary mechanism responsible for the C-BSE
emergence. The species barrier forces the shift to a possible structure (C-BSE in
this case) in a thermodynamically unfavorable process.
This discovery reenforces the origin hypothesis of the epidemic C-BSE as a contact
of the cattle with feed contaminated with AS. Where the AS will evolve shifting to
a C-BSE stable conformation. This also has implications in the control of farmed animals
and humans’ exposure to the AS.
Funded by:/Grant number: Project PID2019-105837RB-I00 MCIN/ AEI /10.13039/501,100,011,033
Fundación La Marató de TV3 Enfermedades
The chronic wasting disease agent from white-tailed deer is infectious to humanized
mice after passage through raccoons
Eric Cassmanna, Xu Qib, Qingzhong Kongb, and Justin Greenleea
aNational Animal Disease Center, Agricultural Research Service, US Department of Agriculture,
Ames, IA, USA
bDepartments of Pathology, Neurology, National Center for Regenerative Medicine, and
National Prion Disease Pathology Surveillance Center, Case Western Reserve University,
Cleveland, Ohio, USA
Aims: Evaluate the zoonotic potential of the raccoon passaged chronic wasting disease
(CWD) agent in humanized transgenic mice in comparison with the North American CWD
agent from the original white-tailed deer host.
Material and Methods: Pooled brain material (GG96) from a CWD positive herd was used
to oronasally inoculate two white-tailed deer with wild-type prion protein genotype
and intracranially inoculate a raccoon. Brain homogenates (10% w/v) from the raccoon
and the two white-tailed deer were used to intracranially inoculate separate groups
of transgenic mice that express human prion protein with methionine (M) at codon 129
(Tg40h). Brains and spleens were collected from mice at experimental endpoints of
clinical disease or approximately 700 days post-inoculation. Tissues were divided
and homogenized or fixed in 10% buffered neutral formalin. Immunohistochemistry, enzyme
immunoassay, and western blot were used to detect misfolded prion protein (PrPSc)
in tissue.
Results: Humanized transgenic mice inoculated with the raccoon passaged CWD agent
from white-tailed deer exhibited a 100% (12/12) attack rate with an average incubation
period of 605 days. PrPScwas detected in brain tissue by enzyme immunoassay with an
average optical density of 3.6/4.0 for positive brains. PrPScalso was detected in
brain tissue by western blot and immunohistochemistry. No PrPScwas detected in the
spleens of mice inoculated with the raccoon passaged CWD agent. Humanized mice inoculated
with the CWD agent from white-tailed deer did not have detectable PrPScusing conventional
immunoassay techniques.
Conclusions: The host range of the CWD agent from white-tailed deer was expanded in
our experimental model after one passage through raccoons.
Funded by: This research was funded in its entirety by congressionally appropriated
funds to the United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service.
The funders of the work did not influence study design, data collection and analysis,
decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
Acknowledgement: We thank Quazetta Brown, Lexi Frese, Rylie Frese, Kevin Hassall,
Leisa Mandell, and Trudy Tatum for providing excellent technical support to this project.
Beta-endoproteolysis of the cellular prion protein by dipeptidyl peptidase-4 and fibroblast
activation protein
Andrew R. Castlea,b, Sang-Gyun Kanga,b, Ghazaleh Eskandari-Sedighia,c, Serene Wohlgemutha,b,
My-Anh Nguyenf,g, Daniel J. Druckerd,e, Erin E. Mulvihillf,g, and David Westawaya,b,c
aCentre for Prions and Protein Folding Diseases, University of Alberta, Edmonton,
Canada; bDepartment of Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada; cDepartment
of Biochemistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada; dLunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research
Institute, Mt. Sinai Hospital, Toronto, Canada; eDepartment of Medicine, University
of Toronto, Toronto, Canada; fUniversity of Ottawa Heart Institute, Ottawa, Canada;
gDepartment of Biochemistry, Microbiology and Immunology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa,
Canada
Aims: β-Endoproteolysis, which splits PrPCinto the N-terminal fragment N2 and the
C-terminal fragment C2, is of interest because a protease-resistant, C2-sized fragment
(‘C2Sc’) accumulates in the brain during prion infections, seemingly comprising the
majority of PrPScat disease endpoint in mice. However, candidates for the underlying
proteolytic mechanism remain unconfirmed in vivo. We therefore set out to investigate
this important phenomenon.
Materials and Methods: We performed a cell-based screen of protease inhibitors using
capillary westerns to study PrPCfragmentation. Hits were rescreened to obtain dose-response
curves and were pursued further by the following approaches: i) acute co-transfections
of PrP alleles and protease genes; ii) analyses of recombinant PrP substrates exposed
to recombinant proteases; iii) Edman sequencing to assign N-termini; iv) analyses
of C2 fragment levels in protease-knockout mice; v) testing of relevant protease inhibitors
in cell-based models of prion infections.
Results: The protease inhibitor screen unexpectedly linked type II membrane proteins
of the S9b serine peptidase subfamily to PrPCβ-cleavage. Co-transfection experiments
in cells and assays with recombinant proteins confirmed that fibroblast activation
protein (FAP) and its paralog, dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP4), cleave directly at multiple
sites within the N-terminal domain of PrPC. For wild-type mouse and human PrPCsubstrates
expressed in cells, the rank orders of activity were human FAP ~ mouse FAP > mouse
DPP4 > human DPP4 and human FAP > mouse FAP > mouse DPP4 ≫ human DPP4, respectively.
C2 levels relative to total PrPCwere reduced in several tissues from FAP-null mice,
and, while knockout of DPP4 lacked an analogous effect, the combined DPP4/FAP inhibitor
linagliptin, but not the FAP-specific inhibitor SP-13786, reduced C2Scand total PrPSclevels
in two murine cell-based models of prion infections.
Conclusions: We have identified two closely-related proteases that can perform β-cleavage
of PrPC. Beyond opening up a potential new avenue for therapeutic intervention against
prion diseases, our findings may lead to new axes of investigation, given the published
biologies of DPP4 and FAP in neuropeptide processing, cellular senescence and tissue
remodelling.
Funded by: Canadian Institutes of Health Research; Campus Alberta Neuroscience; Alberta
Prion Research Institute
Grant number: 165980; CANNEGP; APRIIEP201600033
Role of APOE vs Aβ in prion models of tau pathology
P. Chakrabartya,b,c, T. Williamsa,b, G. Xua,b, B. Moorea,b, Q. Voa,b, A J. Ruiza,
P. Sullivand, B. Giassona,b,c, and D. Borchelta,b,c
aCenter for Translational Research in Neurodegenerative Disease, University of Florida,
Gainesville, USA; bDepartment of Neuroscience, University of Florida, Gainesville,
USA; cMcKnight Brain Institute, University of Florida, Gainesville, USA; dDepartment
of Medicine, Duke University, Durham, USA
Aims: Alzheimer’s disease and related tauopathies are characterized by progressive
transmission of aggregated tau and amyloid β (Aβ) along neuroanatomically connected
brain regions. Our aim was to broadly investigate the relative contribution of Apolipoprotein
E (APOE) and Aβ in modulating tau pathology in tau prion-seeded polygenic models of
Alzheimer’s disease.
Material and Methods: We combined the human P301S mutant tau mice (Line PS19) with
human APOE3tr and APOE4tr mice and examined the outcomes of hippocampal seeding of
K18-tau aggregates. Mice were injected at 2.5 month of age and analyzed at 7.5 months
of age. We also combined PS19 mice with human APPswe/ind mutant transgenic APPsi mice
and examined the effects of intracerebral seeding with amyloid-enriched mouse brain
homogenates from various sources. Neonatal PS19xAPPsi mice were injected with the
seeding homogenates and analyzed at 9 months of age.
Results: The first set of experiments allowed us to generate insights into how APOE4,
the major risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease, regulates intracerebral propagation
of K18-tau prion induced tauopathy. K18-tau seeded PS19xAPOE3tr mice accumulated higher
phosphorylated tau and microgliosis relative to PS19xAPOE4tr mice, but neurofibrillary
tangle burden was not affected. PS19 mice that were heterozygous for APOE3 showed
similar results, albeit to a lesser degree. A focused transcriptomic study revealed
modest changes in gene expression associated with tau propagation, with more changes
evident in APOE4tr mice compared to APOE3tr mice. In the second set of experiments,
we used PS19xAPPsi mice. At 9 months of age, these mice had no Aβ deposits and only
2 of 7 bigenic mice showed MC1 reactive pre-tangle pathology. Seeding with amyloid-enriched
homogenates from three different transgenic APP sources robustly induced Aβ deposits
in PS19xAPPsi mice (19 of 19 injected mice showed pathology; n = 6–7 for each Aβ source).
Most of the animals with induced Aβ pathology (n = 16/19 seeded mice) also showed
high burden of MC1 and Gallyas positive tau tangle pathology.
Conclusions: We demonstrate that the presence of human APOE3 triggered accumulation
of phosphorylated tau in PS19 mice following K18-tau seeding. Seeding did not differentially
induce tau tangle in PS19xAPOE3tr and PS19xAPOE4tr mice. In the combined presence
of tau and APP overexpression, seeding with amyloid enriched mouse brain homogenates
induced both Aβ deposits and tau tangles. Overall, these findings indicate that Aβ
is a relatively stronger modulator of tau prion-induced tau misfolding than APOE.
Funded by:/Grant number: NIA RF1AG057933 (DRB, PC), NIA T32 AG061892 (TW), Ed & Ethel
Moore Alzheimer’s disease Research Grant (GX).
PrPScaggregation state does not affect efficiency of peripheral infection in two CWD
strains
Sheng C. Chang, Samia Hannaoui, and Sabine Gilch
Department of Comparative Biology and Experimental Medicine, Faculty of Veterinary
Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada
Aims: PrPScexists in various strain-specific aggregation states, and PrPScoligomers
have been shown to be the most infectious isoforms upon intracerebral inoculation.
We aimed to determine the most infectious particle size upon infection directly into
the brain versus through the periphery in an in vivo model, and to explore the impact
of PrPScaggregation states on neuroinvasion efficiency using in vitro models.
Material and Methods: We solubilized and fractionated mouse-adapted Wisc-1 and 116AG
CWD prions into thirty different fractions through a sedimentation velocity gradient.
Fractions were collected and the quantity of total PrP and PK-resistant PrPScthat
each fraction represents as a ratio of the entire gradient were determined through
western blot after treatment without or with proteinase K. The same fractions were
also inoculated intracerebrally and intraperitoneally into gene-edited mice expressing
cervid PrP. The animals were sacrificed upon the onset of terminal illness, and the
survival figures were analyzed. To determine degradation kinetics of different PrPScaggregate,
we exposed J774 macrophages to fractionated scrapie or CWD prions. Cells at various
time points post-exposure were harvested and cell lysates were subjected to solubilization
in anionic detergent and ultracentrifugation, following which the resulting pellet
fraction consisting of PrPScwas quantified with western blot to determine the uptake
and degradation kinetics of the different prion aggregates in the immune cells.
Results: The greatest quantity of PK-resistant PrPScin Wisc-1 CWD was between fractions
9–12, and for 116AG CWD this was slightly lower in the gradient between fractions
10–14. We found that in both the animals inoculated intracerebrally and intraperitoneally,
fractions 10–16 and 24–30 in the middle and the bottom of the gradient that correspond,
respectively, to small oligomers and fibrils led to shortest survival. Interestingly,
fibrillar PrPScfrom fractions 22–30 of the gradient were more resistant to degradation
by cultured macrophages.
Conclusions: In our CWD model, prion neuroinvasion and infectivity from the periphery
are not dictated by the aggregation state of inoculated prions. Rather, these properties
are likely determined by intrinsic properties specific to each individual prion strain,
despite the different processing of the different aggregates in the periphery by immune
cells.
Funded by: Alberta Prion Research Institute, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research
Council of Canada, University of Calgary
Acknowledgement: Dr. Debbie McKenzie and Dr. Trent Bollinger for providing us the
cervid prion isolates used to generate the passaged material for this study, Dr. Walker
Jackson and Dr. Lech Kaczmarzcyk for providing us the embryonic stem cells used to
generate the cervid-PrP-expressing gene-edited mice, and Shranjit Lail and Dr. Robin
Yates for providing us with the J774 macrophage cell line.
GSS A117V and a mouse model expressing bank vole PrPCas a fast and versatile model
to monitor potential treatments for human prion diseases
Jorge M. Charcoa,b,l, Tomás Barrioc,*, Hasier Erañaa,b,l, Carlos Díaz-Domíngueza,
Cristina Sampedro-Torres-Quevedoa, Enric Vidale, Izaro Kortazar-Zubizarretaf, Guiomar
Pérez de Nanclaresg, Steffen Halbgebauerh, Mariví Geijoi, Glenn Tellingj, Markus Ottok,
and Joaquín Castillaa,d,l
a
Center for Cooperative Research in Biosciences (CIC bioGUNE), Basque Research and
Technology Alliance (BRTA). Bizkaia Technology Park. Derio. Spain;
b
ATLAS Molecular Pharma S. L. Bizkaia Technology Park. Derio. Spain;
c
UMR ENVT-INRAE 1225 Interactions Hôtes-Agents Pathogènes (IHAP). École Nationale Vétérinaire
de Toulouse. Chemin des Capelles, 23. Toulouse. France * These authors contributed
equally to this work;
d
IKERBASQUE, Basque Foundation for Science, Prion Research Lab. Bilbao. Spain;
e
Unitat mixta d’Investigació IRTA-UAB en Sanitat Animal. Centre de Recerca en Sanitat
Animal (CReSA). Campus de la Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB). Bellaterra.
Catalonia;
f
Department of Neurology, Bioaraba Health Research Institute, Araba University Hospital
– Txagorritxu, Vitoria-Gasteiz. Spain;
g
Molecular (Epi)Genetics Laboratory, Bioaraba Health Research Institute, Araba University
Hospital, Vitoria-Gasteiz. Spain;
h
Institute of Experimental Neurology, Ulm University Hospital. Helmholtz Strasse. Ulm.
Germany;
i
Animal Health Department, NEIKER-Basque Institute for Agricultural Research and Development,
Basque Research and Technology Alliance (BRTA), Parque Científico y Tecnológico de
Bizkaia, P812, E-48160 Derio, Spain;
j
Prion Research Center (PRC), Colorado State University. Fort Collins, Colorado. USA;
k
Departament of Neurology, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, Halle (Saale),
Germany;
l
Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades infecciosas (CIBERINFEC),
Carlos III National Health Institute, Madrid, Spain
Aims: To develop an animal model of human prion disease that meets the ideal conditions
to evaluate future anti-prion therapies.
Material and Methods: TgVole (1x) mouse model expressing bank vole (I109I) PrP at
approximately physiological levels was used in this project. A brain homogenate from
a GSS A117V patient was used for the intraperitoneal and intracerebral inoculation
of these animals. For NfL and β-synuclein sera quantification, a SIMOA Immunoassay
system was used.
Results: GSS A117V propagates intracerebrally into TgVole (1x) with high specific
infectivity and an extremely short incubation period of 67 ± 1 dpi. Additionally,
GSS A117V also propagates intraperitoneally very efficiently with a period of 87 ± 1
dpi. A kinetic study after intraperitoneal inoculation allowed us to observe increasing
levels of NfL and β- synuclein detectable at short times during the pre-clinical stage,
which allows an accurate way to monitor the disease process.
Conclusions: The combination of a very short incubation period after intracerebral
and, more importantly, intraperitoneal inoculation allows monitoring of disease progression
by means of serum biomarkers (NfL and β-synuclein). These results make this combination
of mice and inoculum an ideal in vivo model for preclinical studies focused on future
therapeutic approaches for human transmissible spongiform encephalopathies.
Funded by:/Grant number: PID2021-122201OB-C21 and CJDF Grant 2022
Acknowledgement: Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation and USA CJD Foundation
Identification of biomarker panels for differential diagnosis of Neurodegenerative
Disorders
Athanasia Chatziefstathioua, Sezgi Canaslanb, Eirini Kanatac, Konstantinos Vekrellisd,
Elisabeth Kapakie, Matthias Schmitzb, Inga Zerrb, Konstantinos Xanthopoulosc, Dimitra
Dafoua, and Theodoros Sklaviadisc
aSchool of Biology, Aristotle University, Thessaloniki, Greece; bDepartment of Neurology,
University Medical Center and the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE),
Göttingen, Germany; cSchool of Pharmacy, Aristotle University, Thessaloniki, Greece;
dCenter of Basic Research, Biomedical Research Foundation Academy of Athens (BRFAA),
Athens Greece; eDepartment of Neurology, Neurochemistry Unit National and Kapodistrian
University, Athens, Greece
Aims: Recent reviews of epidemiological studies and reports from the WHO (World Health
Organization), estimated that there were 24.3 million people with dementia in the
world in 2001 and predicted that this would rise to 42.3 million in 2020, and 81.1
million patients by 2040. Therefore, it is necessary to exploit already established
biomarkers, identify, and establish novel ones to determine appropriate biomarker
panels that will allow the early detection and differential diagnosis of Neurodegenerative
Disorders. The main goal of the current study is the identification of a suitable
combination of different biomarkers in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and plasma to either
distinguish different types of Neurodegenerative Disorders and controls (healthy and/or
neurological).
Material and Methods: We analyzed different protein markers such as glial fibrillary
acidic protein (GFAP), neurofilament light chain (NF-L), total tau (TAU) and ubiquitin
carboxyl-terminal hydrolase L1 (UCH-L1) by using an ultrasensitive test called single-molecule
array assay (SIMOA). A cohort of Alzheimer Disease (AD) and Frontotemporal Dementia
(FTD) patients were analyzed using plasma and CSF from matched patients.
Results: We observed that CSF-NF-L, CSF-TAU & CSF-UCH-L1 were significantly elevated
in AD patients compared to control donors. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC)
curve analysis resulted in a very good diagnostic accuracy as indicated by the area
under the curve (AUC) values of 0.84–0.93 & p < 0.0001. We also observed that CSF-NF-L
& CSF-UCH-L1 were significantly elevated in FTD patients compared to controls, with
an AUC of 0.76 and 0.82, respectively and p < 0.01. Furthermore, we also observed
an increase on CSF-GFAP in AD and control group compared to FTD patients, with an
AUC of 0.80 & 0.79 and p < 0.01. Finally, spearman correlation for NF-L showed an
association between CSF and plasma samples in patients with AD and FTD, r = 0.4852
& r = 0.6703, p < 0.05, respectively.
Conclusions: Our study suggests NF-L and UCH-L1 as promising markers to discriminate
between AD or FTD and controls, while GFAP is also a promising marker in discriminating
AD and controls from FTD patients.
Funded by: This research has been co‐financed by the European Regional Development
Fund of the European Union and Greek national funds through the Operational Program
Competitiveness, Entrepreneurship and Innovation, under the call RESEARCH – CREATE
– INNOVATE (project code:T1EDK-03884)
Acknowledgement: The research work was supported by the Hellenic Foundation for Research
and Innovation (H.F.R.I) under the 3rdCall for H.F.R.I. PhD Fellowships (Fellowship
Number: 6325)
Yeast models for studying aggregation of proteins, involved in Alzheimer’s disease
Y. Chernoffa, Z. Decknerb, P. Chandramowlishwarana, A. Hirscha, R. Mezenceva, L. Walkerb,
and D. Lynnc
aSchool of Biological Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA;
bSchool of Medicine and Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA; cDepartments of Chemistry
and Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA
Aims: Cross-β fibrous aggregates (amyloids) of human Aβ and tau proteins are linked
to Alzheimer’s disease. Mechanisms of amyloid formation and propagation are still
poorly understood due to the complexity of the human organism. Heritable endogenous
amyloids, found in yeast cells and termed yeast prions, provide a powerful tool for
the investigation of these processes. We have developed yeast assays for prion properties
of Aβ and tau.
Material and Methods: Our constructs employ fusions of Aβ or tau to either various
fragments of the yeast prion protein Sup35, or to various fluorescent proteins (FPs).
Fusions to Sup35 allow for phenotypic detection of a prion, formed by a chimeric protein.
Fusions to FP allow for cytological detection of aggregation and biochemical characterization
of aggregates.
Results: We have demonstrated the ability of Aβ amyloids (including those from brain
extracts) to transfect yeast cells, followed by propagation of various Aβ-based polymorphs
(strains) in yeast. Impact of chemicals and Aβ mutations on amyloidogenic properties
of Aβ has been studied by using yeast assays. Molecular basis of aggregates formed
by Aβ and tau proteins in yeast cells has been characterized. Colocalization between
tau and Aβ aggregates has been detected.
Conclusions: Our data show that yeast model recapitulates the major features of Aβ
and tau aggregation, observed in humans, and is applicable to understanding mechanisms
of aggregation.
Funded by: NIH
Acknowledgement: Support from Emory Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center.
Loss of Rab7 activation leads to the impairments in cholesterol metabolism in prion
infection
Pearl Cherrya,b, Samia Hannaouia,b, SuY Shima,b, Vincent Ebacherb, Waqas Tahira,b,
Li. Lua,b, Hermann Schätzla,b, and Sabine Gilcha,b
aCalgary Prion Research Unit, Comparative Biology and Experimental Medicine, Faculty
of Veterinary Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada; bHotchkiss Brain Institute,
Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada
Aims: Prion diseases are caused by the accumulation of infectious PrPSc, which is
the misfolded isoform of cellular prion protein-PrPc. In prion infected neurons, certain
cellular impairments including elevating cholesterol levels are observed. The aim
of my study was to elucidate the causal mechanism of impaired cholesterol metabolism
upon prion infection, focusing on the role of Rab7.
Material and Methods: Quantitative analysis of active Rab7 (Rab7.GTP) levels at different
stages of prion infection in cerebellar granular neurons (CGN), 22 L-N2a cells and
22 L infected terminal mouse brains, and the trafficking dynamics of low-density lipoprotein
(LDL) in 22 L-CAD5 cells were analyzed by confocal microscopy. Free cholesterol levels
were visualized by filipin stating. Feedback regulation of cholesterol synthesis in
prion infection, was measured via quantitative PCR. Impairments in Rab7 ubiquitination
and its interactions with effector proteins upon prion infection were analyzed via
immune pull down and subsequent immunoblotting. Over-expression of a constitutively
active mutant of Rab7 in 22 L-N2a cells followed by amplex cholesterol assay and detection
of PrPScwas used to analyse the effect of Rab7 on cholesterol levels and prion propagation.
Results: We found that de novo prion infection of CGN is associated with elevated
active-Rab7 levels at the early stages of infection, followed by a gradual loss in
its levels, concomitant with increased cholesterol levels and PrPScaccumulation. The
loss in active Rab7 levels was also observed in neurons of 22 L-infected terminal
mouse brains. The loss in active Rab7 levels upon prion infection causes a delay in
LDL trafficking to lysosomes, leading to defective feedback regulation of cholesterol
metabolism, which triggers de novo cholesterol synthesis in prion infected neuronal
cell lines. Prion infection results in compromised ubiquitination of Rab7, which can
subsequently impair its activation process. Rab7 effector interaction is reduced in
both prion-infected neuronal cells and terminal mouse brains resulting in defective
retrograde lysosomal transport. Over-expression of an active mutant of Rab7 in prion-infected
cells restores normal cholesterol levels and reduces prion propagation, demonstrating
a central role of Rab7 in regulating cholesterol metabolism and PrPScpropagation.
Conclusions: We have demonstrated that loss in Rab7 activation upon prion infection
causes dysregulations in cholesterol metabolism. The reduced activation of Rab7 can
be linked to its compromised ubiquitination status. Rescuing the LDL trafficking impairments
upon loss of active Rab7 reduces elevated cholesterol levels and PrPScpropagation.
Our results imply that Rab7 activity is critically important in regulating cholesterol
levels and hence attenuating prion propagation.
Funded by: This research was funded by the Canada Research Chairs program and grants
from the Alberta Prion Research Institute and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research
to S.G. P.C. was supported by a University of Calgary Eyes High Graduate Student Fellowship
Grant number: 201,600,035
Inoculation of human traumatic brain injury tissue homogenates induces cognitive deficits
and widespread tau pathology in wild-type mice
Roberto Chiesaa, Gloria Vegliantea, Ilaria Raimondia, Elena Restellia, Ilaria Lisia,
Federica Paredia, Fabrizio Ortolanob, Marco Carbonarab, and Elisa R Zaniera
aDepartment of Neuroscience, Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario Negri, Milan,
Italy; bDepartment of Anaesthesia and Critical Care, Fondazione IRCCS Cà Granda Ospedale
Maggiore Policlinico, Milan, Italy
Aims: Tau pathology has been hypothesized to spread by a prion-like mechanism by which
pathological tau conformers seed misfolding of normal tau. We have demonstrated that
a single severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) in C57BL/6 J (WT) mice induces a self-propagating
tau pathology that progressively spreads in the brain and can be horizontally transmitted
to naïve mice, causing synaptic degeneration and cognitive impairment.
The aim of this study was to test whether a transmissible tau pathology is generated
also in TBI patients.
Material and Methods: Fresh-frozen human traumatic brain injured (hTBI) tissues surgically
removed for refractory intracranial hypertension (n = 3 patients, GCS at admission
<8) and characterized biochemically for the presence of both total and hyperphosphorylated
tau (P-tau), were homogenized (10% w/v in PBS) and inoculated bilaterally in the hippocampus
and overlaying cortex of male WT and tau knockout (KO) mice. A glioma brain specimen
was used as control (hCT). The cognitive function of inoculated mice was assessed
by the novel object recognition (NOR), Radial Arm Water Maze (RAWM) and Y-maze tests
up to 14 months post-inoculation (mpi). Synaptic loss and tau deposition were evaluated
by immunohistochemistry at sacrifice.
Results: Early and persistent memory deficits were observed in mice inoculated with
hTBI1 homogenate as assessed by NOR at 4, 8 and 12 mpi (hTBI1 vs hCT, *p < 0.05),
associated with widespread tau pathology and synaptic loss (V-GLUT1 and drebrin, hTBI1
vs hCT, *p < 0.05). A similar memory impairment was induced by hTBI2 in NOR and RAWM
at 4 and 10 mpi respectively (hTBI2 vs naïve, *p < 0.05). Interestingly, hTBI3, which
had lower levels of both total and P-tau than the other homogenates (total tau: hTBI1/2
vs hTBI3, **p < 0.01; CP13: hTBI1/2 vs hTBI3, *p < 0.05), did not significantly impair
cognitive function of inoculated mice. Semiquantitative analysis found that hTBI1
induced the largest pathological tau deposition in the hippocampus in terms of PHF1-positive
neurons in the CA2-3 regions, and CP13 staining of apical dendrites in the stratum
radiatum of the CA1 region. Thus, hTBI1 was selected for additional inoculations in
WT and tau KO mice. The latter showed preserved memory function as compared to WT
inoculated mice, consistent with a key role of endogenous tau in the spreading of
tau proteinopathy.
Conclusions: Self-templating pathological tau is induced by a single TBI in humans
and plays a key role in exacerbating post-traumatic pathology.
Funded by: Alzheimer’s Association, USA
Grant number: AARG-17532633
Acknowledgement: We thank Ilaria Bertani for participating in the initial phase of
this project.
A Field-Deployable Diagnostic Assay for the Visual Detection of Chronic Wasting Disease
Prions
Peter R. Christensona,b, Manci Lib,c, Gage Rowdenb,c, Marc D. Schwabenlanderb,c, Tiffany
M. Wolfb,d, Sang-Hyun Oha,b, and Peter A. Larsenb,c*
aDepartment of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis,
MN USA; bMinnesota Center for Prion Research and Outreach, University of Minnesota,
St. Paul, MN USA; cDepartment of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences, University of
Minnesota, St. Paul, MN USA; dDepartment of Veterinary and Population Medicine, University
of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN USA
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD), a prion proteinopathy of cervids, is spreading
across the United States and Canada, and has been detected in South Korea and Northern
Europe. Field-deployable diagnostic tools for the rapid and reliable detection of
CWD are limited. Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) facilitate sensitive and reliable diagnostic
techniques via visual color change for the detection of a variety of targets. In parallel,
recently developed QuIC assays leverage protein-amplification and fluorescent signaling
for the accurate detection of misfolded proteins, especially misfolded prion proteins.
To advance field based CWD diagnostics, we combine AuNPs and QuIC technologies to
create the Minnesota Quaking Induced Conversion (MN-QuIC™) assay, a field deployable
method for the detection of CWD using the naked eye.
Material and Methods: In MN-QuIC™, tissue samples are amplified by incubating/shaking
in recombinant prion rich solutions for 20–24hrs. After amplification, solutions are
injected into an AuNP solution. AuNP solutions from CWD positive tissues appear visually
red and while CWD not detected solutions appear visually blue. For laboratory testing,
retropharyngeal lymph nodes (RPLN) and tonsil samples from wild white-tailed deer
(WTD) were tested. The status of all samples was independently confirmed with ELISA
and/or IHC. To demonstrate the utility of MN-QuIC™ outside the laboratory, we deployed
to a rural wildlife surveillance field station where we performed MN-QuIC™ on 13 wild
WTD in a blind study.
Results: Laboratory testing consisted of 60 tissues (RPLNs and tonsils) from 50 animals
that were investigated with MN-QuIC™ as well as independently with RT-QuIC, ELISA,
and/or IHC . For RPLN testing, MN-QuIC™ correctly identified 18 of 20 CWD positive
tissues and 20 of 20 CWD not detected tissues. In tonsil testing, MN-QuIC™ successfully
identified all 10 CWD positive and all 10 CWD not detected tissues. For the blinded
field test outside of the laboratory, we detected 3 CWD positive animals and 10 CWD
negative animals, in which independent ELISA results matched MN-QuIC™ with 100% consistency.
All MN-QuIC™ results for both laboratory and field testing were obtained in approximately
24hrs.
Conclusions: We successfully demonstrated that MN-QuIC™ is functional in a non-traditional
laboratory setting by correctly identifying all CWD positive and CWD not detected
(independently confirmed with ELISA and/or IHC tests) animals in a blinded study at
a field site, thus documenting the portability of the assay. We conclude that hybrid
AuNP and QuIC assays, such as MN-QuIC™, have great potential for sensitive, field-deployable
diagnostics of CWD.
Funded by: Minnesota Department of Natural Resources; the Minnesota State Legislature
through the Minnesota Legislative-Citizen Commission on Minnesota Resources (LCCMR);
Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station Rapid Agricultural Response Fund; Minnesota
Agricultural, Research, Education, Extension and Technology Transfer (AGREETT) program;
CSE Interdisciplinary Fellowship
Acknowledgement: We thank Christopher Ertsgaard and Dong Jun Lee for helpful discussions
on experimental results and protocols. Portions of this work were conducted in the
Minnesota Nano Center, which is supported by the National Science Foundation through
the National Nano Coordinated Infrastructure Network (NNCI) under Award Number ECCS-2025124.
W. Zhang provided the expertise for TEM studies. These studies were carried out in
the University of Minnesota Characterization Facility, which receives partial support
from the NSF through the MRSEC (Award Number DMR-2011401) and the NNCI (Award Number
ECCS-2025124) programs. F. Schendel, T. Douville, and staff of the University of Minnesota
Biotechnology Resource Center provided critical support concerning the large-scale
production of recombinant proteins. We thank the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources,
especially M. Carstensen, Lou Cornicelli, E. Hildebrand, P. Hagen, and K. LaSharr,
for providing the white-tailed deer tissues used for our analyses and logistical assistance
for MN-QuIC field deployment. K. Wilson of the Colorado State University Veterinary
Diagnostic Laboratory provided assistance with ELISA and IHC testing of samples reported
herein. S. Stone provided valuable logistical assistance with our molecular work.
We thank NIH Rocky Mountain Labs, especially B. Caughey, A. Hughson, and C. Orru for
training and assistance with the implementation of RT-QuIC and for supplying the rPrP
clone.
Isolation and Characterization of Natural Bioactive Polyphenols with Antioxidant and
Anti-Prion Properties
Nikoletta Christoudiaa, Eirini Kanatab, Korina. Karagiannia, Spyros Pettasa, Matthias
Schmitzc, Andreana N Assimopouloud, Konstantinos Xanthopoulosb, Dimitra Dafoua, and
Theodoros Sklaviadisb
aDepartment of Genetics, Development and Molecular Biology, School of Biology, Aristotle
University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece; bLaboratory of Pharmacology, School
of Pharmacy, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece; cDepartment
of Neurology, University Medical Center and the German Center for Neurodegenerative
Diseases (DZNE), Göttingen, Germany; dLaboratory of Organic Chemistry, School of Chemical
Engineering, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece
Aims: Prion diseases, also known as transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs),
are a group of rare, fatal brain diseases that affect both animals and humans – and
are caused by the misfolding of normal protein (PrPC) into disease-associated protein
(PrPSc). Oxidative stress has been found to be associated with the onset and/or progression
of neurodegenerative diseases. Natural polyphenol bioactive compounds act as inhibitors
of oxidative stress. We aimed to study the neuroprotective biological activities of
natural polyphenols.
Material and Methods: Carnosic acid (a catechol-type diterpene isolated from Rosmarinus
officinalis), Carnosol (Carnosic acid’s metabolite), Oenin and Myrtillin chloride
(Anthocyanins) and anthocyanin extracts isolated from grape skins using methods such
us HPLC-DAD-MS, GC-MS and NMR, were tested for their antioxidant and anti-prion effects.
The assessment of bioactivity of polyphenols was evaluated in an in vitro model of
Prion disorders (N2a22L cells) and a cell-free Prion amplification assay (RT-QuIC).
Cell viability in the presence of different concentrations of polyphenols extracts
was estimated by MTT assay. In addition, the assessment of their neuro- and anti-prion
protection was evaluated on the N2a22L cell model by determining, via western-blot
and RT-QuIC, whether they inhibit the accumulation of the proteinase–resistant protein
PrPSc. Their antioxidant role was estimated by the expression measurement of genes
linked with the antioxidant response, using real-time PCR and by the measurement of
reactive oxygen species (ROS) production.
Results: In line with polyphenols’ anti-oxidant properties, the expression of genes
linked with anti-oxidant response was elevated when N2a22L cells were treated. In
addition, polyphenols demonstrated their effectiveness to neutralize oxidative stress,
by decreasing ROS. Treatment of N2a22L cells resulted in a remarkable reduction in
the accumulation of the disease-associated form of PrPSc, as detected by immunoblotting.
This effect was validated in cell-free assays, demonstrating that polyphenols can
independently prevent the formation of PrPSc. Importantly, cell-free assays unveiled
that these natural products not only prevent the formation of PrP aggregates but can
also disrupt already formed aggregates.
Conclusions: Our findings suggest that polyphenols have pleiotropic effects against
Prion diseases, suggesting that they could become important preventative and/or therapeutic
agents against Prion and other neurodegenerative diseases.
Funded by: European Regional Development Fund, 2021–2023. Investment Research Plans
for Business Research and Development of Central Macedonia (KMP6-0079465).
Grant number: KMP6-0079465
Longitudinal Profile of Specific Blood Cell Phenotypes Critical to Prionemia in Deer
Inoculated with Chronic Wasting Disease
Brianne M. Coleman, Amy V. Nalls, Erin E. McNulty, Joseph A. Westrich, Audrey M. Sandoval,
and Candace K. Mathaison
Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Pathology, College of Veterinary Medicine
and Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a terminal, infectious prion disease endemic
within captive and free-ranging cervid populations across North America, Scandinavia,
and Korea. It has been established that prion infectivity is present in the blood
of prion-infected animals, including deer and humans. Yet to be revealed is the longitudinal
profile of specific cell subsets associated with prion infection. Using our white-tailed
deer model we have established a reliable, consistent method for isolating blood cell
populations throughout disease course; from minutes post inoculation to terminal disease.
Throughout CWD disease course we isolate platelets, polymorphonuclear cells (PMNs),
total peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), and specific blood cell subsets
including CD4, CD8, CD14, and B cells. All of these cell subsets are being analyzed
for the presence of amyloid seeding activity (prions) by real-time quaking-induced
conversion (RT-QuIC) assay.
Material and Methods: We employ density gradient and centrifugation processing on
fresh whole blood from a cohort of four deer inoculated with 10 mg of prion infected
brain material, to isolate cell populations of interest followed by magnetic bead
separation for specific blood cell subset extraction. Verification of each cell population
is done by flow cytometry utilizing the limited, species-specific antibodies available
for cervids. Isolated cell fractions harvested at various times throughout disease
course are analyzed for protein seeding activity by our modified amyloid amplification
assay, lipase iron-oxide bead extraction RT-QuIC (LIQ). Two animals inoculated with
10 mg of non-infectious prion brain material are processed in the same manner to serve
as negative controls.
Results: Prion seeding activity has been identified in PBMC and subset populations
at or near the time of lymphoid biopsy positivity, with a progressive increase in
signal detection as disease course progresses. CD14 and B cell populations express
consistently increasing rates of prion amplification with indications of oscillating
T cell interactions over time. Evaluation and optimization of prion detection in platelet
and PMN populations by LIQ and protein misfolding cyclic amplification assay with
RT-QuIC readout (PQ) is currently ongoing.
Conclusions: Our studies are revealing the temporal prion seeding activity in bulk
PBMC and specific blood cell subsets across the longitudinal course of CWD infection.
These findings will provide better understanding of mechanisms associated with intra-host
prion trafficking.
Funded by: NIH-NIAID, NIH-NINDS
Grant number: 2R01AI112956-06, 1R01NS107246-01
Exposure of non-human primates to low doses of BSE/vCJD prions: an update
Emmanuel Comoy, Jacqueline Mikol, Jérôme Delmotte, and Jean-Philippe Deslys
Direction of Fundamental Research, Division of Prions and Related Diseases (SEPIA),
CEA, Fontenay-aux-Roses, France
Aims: The occurrence of a high prevalence of healthy carriers (1/2,000) in UK, as
revealed by appendix studies, constitutes a sharp contrast with the limited number
of clinical cases of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD) and the absence of new
cases during the past years.
The high heterogeneity of consumers’ exposure may explain this apparent paradox: a
low number of people were exposed to a high amount of infectivity, whereas a high
number of people were exposed to a very low amount of infectivity. Our macaque model
might help to assess the clinical evolution of these latter ones and their potential
as a source of secondary exposure, notably through blood donations.
Material and Methods: We exposed cynomolgus macaques to serial dilutions of BSE-infected
material or blood products from different sources. Post mortem histological and biochemical
analyses were performed on clinically-affected animals.
Results: High dose-inoculated animals developed typical clinical vCJD disease with
all the pathognomonic hallmarks after incubation periods ranging from 3 to 8 years.
Some low-dosed animals developed clinical signs with atypical patterns after extensive
incubation periods, exhibiting lesion and biochemical profiles that differed markedly
from the typical disease. Despite the presence of neurological signs and neuronal
lesions, classical lesions of spongiform change and presence of cerebral PrPres were
inconstant, or even absent, whereas prion infectivity was evidenced after successive
transmissions.
Conclusions: These observations suggest that low-dose exposure, which would have been
the most frequent occurrence during the period of risk and would correspond to healthy
carriers, could induce non-typical pathologies that may not be recognized as ‘prion
disease’.
Funded by: European Commission, French Research Funding Agency, Health Canada
Non-human primates: a renewed gold standard for prion(-like) diseases?
Emmanuel Comoy, Jacqueline Mikol, Jérôme Delmotte, and Jean-Philippe Deslys
Direction of Fundamental Research, Division of Prions and Related Diseases (SEPIA),
CEA, Fontenay-aux-Roses, France
During decades non-human primates (NHP) were considered as gold standard to model
human prion diseases until the onset of humanized transgenic mice. The NIH group of
Carleton Gajdusek first brought from these models pivotal and founding information
about transmissibility, pathogeny and resistance of the different forms of human prion
diseases (familial, sporadic or iatrogenic CJD, Kuru …), and in a second time, our
primate studies provided the first experimental evidence for a zoonotic potential
of BSE.
The BSE crisis opened the field to studies about the zoonotic potential of the other
animal prion diseases and the iatrogenic (mainly transfusional) risk of subsequent
human prion diseases. Transgenic models of mice expressing human PrP emerged at that
time and were widely used to assess these questions, with respect to their numerous
advantages (expression of the prion protein of concern, little size, limited cost,
ethical considerations, availability of dedicated facilities) in comparison to primates.
However, primate (mainly macaque) models persisted since they provided in these two
domains complementary answers according to their specific features: their lifespan
(25–30 years versus 2 years for mice) is more compatible with long incubation periods
(as expected) in humans, and most of all their size, their phylogeny and their physiology
make them unique to model the potential natural routes of human contamination (oral,
intravenous, accidental).
During the last decade, we and others described, in different independent primate
studies, unexpected observations after prion exposure in several non-optimal conditions,
mostly through peripheral routes. The animals developed neurological diseases with
either incomplete prion phenotypes, or pathological pictures that would not be suspected
as linked to prion. These observations that will be updated here question the real
expanse of prion diseases and our capacities do detect them. At a time where structural,
conjectural and ethical issues hamper the use of NHP in all the areas of scientific
research, these observations together with new technical approaches for refined animal
monitoring, renew the interest of these large animal models for prion diseases but
also for prion-like diseases, with the first description in a non transgenic model
of the transmissibility of Alzheimer’s disease.
Optimization of the RT-QuIC in prion disease diagnostics
S. Correia, M. Schmitz, and I. Zerr
Neurologie, University Medical Center, Göttingen, Germany
Aims: Real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC) is a highly sensitive and specific
diagnostic test for Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD). The current sensitivity of CSF
RT-QuIC was undertaken at the Germany National Reference Center for TSE is 80–89%
and the specificity is 99–100%. We aimed to increase the sensitivity in CSF RT-QuIC.
Based on this aim, the following tasks were formulated:
Purification of Hamster-sheep, FL Human, FL Human E200K, and FL Human FFI recombinant
PrP substrates were performed. They were tested in a set of samples to define assay
conditions for reduced self-aggregation.
The best suitable substrate for sCJD and gCJD CSF diagnostic via RT-QuIC was investigated
to obtain the best diagnostic accuracy. sCJD, gCJD, and control samples were tested.
We compared the signal response from each substrate and the best substrate performance
was determined.
To determine agreement between the different substrates, we performed standard RT-QuIC
(Hamster-sheep) in parallel with FL Human and E200K.
Material and Methods: Different substrates were purified using AKTÄ system. To determine
the sensitivity and specificity of different substrates in sCJD and gCJD we used a
cut-off at 10,000 rfu/80 h in 88 sCJD samples, 16 E200K CJD samples and 22 FFI samples.
To investigate the agreement between the different substrates in CJD CSF, 134 CSF
samples with positive or negative signal response in the standard RT-QuIC (hamster-sheep)
were analyzed in parallel with Fl Human and E200K.
Results: The E200K subtrate showed the highest sensitivity in sCJD (98%), E200K (100%)
and FFI (55%) patients. The specificity in all the substrates was 100 %. Signal-kinetic
of the substrates were analyzed and E200K substrate had a significant shorter lag
phase and higher AUC in comparison with Hamster-sheep and FL Human substrates. Agreement
between substrates was analyzed using the Cohen’s kappa value in a cohort of 134 CSF
samples. We obtained an agreement of 86.6% between Hamster-sheep and FL Human and
a agreement of 79.1% between Hamster-sheep and E200K substrates. For FL Human and
E200K substrates we obtained 71.6% agreement.
Conclusions: The results suggest that E200K substrate increases the sensitivity of
the RT-QuIC in patients with sCJD to 98% (Hamster-sheep 80% and FL Human 75%) and
in CJD E200K and GSS patients to 100% (Hamster-sheep 88% and 50%, FL Human 88% and
50%). In FFI samples the E200K substrate showed the best sensitivity (55%) in comparison
to FL Human (36% sensitivity) and Hamster-sheep (36% sensitivity).
A non-radioactive cell-free assay for detection of direct PERK activators
Márcia Costaa,b,c, Thomas W. Röslera,b, and Günter U. Höglingera,b,c
aDepartment of Translational Neurodegeneration, German Center for Neurodegenerative
Diseases, Munich, Germany; bDepartment of Neurology, School of Medicine, Technical
University of Munich, Munich, Germany; cDepartment of Neurology, Hannover Medical
School, Hannover, Germany
Aims: Activation of the PERK pathway, a major branch of the unfolded protein response
has shown to be promising therapeutic approach in tauopathies and possibly other neurodegenerative
proteinopathies. In the present study, we aimed to develop a cell-free assay for the
discovery of novel direct PERK activators.
Material and Methods: We measured the activity of human recombinant PERK in the presence
of a test compounds (activators or inhibitors) by detecting the amount of consumed
ATP in a cell-free setup. We developed a novel assay protocol and carried out cell-free
protein reactions to optimize the assay parameters.
Results: We were able to determine suitable assay conditions, including parameters
such as optimal PERK concentration, reaction temperature, reaction time and type of
substrate protein. We successfully detected PERK activation and inhibition by selected
modulators, using SMAD3 as a phosphorylation-accepting protein. The developed assay
showed adequate stability and robustness to estimate an activating EC50. We also provided
novel insights into the mechanism of PERK activation by a distinct activator. Lastly,
we assessed the assay applicability by testing MK-28, a recently described PERK activator.
Conclusions: Our data shows that the developed cell-free assay can be applied for
a high-throughput screening setup to discover novel direct PERK activators from large
compound libraries. Novel direct activators of PERK will be useful to deepen the understanding
of the PERK signaling pathway particularly in neurodegeneration, and may lead to the
identification of new therapeutic drug candidates.
Funded by/Grant number: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft under Germany’s Excellence
Strategy within the framework of Hannover Cluster RESIST (EXC 2155 – project number
39,087,428)
Niedersächsisches Ministerium für Wissenschaft und Kunst (MWK, ZN3440.TP): REBIRTH
– Forschungszentrum für translationale regenerative Medizin
VolkswagenStiftung (Niedersächsisches Vorab)
Petermax-Müller Foundation (Etiology and Therapy of Synucleinopathies and Tauopathies)
Acknowledgement: The authors thank Luciana Fernandes for helping with the preliminary
setup experiments
Assessing the effect of inoculation route on pathogenesis in CWD-susceptible gene
targeted mice
Joseph DeFranco, Sehun Kim, Jenna Crowell, Jifeng Bian, Bailey Huser, EmmaKate Raisley,
and Glenn C. Telling
Prion Research Center (PRC), the Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology,
Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA, Program in Cell and Molecular
Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA
Aims: This study aims to explore the effects of inoculation route on disease outcomes
following infection of gene targeted (Gt) mice expressing either deer or elk PrP with
North American CWD prions. In doing so, we will explore the hypothesis that accurately
controlled physiological expression of cervid PrP (CerPrP) by Prnp transcriptional
elements in Gt mice provides an authentic model in which to study how adaptation,
evolution, and selection of CWD strains in non-CNS compartments influences CWD pathogenesis.
Material and Methods: Whereas North American deer or moose PrP encodes glutamine at
residue 226 (CerPrP-Q226), North American elk PrP encodes glutamate (CerPrP-E226).
To precisely assess the effects of this difference on CWD pathogenesis, we created
Gt mice in which the murine PrP coding sequence was targeted and replaced with CerPrP-Q226
or CerPrP-E226, referred to as GtQ and GtE mice. This study builds on our preliminary
findings that GtQ and GtE mice accurately recapitulate deer and elk CWD including
peripheral pathogenesis. Here, we assessed the development of disease in GtQ and GtE
following various routes of inoculation. We compared the transmission properties of
elk CWD with deer CWD. CWD prions were delivered by various inoculation routes including
intracerebrally, intraperitoneally, by gavage, perorally by feeding prion contaminated
food, intranasally, intravenously, intramuscularly, and subcutaneously. Iterative
passages were also performed. Primary outcome measures included kinetics of disease
onset and neuropathological assessments. We assessed PrPScaccumulation in various
tissues by standard methods using various mAbs, IHC, and assessed the conformational
properties of prions in different tissues by conformational stability analysis. We
are assessing CWD prion titers by cell based cervid prion titration (CPCA). We also
assessed the transmission properties by peripheral routes of emergent Nordic CWD prion
strains that are either lymphotropic or non-lymphotropic.
Results: Different inoculation routes produced different transmission efficiencies
and mean incubation times to disease. Disease outcomes were influenced by host polymorphism
at residue 226 and the properties of the inoculum. All peripheral routes of inoculation
had substantially lower levels of PrPSc in the CNS than intracerebrally inoculated
mice. In peripheral challenges using Norwegian CWD strains, mice inoculated with lymphotropic
strains developed disease, while the mice inoculated with non-lymphotropic strains
did not.
Conclusions: Our findings illustrate that different routes of CWD inoculation produce
various disease outcomes in Gt mice. Our future studies will address the postulate
that different routes of inoculation propagate different prion strains that alter
pathogenesis and produce unique infectious conformers.
Funded by: The National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Anschutz Foundation (AF)
Grant number: NIH grants R01NS121682 and PO1-0011877A and AF grant 6,476,430
Effects of Montmorillonite Clay Adsorption on Chronic Wasting Disease Prion Seeding
Activity and Infectivity in Deer
Nathaniel D. Denkersa, Shannon Bartelt-Huntb, Jason C. Bartzc, Candace K. Mathiasona,
and Edward A. Hoovera
aPrion Research Center, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biological Sciences, Department
of Microbiology, Immunology, and Pathology; Colorado State University, Fort Collins,
CO, USA; bDepartment of Civil Engineering, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Omaha,
Nebraska, USA; cDepartment of Medical Microbiology and immunology, Creighton University,
Omaha, Nebraska, USA
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is unique in its facile spread in nature, attributable
to indirect transmission from environmental exposure. Infected cervids shed prions
through excreta/bodily fluids into the landscape–potentially generating a substantial
prion reservoir. Prions bound to soil may have altered infectivity, nevertheless,
the impact of environmental contamination remains unclear. These studies examined:
(1) the binding capacity of CWD prions to montmorillonite (MTE), as assessed by real-time
quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC), and (2) the effect of CWD prions, unbound or
bound to MTE, when orally inoculated into white-tailed deer.
Material and Methods: For in vitro experiments, concentrations of montmorillonite
(3.12–25 mg) were incubated with serial dilutions (10−5– 10−7) of CWD-positive or
negative brain homogenates, whereafter bound and unbound fractions were analyzed by
RT-QuIC. For in vivo studies, eight (8) white-tailed deer were inoculated with 10
mg CWD-positive brain, either unbound (n = 4) or bound (n = 4) to 5 grams of MTE.
Serial longitudinal tissue biopsies and excreta have been collected every 3 months
post-inoculation (MPI) and are being analyzed for CWD prion seeding activity and PrPCWDby
RT-QuIC and immunohistochemistry. Deer are also being monitored for development of
clinical disease.
Results: In vitro results demonstrated that MTE binds CWD prions and removes 90–100%
prion seeding activity in a concentration-dependent manner. Prion seeding activity
was detectable even when bound to MTE. From these studies, we estimated prion binding
capacity to be ~100-200ng CWD brain per milligram of MTE. In vivo results from deer
inoculated with prions either unbound or bound to MTE demonstrated positive seeding
activity in tonsil biopsies by RT-QuIC from 2 of 4 deer in each cohort at 3 MPI. By
6 MPI, 3 deer in the MTE cohort and 2 in the unbound cohort were positive by both
RT-QuIC and IHC. At 9 MPI, 3 deer in each cohort were positive by both assays. All
4 animals in each cohort became CWD-positive and have remained so at the time of this
writing (15MPI). None have signs of clinical disease.
Conclusions: These studies demonstrate: (1) MTE efficiently binds CWD prions and that
bound prions maintained seeding activity, inferring a potential durable environmental
reservoir and vehicle for horizontal transmission; and (2) While MTE binding removed
CWD prion seeding activity in vitro, in vivo assessment in deer has not demonstrated
a discernible difference in infectivity after 15 months. Animals will be observed
until clinical disease onset and terminal tissue prion infectivity assayed.
Funded by: National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Grant number: RO1-NS061902-09 R to EAH, PO1-AI077774 to EAH, and R01-AI112956-06 to
CKM
Acknowledgement: We abundantly thank Sallie Dahmes at WASCO and David Osborn and Gino
D’Angelo at the University of Georgia Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources
for their long-standing support of this work through provision of the hand-raised,
CWD-free, white-tailed deer used in these studies.
Bioassay of Chronic Wasting Disease Prions Derived from Brain and Lymph Node in White-tailed
Deer
Nathaniel D. Denkers, Caitlyn N. Kraft, Lindsay E. Parrie, Erin E. McNulty, Amy V.
Nalls, Candace K. Mathiason, and Edward A. Hoover
Prion Research Center, Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology, College
of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins,
Colorado, USA
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is the most transmissible prion disease and the
only one to affect a free-ranging population. Evidence is accruing that prions produced
in the lymphoreticular system (LRS) may differ from those produced in the central
nervous system (CNS). Studies of transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) strains
in hamsters have illustrated that prion stain conformations differ. CWD is transmitted
predominantly by shed rather than CNS prions, and thereby could vary in their conformation
and/or tissue tropism. In attempt to further elucidate the transmission and pathogenesis
of CWD, we orally exposed white-tailed deer to equivalent low doses of prions present
in either brain or retropharyngeal lymph node to determine whether the differences
may exist in infection efficiency, tissue tropism, conformation, or clinical disease.
Material and Methods: Eight (8) white-tailed deer were orally inoculated with 0.5
mg (equated by reaction rates from real-time quaking induced conversion (RT-QuIC))
of either CWD-positive obex (n = 4) or retropharyngeal lymph node (RPLN) (n = 4) originating
from a single source animal. Longitudinal tissue biopsies and excreta were collected
every 3 months post-inoculation (MPI) with brain, peripheral lymph nodes, and other
tissues and body fluids collected at necropsy (12 MPI). All samples were analyzed
by RT-QuIC and immunohistochemistry.
Results: Longitudinal tonsil biopsies revealed CWD positivity by RT-QuIC at 3 MPI
in 1 of 4 deer (25%) in both cohorts. At six months, 4 of 4 (100%) deer in the obex
cohort and 3 of 4 (75%) deer in the RPLN cohort were positive by both assays. By 9 months,
the last deer in the RPLN cohort was tonsil biopsy positive by RT-QuIC only. Terminal
tissue samples analyzed by RT-QuIC revealed widespread distribution of prions in 8
peripheral lymph nodes of all (100%) obex and 3 of 4 (75%) RPLN inoculated deer. Positivity
was demonstrated in the obex of 2 of 4 (50%) deer in each cohort. Excreta results
demonstrated 1 of 16 (6%) saliva samples were positive in each cohort with only 1
urine sample positive in the obex cohort. Negative controls remained negative in all
samples by both assays.
Conclusions: Negligible differences were observed between cohorts infected with comparable
doses of CWD prions derived from brain and lymph node over the duration of the study,
inferring no discernable variance in CWD pathogenesis from either inoculum source.
Ongoing studies are investigating the biochemical differences within the brain and
lymph node of the point-source inoculum and matched terminal tissues of inoculated
deer.
Funded by: National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Grant number: RO1-NS061902-09 R to EAH, PO1-AI077774 to EAH, and R01-AI112956-06 to
CKM
Acknowledgement: We abundantly thank Sallie Dahmes at WASCO and David Osborn and Gino
D’Angelo at the University of Georgia Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources
for their long-standing support of this work through provision of the hand-raised,
CWD-free, white-tailed deer used in these studies.
Shedding of Chronic Wasting Disease Prions in Multiple Excreta Throughout Disease
Course in White-tailed Deer
Nathaniel D. Denkersa, Erin E. McNultya, Caitlyn N. Krafta, Amy V. Nallsa, Joseph
A. Westricha, Wilfred Goldmannb, Candace K. Mathiasona, and Edward A. Hoovera
aPrion Research Center, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biological Sciences, Department
of Microbiology, Immunology, and Pathology; Colorado State University, Fort Collins,
CO, USA; bDivision of Infection and Immunity, The Roslin Institute and the Royal Dick
School of Veterinary Studies, University of Edinburgh, Midlothian, UK
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) now infects cervids in South Korea, North America,
and Scandinavia. CWD is unique in its efficient transmission and shedding of prions
in body fluids throughout long course infections. Questions remain as to the magnitude
of shedding and the route of prion acquisition. As CWD continues to expand, the need
to better understand these facets of disease becomes more pertinent. The purpose of
the studies described was to define the longitudinal shedding profile of CWD prions
in urine, saliva, and feces throughout the course of infection in white-tailed deer.
Material and Methods: Twelve (12) white-tailed deer were inoculated with either 1
mg or 300ng of CWD. Urine, saliva, and feces were collected every 3-month post-inoculation
(MPI) throughout the study duration. Cohorts were established based on PNRP genotype:
codon 96 GG (n = 6) and alternate codons 96 GS (n = 5) & 103NT (n = 1). Urine and
saliva were analyzed using iron-oxide magnetic extraction (IOME) and real-time quaking
induced conversion (RT-QuIC)(IQ). Feces were subjected to IOME, followed by 4 rounds
protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA) with products analyzed by RT-QuIC (IPQ).
To determine whether IPQ may be superior to IQ, a subset of urine and saliva were
also tested by IPQ. Results were compared with clinical disease status.
Results: Within the 96 GG cohort, positive seeding activity was detected in feces
from all deer (100%), in saliva from 5 of 6 (83%), and in urine from 4 of 6 (66%).
Shedding in all excreta occurred at, or just after, the first positive tonsil biopsy
result. In the 96 GS/103NT cohort, positive seeding activity could be detected in
feces from 3 of 6 (50%) deer, saliva in 2 of 6 (33%), and urine in 1 of 6 (16%). Shedding
in excreta was detected >5 months after the first tonsil positive result. Four of
six 96 GG deer developed clinical signs of CWD, whereas only 2 of the 96 GS/103NT
did. Shedding was more frequently detected in deer with clinical disease. The IPQ
protocol did not significantly improve detection in saliva or urine samples, however,
it significantly augmented detection in feces by eliminating non-specific background
commonly experienced with IQ. Negative control samples remained negative in samples
tested.
Conclusions: These studies demonstrate: (a) CWD prion excretion occurs throughout
infection; (2) PRNP genotype (GG≫GS/NT) influences the excreta shedding; and (3) detection
sensitivity in excreta can vary with different RT-QuIC protocols. These results provide
a more complete perspective of prion shedding in deer during the course of CWD infection.
Funded by: National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Grant number: RO1-NS061902-09 R to EAH, PO1-AI077774 to EAH, and R01-AI112956-06 to
CKM
Acknowledgement: We abundantly thank Sallie Dahmes at WASCO and David Osborn and Gino
D’Angelo at the University of Georgia Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources
for their long-standing support of this work through provision of the hand-raised,
CWD-free, white-tailed deer used in these studies
Study of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease mortality in France between 1992 and 2016
using an Age-Period-Cohort model
A. Denouela, J-P. Brandela,b, A. Elbazc†, and S. Haika,b†
aCNRS UMR 7225, INSERM U1127, Institut du cerveau et de la moelle épinière, Sorbonne
Universités, Paris, France; bAP-HP, Centre National de Référence des Maladies de Creutzfeldt-Jakob,
Groupe Hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtrière, Paris, France; cINSERM U1018, CESP, Equipe ‘Exposome
and heredity’, Villejuif, France †These authors share senior authorship.
Aims: Sporadic form of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) is the most common form of
prion diseases. Its origin is still unknown and the role of exogenous factors remains
possible. We aimed to study sCJD mortality from data collected over 25-years of active
surveillance in France in order to better understand the origin of this form.
Material and Methods: Cases reported to the French CJD Surveillance Network between
1992 and 2016 with a diagnosis of probable or definite sCJD were included to the study.
Crude and age- and sex-standardized mortality rates were calculated as well as male-to-female
mortality ratio. Variations over time of sCJD mortality were analyzed using an Age-Period-Cohort
(APC) model. Age effect reflects a biological process linked to aging, effect of period
of death shows an overall trend such as diagnosis evolution, and a cohort of birth
effect reflects an environmental exposure change.
Results: We included 2475 cases of probable or definite sCJD aged 45–89 years. The
overall mortality rate was 4.58 per million person-years with a peak in 75–79 years
age group. The APC model showed effects of age, period and cohort on sCJD mortality.
We also observed an age-dependent sex effect. Men-to-women mortality ratio was <1
before 55 years and >1 after 80 years.
Conclusions: Study of sCJD mortality rates revealed that several factors influence
its evolution over time. Indeed, APC analyses highlighted processes linked to aging
through an age effect, improvement of surveillance system especially during first
years through the period effect, and unexpectedly, showed a cohort effect in favour
of unknown environmental risk factors (zoonoses, diet, pesticides, antibiotics?).
In addition, an age-dependent gender effect was shown with a shift in men-to-women
mortality ratio at the age peak.
This statistical approach based on 25 years of surveillance in France brings results
that support the role of environmental factors that could influence sCJD susceptibility.
Evaluation of naturally occurring polymorphic variants of the PrP from cervids as
RT- QuIC substrates for the detection of multiple CWD strains
Carlos M. Díaz-Domíngueza, Nuno Gonçalves-Anjoa,b, Jorge M. Charcoa,b,d, Tram Thu
Vuonge, Leire Fernández-Veigaa, Linh Trane, Cristina Sampedro-Torres-Quevedoa, Estela
Bastosb, Hasier Erañaa,c,d, Sylvie L. Benestade, and Joaquín Castillaa,d,f
a
Center for Cooperative Research in Biosciences (CIC bioGUNE), Basque Research and
Technology Alliance (BRTA), Bizkaia Technology Park, Derio, Spain;
b
Centre for the Research and Technology of Agro‐Environmental and Biological Sciences
(CITAB), University of Trás‐os‐Montes and Alto Douro (UTAD), Vila Real, Portugal;
c
ATLAS Molecular Pharma S. L. Bizkaia Technology Park, 800, Derio, Spain;
d
Carlos III National Health Institute, Madrid, Spain;
e
Norwegian Veterinary Institute, Norway;
f
IKERBASQUE, Basque Foundation for Science, Prion Research Lab, Bilbao, Spain Centro
de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Infecciosas (CIBERINFEC)
Aims: Due to the emergence of new Chronic Wasting Disease strains in different cervid
species in Europe and the large amount of polymorphic variants being detected worldwide,
which could give rise to other strains, refining CWD surveillance methods is vital.
Here, we propose to improve RT-QuIC detection of North American and European CWD strains
by testing all known polymorphic variants of the PrP within the Cervidae family as
substrate.
Material and Methods: For that purpose, we have generated plasmids containing every
polymorphic variant of the PrP (from the amino acids 90 to 230) within the Cervidae
family that were produced in bacteria, purified and used to generate new RT-QuIC substrates.
Bank vole 109I rec-PrP, hamster rec-PrP, and hamster-sheep chimeric rec-PrP were selected
as reference RT-QuIC substrates.
Brain homogenates from a variety of CWD-infected cervids that presented different
strain and/or genetic properties were selected as seed to challenge all the previous
substrates. Red deer normal brain homogenate was used as a negative control.
Results: All tested substrates challenged with serially diluted CWD seeds were ranked
according to their time to threshold, obtaining a value for each inoculum-substrate
combination. These revealed the influence of every polymoprhic variant of the cervid
PrP in the propagation and detection of distinct strains, and allowed to highlight
the regions of the protein where the most relevant polymophisms are. Furthermore,
we assessed the more promising polymorphic variants for the detection of each different
CWD strain by RT-QuIC after equilizing the concentration of PrPScin every inoculum
tested.
Conclusions:
- Some polymorphic variants of the cervid rec-PrP can be considered as better substrates
for CWD detection by RT-QuIC than the reference substrates for the different strains
tested.
- Polymorphic variations located in certain regions of the recombinant cervid PrP
alter the CWD detection by RT-QuIC.
Funded by: Spanish ministry of science and innovation
Grant number: PID2021-122201OB-C21
Single-cell transcriptomics of mammalian prion diseases
Athanasios Dimitriadisa, Fuquan Zhanga, Thomas Murphya, Thomas Trainera, Zane Jaunmuktaneb,c,
Christian Schmidta, Malin Katarina Sandberga, Tamsin Nazaria, Jackie Linehana, Stephanie
Canninga, Azadeh Khalili-Shirazia, Mark Kristiansend, John Collingea, Simon Meada,
and Emmanuelle Virea
aMRC Prion Unit at University College London (UCL), UCL Institute of Prion Diseases,
UCL, London, W1W 7FF, UK; bDivision of Neuropathology, National Hospital for Neurology
and Neurosurgery, University College London NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK; cDepartment
of Clinical and Movement Neurosciences and Queen Square Brain Bank for Neurological
Disorders, Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, London,
UK; dUCL Genomics, UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health and Zayed Centre
for Research into Rare Disease in Children, London, UK
Aims: Despite substantial research aiming to elucidate prion disease pathogenesis,
the underlying mechanisms of cellular toxicity and neurodegeneration remain poorly
characterized. The human brain comprises numerous cell populations with heterogenous
transcriptional landscape, complicating the interpretation of transcriptomic studies.
To untangle this complexity, we performed longitudinal single-cell transcriptomics
studies on case-control mouse and human brain. We aimed to transcriptionally characterise
mammalian prion diseases and elucidate its mechanisms.
Materials and Methods: We utilized a single-nucleus sequencing technique based on
split-pool barcoding called SPLiT-seq where random and unique nucleotide barcodes
are attached to each transcript through multiple rounds of combinatorial indexing.
Our pipeline combined tissue disruption, nuclei isolation, RNA barcoding, library
preparation, Illumina sequencing and bioinformatic analysis. Our bioinformatics pipeline
is based on Seurat, used published open-source software, and followed the latest guidelines
of the community. We applied this experimental pipeline to a time-course case-control
study of RML-and control brain homogenate inoculated FVB mice (N = 95, timepoints:
20, 40, 80, 120 dpi and disease end-stage), and a human case-control study in post-mortem
and biopsied brain samples (N = 26). We performed standard pathological characterisation
of our samples and used RNA SCOPE to visualise transcript expression.
Results: We generated 210,000 high-quality cell transcriptomes across 5 time points
in mice. After quality control steps and clustering of the dataset based on transcriptomic
similarity, we identified 26 subclusters of cortical neurons, interneurons, mature
oligodendrocytes, oligodendrocyte precursor cells, vascular and leptomeningeal cells,
and astrocytes. Glial activation was evident from 80 dpi, while our data suggested
a selective transcriptomic response of individual cell clusters to disease. We identified
a pattern of neuronal transcriptomic change shortly after RML-brain inoculation that
quickly resolved, despite rapidly increasing prion titres in brain, only to return
at later stages when the neuropathology of prion disease was evident. Subsequent pathway
analyses identified common perturbed biological pathways associated with synaptic
dysfunction and ion homeostasis. Correlations of these findings with infectivity and
validated transcriptomic targets using RNA SCOPE will be discussed.
Conclusions: Here we provide the first single-cell transcriptomics study of prion
diseases in mouse and human brain which found cell-type and time-specific patterns.
Taken together, findings suggest that prion replication itself does not produce a
transcriptomic signature in brain, rather, a transient pattern of toxicity can be
seen immediately following inoculation of prion disease brain homogenate, which becomes
re-established as prion disease neuropathology develops. Our human data is being analysed
and new findings will be discussed to provide a more complete characterization of
the molecular mechanisms of prion diseases.
Funded by: Medical Research Council and Alzheimer’s Research UK
Grant numbers: ARUK-PPG2020A-030 (ARUK)
Acknowledgements: We are very grateful to all patients and family who consented their
samples to be used in the study, to the National Prion Clinic for their help acquiring
patient’s meta-data, and to the Queen Square Brain Bank and BRAIN UK for providing
human control samples. The ‘Genetics, Epigenetics and Bioinformatics’ group is core
funded by the MRC Prion Unit at UCL.
Development of a high-throughput system for the screening of anti-prion molecules
Katherine Do, Uffaf Khan, Carlos Kramm, Rebeca Benavente, Claudio Soto, Rodrigo Morales
Department of Neurology, McGovern Medical School, University of Texas Health Science
Center at Houston, Texas, USA
PrPSc (a misfolded form of the physiological prion protein, PrPC) is the main effector
in TSEs. Extensive evidence suggests that preventing or decreasing PrPSc replication
is a promising target for therapeutic intervention. Unfortunately, the existence of
different PrPScstrains provide challenges for the identification of anti-prion compounds
as molecules modifying a particular prion agent may not be effective on a second one.
The search of appropriate anti-prion therapies is limited by the lack of platforms
allowing the screening of compound libraries in a high throughput manner. Although
cell-based systems have been adapted for such purpose, they are not available for
any relevant prion strains. We have shown that the Protein Misfolding Cyclic Amplification
(PMCA) technology faithfully replicate the conformational properties of prions, maintaining
all relevant biological features such as their infectivity and particular strain properties.
Aims: Standardization of a high throughput PMCA (HT-PMCA) platform for rodent prions
in a 96-well format and screening of a small library of anti-prion compounds.
Material and Methods: We implemented a 96-well plate PMCA system to efficiently replicate
six strains of prions from rodents (mice and Syrian hamsters) and reduced the time
of analysis by the use of dot blots. We then tested a small library of known protein
misfolding inhibitors for all six prion strains.
Results: We were able to reduce PMCA times to 24 hours (compared to conventional 48
or 72 hours per PMCA round) and volumes to 50 μL (compared to conventional 100 μL)
without losing sensitivity. Dot blots were adapted in replacement of conventional
western blotting, fact that substantially reduced the time to visualize PrPSc signals.
Other materials and reagents were also reduced. Regarding the protein misfolding inhibitors,
we observed strain-specific patterns of prion misfolding interference with specific
compounds. Specifically, our data shows that while some drugs were active for some
prion strains, they were inactive in others. Our system showed great reproducibility
as judged by replicates run in different plates.
Conclusions: Our HT-PMCA system is suitable to test chemical libraries for putative
anti-prion molecules. The data presented in this work demonstrate that the anti-aggregation
activity of certain compounds is prion-strain specific.
Funded by: Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease Foundation
Phagocytic glia mediate prion-like spreading of mutant huntingtin aggregates in Drosophila
brains
Kirby M. Donnelly, Aprem D. A. Zaya, Graham H. Davis, David S. Tomlinson, and Margaret
M. Panning Pearce
Department of Biological Sciences, University of the Sciences, Philadelphia, PA
Aims: A key pathological feature of neurodegenerative disease is appearance of insoluble
aggregates that arise due to protein misfolding in cells of the central nervous system
(CNS). The healthy brain has the capacity to clear toxic protein aggregates via multiple
mechanisms, including the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway, autophagy, and phagocytic
engulfment by glia, but defects in these pathways lead to progressive accumulation
of aggregates over time. A growing body of evidence supports the hypothesis that pathogenic
aggregates associated with many neurodegenerative diseases behave similarly to infectious
prions–they spread from cell-to-cell and nucleate the aggregation of natively-folded
versions of the same protein, events which can contribute to aggregate propagation
in the brain. Here, we explored the hypothesis that mutant huntingtin (mHTT) aggregates
associated with Huntington’s disease (HD) spread in a ‘prion-like’ manner between
synaptically-connected neurons and glia in the Drosophila CNS.
Methods and Results: In a Drosophila model of HD, mHTT aggregates formed in presynaptic
olfactory receptor neuron (ORN) axons nucleated the aggregation of soluble, cytoplasmic
wild-type HTT (wtHTT) proteins expressed in post-synaptic partner projection neurons
(PNs) or in nearby phagocytic glia. ORN-to-PN and ORN-to-glia transfer of mHTT aggregates
was enhanced when ORN activity was silenced, slowed when caspase-dependent apoptosis
in ORNs was blocked, and remarkably, required expression of the conserved glial scavenger
receptor Draper/MEGF10. Further, mHTT aggregate transmission between synaptically-connected
ORNs and PNs involves a transient visit to the glial cytoplasm, suggesting that phagocytic
glia act as obligatory intermediates in trans-synaptic aggregate spreading in vivo.
Forward genetic screens have revealed that entry of phagocytosed neuronal mHTT aggregates
into the glial cytoplasm involves Rab GTPases with proposed roles in phagosome maturation,
suggesting that inefficient or incomplete progression of engulfed material through
the phagolysosomal system could generate seeding-competent mHTT aggregate species.
In support of this, mHTT aggregate formation in neurons accelerates age-related decline
in glial phagocytic clearance of axonal debris and increases markers of late phagosome
and lysosomes in the fly CNS.
Conclusions: Our findings suggest that while phagocytic glia regulate the load of
mHTT aggregates in the brain, they also promote formation of mHTT aggregate seeds
capable of spreading the misfolded phenotype to other cells in the brain. Together,
these data add to a growing understanding of activated glial cells as double-edged
players in neurodegenerative diseases such as HD.
Funded by: NIH/NIA, Pittsburgh Foundation, W.W. Smith Charitable Trusts
Grant number: R03 AG063295
Prion infectivity accumulation in CJD patients peripheral tissues and its implication
for public health
Jean-Yves Doueta, Alvina Huora, Hervé Cassarda, Severine Lugana, Naima Arona, Chloe
Mesica, Tomas Barrioa, Joaquin Castillab, Hasier Erañab, Delisle Marie-Bernadettec,
Péran Patricec, Vincent Beringued, James W. Ironsidee, and Olivier Andreolettia
aUMR INRAE ENVT 1225, Toulouse, France; bCIC Biogune, BilBao, Spain; cINSERM U 1214
TONIC, Toulouse, France; dINRAE VIM, Jouy-en-Josas, France; eNational Creutzfeldt-Jakob
Disease Research & Surveillance Unit, Edinburgh UK
Aims: In marked contrast to vCJD, previous investigations in sCJD revealed either
inconsistent levels or an absence of PrPScin peripheral tissues. These findings contributed
to the consensus that risks of transmitting sCJD as a consequence of non-CNS invasive
clinical procedures were low. Recently, the presence of prion infectivity in the plasma
and bone marrow of several sCJD patients was reported. These results raised questions
about the overall distribution of prion infectivity and transmission risks associated
with other peripheral tissues from sCJD patients.
Material and Methods: we systematically assessed the distribution of prion infectivity
in the peripheral tissues of sCJD (from different subtypes), vCJD and a specific subtype
of gCJD (E200K) patients. Prion quantification/detection was carried out by bioassay
(in PrP transgenic mice) and/or by in vitro amplification (PMCA).
Results: we found that, like in vCJD, prions are largely distributed in the peripheral
tissues of sCJD and gCJD-affected patients from various subtypes. Although strong
inter-individual heterogeneity exists between sCJD-affected individuals, the overall
infectivity distribution and levels observed in sCJD were not significantly different
from those found in vCJD patients. These findings naturally raise a question: how
early prion infectivity starts accumulating in peripheral organs in sCJD.
To answer this question, we propose that studying certain forms of genetic CJD could
represent an interesting approach. Transmission experiments using CJD cases associated
with E200K mutation demonstrated that these form of gCJD are caused by the same strains
than sCJD. They also indicated that both E200K gCJD and sCJD-affected patients display
the same infectivity distribution patterns in peripheral tissues.
Conclusions: These results could impact on our perception of the possible transmission
risks associated with sCJD. They also support the contention that E200K carriers could
allow major advances in the understanding of CJD disease pathogenesis.
Funded by: EU FEDER/INTERREG
Grant number: EFA282/13 TRANSPRION, EFA148/16 REDPRION
Acknowledgement: All contributors and funders
Peripheral prion accumulation in CWD-infected animals
Camilo Duque Velasqueza,c, Alicia Oterod, Chiye Kima,c, Judd Aikenb,c, and Debbie
McKenziea,c
aDepartment of Biological Science, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2G8, Canada;
bDepartment of Agriculture, Food & Nutritional Science, University of Alberta, Edmonton,
AB T6G 2G8, Canada; cCentre for Prions and Protein Folding Diseases, University of
Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2M8, Canada; dCentro de Encefalopatias y Enfermedades Transmisibles
Emergentes, University of Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain
Aims: The main host factor affecting the likelihood of cervids of becoming infected
and developing chronic wasting disease (CWD) is the primary structure of the cellular
prion protein (PrPC). Single changes in the amino acid composition of PrPC(i.e., polymorphisms)
can affect misfolding into PrPCconformers. The serine polymorphism at amino acid 96
(S96) of white-tailed deer PrPCslows the progression of CWD in deer. In transgenic
mice, S96-PrPC protects against prion disease following oral, intraperitoneal and
intracranial infection with different CWD strains. In PMCA assays, using S96-PrPC
as substrate for different CWD strains, Wisc-1 and CWD2 (the most common CWD strains)
lose their replication capacity. We will present data on the seeding activity of PrPCprions
from peripheral tissues of deer expressing different PRNP genotypes.
Material and Methods: PMCA is being used to estimate seeding activity present in peripheral
tissues from terminally-ill orally inoculated white tailed deer expressing different
PRNP genotypes.
Results: Preliminary analysis of various peripheral tissues (muscle, heart, kidney
pancreas, salivary gland) from deer demonstrated that PrPCpolymorphisms correlate
with lower prion seeding activity as determined by the number of serial PMCA rounds
required for detection. In addition, seeding of PMCA substrates with tissue homogenates
from deer heterozygous for PRNP polymorphisms resulted in co-amplification of different
PrPres glycotypes.
Conclusions: Deer expressing PrPCpolymorphisms accumulate less prions as compared
to deer expressing the PRNP genotype (wt/wt; G96/G96) most commonly associated with
CWD infection and rapid disease progression. Understanding the dynamics of prion accumulation
in hosts with PrPCmolecules impairing prion propagation would provide information
fundamental for developing strategies to reduce the spread of CWD.
Funded by: Alberta Prion Research Institute
Grant number: # 212200712
Adaptation of chronic wasting disease (CWD) prion strains in hosts with different
PRNP genotypes
Camilo Duque Velasqueza,c, Elizabeth Triscotta,c, Chiye Kima,c, Diana Morenoa,c, Judd
Aikenb,c, and Debbie McKenziea,c
aDepartment of Biological Science, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2G8, Canada;
bDepartment of Agriculture, Food & Nutritional Science, University of Alberta, Edmonton,
AB T6G 2G8, Canada; cCentre for Prions and Protein Folding Diseases, University of
Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2M8, Canada
Aims: The contagious nature of CWD epizootics and the PrPCamino acid variation of
cervids (and susceptible sympatric species) guarantee the expansion of prion conformational
diversity and selective landscapes where new strains can arise. CWD strains can have
novel transmission properties including altered host range that may increase zoonotic
risk as circulating strains diversify and evolve. We are characterizing the host adaptability
of characterized CWD strains as well as CWD isolates from different cervid species
in various enzootic regions.
Material and Methods: Characterized CWD strains as well as a number of isolates from
hunter-harvested deer were bioassayed in our rodent panel (transgenic mice expressing
cervid alleles G96, S96 and H95-PrPC, elk PrPC, bovine PrPC, and both hamsters and
non-transgenic laboratory mice). Strain characteristics were compared using computer
based scoring of brain pathology (e.g. PrPCWDbrain distribution), western blot and
protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA).
Results: Transmission of various isolates resulted in the selection of strain mixtures
in hosts expressing similar PrPC, particularly for polymorphic white-tailed deer and
for Norwegian reindeer. As of the second passage, transmission of P153 moose prions
from Norway has not resulted in emergence of strains with properties similar to any
North American CWD strains in our taxonomic collection (Wisc-1, CWD2, H95+and 116AG).
Conclusions: Our data indicates polymorphic white-tailed deer can favor infection
with more than one strain. Similar to transmission studies of Colorado CWD isolates
from cervids expressing a single PrPCprimary structure, the isolate from Norway reindeer
(V214) represents a strain mixture, suggesting intrinsic strain diversity in the Nordfjella
epizootic. The diversity of CWD strains with distinct transmission characteristics
represents a threat to wildlife, sympatric domestic animals and public health.
Funded by: Genome Canada and Genome Alberta (Alberta Prion Research Institute and
Alberta Agriculture & Forestry); NSERC
Grant number: #LSARP 10205; NSERC RGPIN-2017-05539
Acknowledgement: We would like to thank Margo Pybus (Alberta Environment and Parks)
Trent Bollinger (University of Saskatchewan) for providing us with tissue samples
from hunter-harvested deer and Sylvie Benestad for providing moose and reindeer samples.
Combination of seeded aggregation and sFIDA for diagnostics of neurodegenerative diseases
Alexandra Dybalaa, Marlene Pilsb,c, Lara Blömekeb,c, Oliver Bannacha,b,c, and Detlev
Riesnera
aInstitut für Physikalische Biologie, Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf,
Germany; bInstitute of Biological Information Processing (Structural Biochemistry:
IBI-7), Forschungszentrum Jülich, Jülich, Germany; cattyloid GmbH, Düsseldorf, Germany
Aims: The aim of the present study was to increase the sensitivity of the sFIDA assay
for quantification of beta-amyloid (Aβ) and alpha-synuclein (aSyn) aggregates by introducing
seeded aggregation.
Material and Methods: The technology of surface-based fluorescence intensity distribution
analysis (sFIDA) was originally developed to detect and count prion protein particles
prepared from scrapie-infected sheep brain and blood. More recently, sFIDA was applied
to analyze Aβ and aSyn aggregates from CSF samples of Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s
Disease patients, respectively. In sFIDA, particles are immuno-captured to a glass
surface, labeled with fluorescent antibody probes and imaged by fluorescence microscopy
at the single particle level.
Results: In the present work, additional monomers were added to aggregates of Aβ or
aSyn by seeded aggregation prior to microscopic analysis. The attached monomers were
labelled either intrinsically with fluorescent dyes or after seeded aggregation by
specific, fluorescently labelled antibodies. Seeded aggregation was carried out either
after binding the seeds to the surface, or in solution, i.e. before binding to capture
antibodies. Enhanced detection of Aβ peptides by seeded aggregation could not be achieved
reproducibly with sufficient improvement of sensitivity. This was due to the very
high tendency of self-aggregation of Aβ peptides, even if the length of the peptide
was varied.
In contrast, the limit of detection for aSyn particles could be improved by two to
three orders of magnitude. Seeded aggregation in solution was superior over aggregation
on the surface. Optimized conditions included adjustment of pH, temperature and monomer
concentration. Self-aggregation of aSyn did not interfere with the analysis.
Conclusions: Seeded aggregation in solution, binding to the capture antibodies on
the surface, labelling seeded aggregates with antibody probes, and counting the aggregates
in the fluorescence microscope was found as the optimal procedure for sensitive analysis
of aSyn aggregates.
Funded by: iBrain – Interdisciplinary Graduate School for Brain Research and Translational
Neuroscience, Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, and Forschungszentrum Jülich,
Germany
Understanding the key features of the spontaneous formation of bona fide recombinant
prions through a new method allowing their consistent generation within hours
Hasier Erañaa,b,c, Jorge M. Charcoa,b,c, Carlos M. Díaz-Domíngueza, Miguel A. Pérez-
Castroa, Enric Vidald, Cristina Sampedro-Torres-Quevedoa, Rafael López-Morenoa, Sierra
Espinard, Ezequiel González-Mirandaa, Sandra García-Martíneza, Aileen Santinia, Melisa
Lázaroa, Leire Fernández-Veigaa, Juan Tasis-Galarzaa, Nuria López-Lorenzoe, Mikel
Vallea, Glenn Tellingf, Mariví Geijog, Jesús R. Requenaeand Joaquín Castillaa,c,h
aCenter for Cooperative Research in Biosciences (CIC bioGUNE), Basque Research and
Technology Alliance (BRTA), Derio, Spain; bATLAS Molecular Pharma S. L., Derio, Spain;
cCentro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades infecciosas (CIBERINFEC),
Carlos III National Health Institute, Madrid, Spain; dCentre de Recerca en Sanitat
Animal (CReSA) – Institut de Recerca i Tecnologia Agroalimentàries (IRTA), Barcelona,
Catalonia; eCIMUS Biomedical Research Institute & Department of Medicine, University
of Santiago de Compostela-IDIS, Santiago de Compostela, Spain; fPrion Research Center
(PRC), Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA; gAnimal Health Department,
NEIKER-Basque Institute for Agricultural Research and Development. Basque Research
and Technology Alliance (BRTA), Derio, Spain; hIKERBASQUE, Basque Foundation for Science,
Bilbao, Spain
Aims: Different methodologies developed to achieve the spontaneous generation of infectious
prions in vitro have given rise to a large spectrum of misfolded proteins and amyloid
aggregates with distinct properties. From those unable to propagate and cause disease
in vivo or those requiring overexpressing animal models and multiple serial inoculations,
to infectious prions with high titers, able to cause disease in wild-type animals.
Herein, we break down a novel and easily scalable methodology that consistently leads
to the spontaneous misfolding of recombinant PrP into infectious, high titer, bona
fide prion preparations, allowing the understanding of the minimal requirements for
such an event.
Material and Methods: Using recombinant bank vole PrP and Protein Misfolding Shaking
Amplification (PMSA) technique, derived from the well-known PMCA, we analyzed all
potentially relevant parameters leading to consistent spontaneous prion misfolding.
Among others, are bead material and size, shaking parameters, protein concentration,
presence of cofactors, and process temperature.
Results: Apart from developing a methodology to obtain infectious synthetic prions
with high titers within minutes, we achieved the formation of a variety of strains
with specific and differential features. Additionally, the critical parameters for
consistent spontaneous bona fide prion formation were determined, providing relevant
information on the mechanism promoting this event, central in prion pathogenesis.
Conclusions: Through fine-tuning of PMSA operational conditions, we can consistently
produce distinct strains of highly infectious recombinant prions in a spontaneous
manner, offering an invaluable tool to study every aspect contributing to spontaneous
prion formation. Although protein concentration, shaking parameters, and process temperature
are required to be within a specific range, the most critical parameter for consistent
spontaneous formation of bona fide recombinant prions is the glass surface, provided
in this system by determined amounts of glass beads.
Funded by: Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation
Grant number: This study was funded by MINECO research project references RTI2018-098515-B-I00
and PID2021-122201OB-C21, and by RedPRION (Interreg POCTEFA EFA148/16).
Prion Protein Gene Diversity in German Cervids
Sonja Ernsta, Martin H. Groschupa, Balal Sadeghia, Markus Kellera, Dolores Gavier-Widén,
Jörn Gethmanna, Fiona Houstonc, and Christine Fasta
aFriedrich-Loeffler-Institut, Institute of Novel and Emerging Diseases, Isle of Riems,
Germany; bNational Veterinary Institute (SVA), Uppsala, Sweden; cDivision of Infection
and Immunity, The Roslin Institute and The Royal Dick School of Veterinary Studies,
University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
Aims: Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD), a Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy (TSE)
affecting multiple Cervid species, is caused by a cellular prion protein (PrPC) misfolding
into its pathological isoform (PrPCWD). While the disease has been endemic since the
1960s in North America and still continues to spread, only six years ago the first
European case was described in Norway. However, since then additional cases, not only
in its contagious but also in a novel ‘atypical’ form in moose (Alces alces) and red
deer (Cervus elaphus), have been discovered in Scandinavia, now endangering all European
Cervids. Susceptibility to CWD strongly depends on the structure of the prion protein
gene (PRNP), thus this study aims to investigate the diversity of the PRNP of the
German Cervid population.
Methods: We reached out to hunters, forest offices and deer keepers to sample red
deer, roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) and sika deer (Cervus nippon) throughout Germany
during the past hunting season (2021/2022). After dividing Germany into 12 regions,
from each region and species, a sample of 149 animals will be genotyped. This sample
size is suitable to detect polymorphisms with an occurrence of more than 2% in the
population. When less than 149 samples are collected, all animals will be genotyped.
Sanger Sequencing the Open Reading Frame (ORF) on exon three of the PRNP provides
detailed information on possible amino acid exchanges, single nucleotide polymorphisms
and silent mutations. This will allow us to define different genotypes under the aspect
of recently published data from similar studies in North America and Europe.
Results: Samples from a total of 834 red deer, 2170 roe deer and 47 sika deer throughout
Germany were sent back to FLI. The different numbers of samples per species reflect
the composition of the natural population, as there live far more roe than red deer
in Germany. Since there are only five regions where they are native, Sika deer are
rare in Germany. The distribution of the samples covers most parts of Germany, with
only smaller regions that have not been sampled yet. Preliminary results of roe and
red deer show genotype variation within the red deer population, whereas the examined
roe deer are homologous so far.
Conclusion: This study aims to get new detailed insights into the vulnerability of
German Cervid population to CWD, to improve the European CWD surveillance and control
measures and to estimate the threat of a CWD introduction into Germany.
Seed Amplification Assay accurately detects misfolding α-Synuclein in CSF samples
from PD and iRBD patients of the DeNoPa cohort
Carly Farrisa, Luis Conchaa, Sandrina Weberb, Mohammed Daknab, Elisabeth Langb, Yihua
Maa, Maritta Starkeb, Claudio Sotoa,c, and Brit Mollenhauerb
aR&D Unit, Amprion, San Diego, US; bParacelsus-Elena-Klinik, Kassel, Germany; cUniversity
of Texas McGovern Medical School, Houston, TX, USA
Aims: Diagnostic biomarkers are most valuable in the earliest stage of Parkinson’s
disease (PD). Because of the high rate of misdiagnosis, early clinical diagnosis cannot
be used as gold standard to evaluate accuracy of a diagnostic test. In addition, access
to pathologically confirmed samples can be challenging. Our goal was to determine
sensitivity and specificity of the αSyn Seed Amplification Assay (αS-SAA) for manifest
and prodromal PD using the longitudinal DeNoPa cohort. Thus, we compared the αS-SAA
results of baseline samples (collected weeks after diagnosis) versus their 8y clinical
diagnosis.
Material and Methods: We blindly analyzed samples from 113 PD, 29 isolated REM sleep
behavior disorder (iRBD), and 64 healthy control (HC) patients. Patients were categorized
based on baseline (BL) assessment and underwent biannual clinical follow-ups at a
single center. CSF samples were analyzed in triplicate, using recombinant αSyn substrate.
αS-SAA conditions used in this study have been described elsewhere.
Results: Of the 113 BL-PD cases, 99 (87.6%) had a final synucleinopathy diagnosis,
including 95 PD (84.1%), 2 DLB (1.8%), and 2 MSA (1.8%). The other 14 (12.4%) BL-PD
patients had a non-synucleinopathy final diagnosis, including 3 (2.7%) vascular PD
(vPD), 5 (4.4%) essential tremor (ET) and/or dystonia (DT), 2 (1.8%) restless leg
syndrome (RLS), and 4 (3.5%) progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP).
The assay was highly sensitive, as 94 (95%) of the 99 patients with final synucleinopathy
diagnosis were αS-SAA-positive, including 91 (92%) PD, 1 (1%) DLB, and 2 (2%) MSA.
One of the MSA samples presented the low fluorescence signature previously reported
for MSA αSyn seeds. Of the 14 cases without a synucleinopathy, 12 were found αS-SAA-negative.
Of the 64 HC subjects, 62 (96.9%) were αS-SAA-negative. Considering BL samples only,
the assay performed with a sensitivity of 94.6% (95%CI 86.7–98.5%) and a specificity
of 98% (95%CI 89.4–100%).
Of the 56 iRBD CSF samples, 53 (94.6%) were αS-SAA-positive and 27 (93.1%) of the
29 patients had an αS-SAA(+) sample at BL or follow-up visit. This level of detection
at BL is 64.8% higher than previously reported for a sub-cohort of these samples.
Conclusions: αS-SAA enables the sensitive and specific detection of misfolded αSyn
in early PD and even early iRBD. Compared to baseline clinical assessment, αS-SAA
was 10% more specific. Remarkably, CSF from iRBD was αS-SAA-positive up to 8 years
before phenoconversion and 2 cases were found positive only months after the first
iRBD symptoms.
Funded by: Michael J Fox Foundation
Grant number: MJFF-021233
Semi-quantitative αS-SAA detects no difference in αSyn seeds in CSF from prodromal
to phenoconversion in longitudinal samples
Carly Farrisa, Yihua Maa, Claudio Sotoc, Brit Mollenhauerb, and Luis Conchaa
aR&D Unit, Amprion, San Diego, US; bParacelsus-Elena-Klinik, Kassel, Germany; cUniversity
of Texas McGovern Medical School, Houston, TX, USA
Aims: To determine if CSF levels of αSyn seeds increase in subjects that progress
from prodromal to Parkinson’s disease (PD) or dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB).
Material and Methods: We developed a semi-quantitative αSyn seed amplification assay
(SemiQ αS-SAA) that estimates the seeding activity (SD50) of misfolded αSyn in CSF.
SD50 was estimated by means of serial dilutions and the Spearman-Kärber model. The
method was evaluated with immunoprecipitated PD-CSF samples and also by spiking synthetic
seeds in healthy control CSF. CSF samples from patients with isolated REM sleep behavior
disorder (iRBD) were longitudinally collected and evaluated by SemiQ αS-SAA. Some
of these subjects phenoconverted to full blown disease and CSF samples were semi-quantified
at baseline iRBD evaluation and after phenoconversion. We also developed a synthetic
CSF matrix that can replace healthy control (HC) CSF as diluent and enables semi-quantitation
of large quantities of samples.
Results: The SemiQ αS-SAA estimated seeding activities (SD50) that were proportional
to the number of immunoprecipitations (IPs) performed on PD-CSF. Compared to the control
samples (no-IP and no-antibody), 2 serial IPs reduced the seeding activity by ~35%,
while 3 serial IPs showed a ~ 60% reduction. Thus, the assay correctly estimated lower
levels of PD αSyn seeds in human CSF. When spiking 2 levels of synthetic αSyn seeds
(10-fold difference) in HC CSF, the SemiQ αS-SAA estimated the difference to be ~13-fold.
This result suggests that the estimated seeding activity does correlate with the mass
of seeds in a sample.
We did not find significant differences in SD50 during progression from iRBD to full
blown PD in a case with longitudinal samples collected over 60 months. Comparable
results were found in 4 more cases that showed no difference in SD50 for samples collected
at BL and final visit. Two of these cases included a final sample collected after
phenoconversion to PD and DLB, while the other 2 remained iRBD. Lastly, SD50 estimations
using synthetic CSF increased the separation window, probably because it lacks CSF
inhibitors that reduce amplification of low levels of seeds.
Conclusions: αS-SAAs are perceived as non-quantitative because no correlation between
levels of αSyn seeds and disease progression has been shown to date. Our results indicate
that αSyn behaves like amyloid-β and prions, where misfolding and accumulation occurs
before the onset of first symptoms and there is no correlation with disease severity.
Moreover, our data suggest that levels of αSyn seeds in CSF reach a plateau during
the prodromal stage of the disease.
Funded by: Michael J Fox Foundation
Grant number: MJFF-021233
First detection of classical scrapie confirmed by immunoblot in sheep in Eastern Libya.
Christine Fast*a, Fawzia F. Abdalla*b, Sonja Ernsta, Martin H. Groschupa, and Monier
Sharifb* Both authors are considered as first authors
aFriedrich-Loeffler Institut, Isle of Riems, Germany; bDepartment of Pathology and
Clinical Pathology, Faculty of veterinary medicine, Omar Al-Mukhtar University, Al-Bayda,
Libya
Aims: Scrapie was first reported by the Libyan national centre for animal health in
2014, but the distribution of this disease in Libya is still unknown and neglected.
Here we report several classical scrapie cases from different herds in Eastern Libya
submitted between 2018 and 2022.
Methods: In total 10 sheep from 10 herds were submitted to the Veterinary Teaching
Hospital at Omar Al-Mukhtar University, Al-Bayda, Libya for post-mortem examination.
Further protein biochemical examination includes a PTA-Immunoblot to detect the pathological
prion protein (PrPSc), which was done by FLI – Isle of Riems, Germany.
Results: The sheep were between 2 and 5 years of age. The clinical signs, which progressed
slowly over one to three months included weight loss and behavioural abnormalities
as well as neurological disorders. Among others tremors, bruxism, repeated licking
of the lips, typical down and upward movements of the head, hesitant and uncertain
gait, ataxia of the hind limbs, occasional falls, blindness, and bunny hopping were
described by the owners. Some animals were found dead without any previous clinical
signs. The histomorphological examination revealed, most prominent in the brain stem,
characteristic signs of a spongiform encephalopathy, with neuronal vacuolation (single
or multiple vacuoles) and spongiform change in the gray matter neuropil as well as
gliosis. Additionally, mild perivascular infiltration and astrocytosis were observed
in vacuolated areas. In one animal no histomorphological alterations was seen. By
PTA-immunoblot the presence of classical scrapie has been confirmed.
Conclusions: Classical scrapie exists in Libya and is widely distributed. Moreover,
almost all cases were easily diagnosed by a combination of clinical signs and histopathological
examination, indicating a long lasting disease history in Eastern Libya. Therefore,
the results of the study presented here could not only serve to raise awareness of
the disease among sheep and goat farmers, but also should lead to the implementation
of control measures in the future.
SFPQ as a plasma biomarker to distinguish Creutzfeldt – Jakob disease and rapidly
progressive Alzheimer’s disease
Leticia C. Fernandez#, Neelam Younas#, Stefan Goebel, Kathrin Dittmar, Peter Hermann,
and Inga Zerr
# equal contribution Prion Research Group, National Reference Center for Surveillance
of TSE, Department of Neurology, University Medical Center Göttingen, Germany
Aims: Measuring the SFPQ (splicing factor proline and glutamine rich) levels in body
fluids, specifically blood, as a potential blood-based biomarker for rapid progressive
dementias.
Material and Methods: A cohort of 40 patients (10 subjects per group) was evaluated.
The patients were diagnosed with either Alzheimer´s disease (AD), rapidly progressive
Alzheimer´s disease (rpAD) or Sporadic Creutzfeldt – Jakob disease (sCJD), and healthy
patients as control (HC). Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was performed
to quantify SFPQ levels in plasma.
Results: SFPQ levels were observed and measured in plasma samples of neurodegenerative
diseases. Here, we found that the levels of SFPQ protein in the plasma were significantly
different between rapidly progressive dementias, specifically CJD and rpAD.
Conclusions: Since SFPQ levels in plasma differs from AD and rpAD from HC and CJD
we propose that SFPQ levels in Plasma can be used as a diagnostic tool to differentiate
CJD from rpAD. Additionally levels of SFPQ in plasma could be a biomarker for differential
diagnosis of rapidly progressive dementias.
The cellular prion protein as a potential receptor in neurodegenerative diseases
Anna-Lisa Fischer, and Matthias Schmitz
Inga Zerr Neurology, Universitätsmedizin Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany
Aims: Neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer´s disease (AD) or Parkinson´s disease
(PD) are associated with the accumulation of aggregated proteins. These diseases demonstrated
phenotypic diversity and propagation of pathology that is reminiscent of prion diseases.
It is suggested that amyloid-β, alpha synuclein, and tau proteins share common structural,
biological, and biochemical features, as well as similar mechanisms of aggregation
and self-propagation in a prion-like manner. Propagation of protein misfolding in
these diseases may therefore occur via mechanisms similar to those underlying prion
pathogenesis. In this work, we focused on cellular prion protein (PrPC) as a potential
receptor protein for misfolded proteins, supporting internalization and interaction.
Material and Methods: To examine a possible direct interaction we subjected recombinant
human PrPC as well as recombinant misfolded proteins (aSyn, tau) to surface plasmon
resonance spectroscopy (SPR). SH-SY5Y (SHWT) and stable PRNP transfected SH-SY5Y PrP
(SHPrP) cells were treated with different recombinant misfolded proteins under same
conditions.
Results: We observed aneffect of PrPC on the internalization of misfolded proteins
and the interaction between PrPC and misfolded proteins. SPR results presented misfolded
proteins as direct interaction partners of PrPC. SHPrP cells showed a significantly
higher amount of internalized misfolded proteins compared to SHWT cells.
Conclusions: In conclusion, our experiments indicate PrPC as a receptor for misfolded
proteins, promoting the internalization and interaction. These findings contribute
to a better understanding of the pathological mechanism in neurodegenerative diseases,
which is important for future diagnostics or therapies.
Optimizing prion vaccination in a transgenic mouse model of Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker
Madeleine Fleminga,b, Andrew Fanga,b, Brian Tancownya, b, Glenn C. Tellingc, Holger
Willea,b,d
aDepartment of Biochemistry; bCentre for Prions and Protein Folding Diseases; cPrion
Research Center, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA; dNeuroscience
and Mental Health Institute, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Aims: Gerstmann–Sträussler–Scheinker disease (GSS) is a rare, genetic prion disease
in humans that is characterized by dementia and ataxia and is caused by point mutations
such as the proline to leucine mutation at codon 102 (P102L). The TgP101L transgenic
mouse line overexpresses mutant PrP carrying the murine equivalent of the P102L mutation
and develops GSS disease symptoms at 177 days of age (±17 days). Previously we developed
a model-based prion vaccine by using the proposed β-solenoid structure of PrPSc and
modified the innocuous fungal prion HET-s to mimic a surface epitope of PrPSc. The
goal of this study was to optimize the immunization protocol in vaccine efficacy trials
using TgP101L transgenic mice.
Material and Methods: In this study, we compared alum, saponin-based QS21, and Freund’s
adjuvant in prion vaccination trials using TgP101L transgenic mice and a prime-boost
immunization schedule (primary dose followed by three boosts at two-week intervals).
We collected pre- and post-immune sera and measured antibody titres following each
immunization using an indirect ELISA. We also observed symptom onset and disease progression
relative to non-immunized controls. Lastly, we conducted an experiment where the animals
received additional prion vaccine boosters every 100 days following the initial prime-boost
schedule.
Results and Conclusions: The observed antibody titres illustrate that alum adjuvant
leads to a higher antibody production than both Freund’s and QS21 adjuvants. Mice
immunized with the prion vaccine and either alum, QS21, or Freund’s adjuvant show
a significant delay in symptom onset at 495 days of age (±42 days), 479 days of age
(±54 days), or 448 days of age (±39 days), respectively. Relative to the disease onset
for unimmunized TgP101L mice, this represents an increase in health-span of ~280%,
~270%, and ~250%, respectively, emphasizing the protective effect of the model-based
prion vaccine. Additional vaccine boosts every 100 days helped to maintain the antibody
titre, however there was an earlier onset of prion disease symptoms at 421 days of
age (±105 days), compared to mice on the regular prime-boost schedule. This observation
suggests T-cell exhaustion, due to persistent antigen stimulation and prolonged exposure
to inflammatory cues, as a potential cause for the reduced vaccine efficacy. Moreover,
this finding points towards a prominent role of cellular immune response elements
in the observed protection against neurodegeneration. Optimizing the administration
of the model-based prion vaccine is essential for its potential use in the prevention
of prion diseases.
Funded by: The CJD Foundation, Alberta Innovates/Alberta Prion Research Institute
Grant number: 201900006
Fatal Familial Insomnia in a cerebral organoid model
Simote T. Foliakia, Anna Smitha, Benjamin Schwarzb, Eric Bohrnsenb, Catharine M. Bosiob,
Katie Williamsa, Hailey Lachenauerc, Bradley R. Grovemana, and Cathryn L. Haigha
aLaboratory of Persistent Viral Diseases; bLaboratory of Bacteriology; cResearch Technologies
Branch, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Division of Intramural
Research, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institutes of Health, Hamilton, MT,
USA
Aims: Fatal familial insomnia (FFI) is a rare neurodegenerative disease caused by
a dominantly inherited single amino acid substitution (D178N) within the prion protein
(PrP). No in vitro human brain tissue model for this disease has previously been available.
As a result, the cellular and molecular pathogenesis of FFI in the human brain and
how this mutation exerts its damaging effect on brain cells are still unknown. This
study aims to investigate this damaging effect in human brain tissue using a human
cerebral organoid model.
Material and Methods: CRISPR-Cas9 engineering was used to introduce the D178N mutation
into the PRNP gene in human induced pluripotent stem cells. We made FFI cerebral organoids
using these cells and compared them with their isotype control organoids to investigate
disease-associated cellular changes. We assessed the mutant organoids for prion disease
pathology including prion seeding activity by RT-QuIC, Proteinase-K resistant prion
deposition, altered PrP post-translational processing, and astrogliosis. The efficacy
of neuronal network communication and the associated changes in neurotransmitters
were measured by Multi-electrode arrays and Liquid Chromatography Mass-Spectrometry
(LCMS). Oxidative stress levels and mitochondrial activity were assessed by Flow cytometry,
Immuno-blotting, and Seahorse assay. Autophagy and mitophagy were assessed by Flow
cytometry and Transmission electron microscopy. Changes in cellular metabolites and
lipid compositions were determined by LCMS.
Results: We found that, in the absence of other hallmarks of FFI, the D178N organoids
exhibited astrogliosis with cellular oxidative stress. Abnormal post-translational
processing of PrP was evident but no tissue deposition or propagation of mis-folded
PrP isoforms were observed. In addition, the neuronal electrophysiological function
was compromised and neurotransmitter levels altered. Underlying these dysfunctions
were changes in cellular energy homeostasis, with substantially increased glycolytic
and Krebs cycle intermediates, and greater mitochondrial activity. This increased
energy demand in D178N organoids was associated with increased mitophagy and depletion
of lipid droplets, resulting in shifts in cellular lipid composition. Using a double
mutation (178 NN) we could confirm that most changes were caused by the presence of
the mutation rather than interaction with PrP molecules lacking the mutation
Conclusions: Our data strongly suggests that shifting biosynthetic intermediates and
oxidative stress, caused by an imbalance of energy supply and demand, results in astrogliosis
with compromised neuronal activity in FFI organoids. They further support that many
of the disease-associated changes are due to a corruption of PrP function because
of the mutation and do not require propagation of PrP mis-folding.
Funded by: This work was supported by the Division of Intramural Research, National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease.
Modulation of PrPCexpression affects cancer progression in vivo
Natalia Fortunato de Mirandaa, Shana Portellia, Frederic Hollandeb, Theo Mantamadiotisa,
and Victoria A Lawsona
aDepartment of Microbiology and Immunology and Peter Doherty Institute for Infection
and Immunity, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia; bDepartment of Clinical
Pathology and The University of Melbourne Centre for Cancer Research, The University
of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia
Aims: An increase in tumor-specific PrPCexpression is associated with poor patient
outcome. However, the role of PrPCas either a cause or consequence of malignant transformation
and the consequences of therapeutic PrPCmodulation in the context of neurodegeneration
on tumor initiation and progression are yet to be established. In this study we investigated
the effect of PrPCexpression on tumor initiation and progression in two mouse models
of cancer.
Material and Methods: Tumors were induced in Prnp knock-out (PrnpKO) and congenic
Prnp wildtype (PrnpWT) mice in a colitis model of colorectal cancer using the carcinogen
azoxymethane and inflammatory reagent, dextran sulfate sodium salt. Tumors were induced
in PrnpKO
mice and their PrnpWT
littermates in a glioblastoma model by constitutive activation of the PI3K pathway
via expression of a Pik3caH1047R
oncogenic mutant and deletion of phosphatase and tensin homolog (PtenΔ
) tumour suppressor gene.
Results: In the colitis and glioblastoma models of cancer both PrnpKO
and PrnpWT
mice developed tumors. However, in both cancer models, tumors in PrnpKO
mice had a greater tumor burden than PrnpWT
mice. These in vivo observations suggest that PrPCexpression is not required for the
development of tumors, but rather appears to modulate tumor progression and malignancy.
Conclusions: These observations suggest that in cancer cells, the modulation of PrPCexpression
may regulate tumor progression.
Funded by: SP is supported by a Carol Willessee PhD scholarship and we are grateful
for the support from the CJD Support Group Network in Australia.
The chronic wasting disease agent from white-tailed deer fails to adapt to sheep upon
second passage
Alexis J. Frese, Eric D. Cassmann, M. Heather West Greenlee, and Justin J. Greenlee
Department of Agriculture, Virus and Prion Research Unit, National Animal Disease
Center, Agricultural Research Service, United States Ames, IA, USA
Aims: Interspecies transmission of prion disease is highly variable and dependent
upon multiple factors. The chronic wasting disease (CWD agent) of mule deer is transmissible
to sheep after intracranial inoculation, with similar clinical signs and incubation
periods to scrapie. This study used sheep and transgenic mice to investigate the susceptibility
of sheep to the CWD agent from white-tailed deer and to characterize subsequent passages
of the resulting disease agent.
Material and Methods: Suffolk sheep (n = 15) with PRNP genotypes VRQ/ARQ, ARQ/ARQ,
or ARQ/ARR were inoculated intracranially with CWD prions from white-tailed deer.
Western blots and ELISA assays were performed on brain and lymphoid tissues to analyze
PrPScaccumulation. Brain material from one positive sheep with the ARQ/ARQ genotype
(#424) was used to inoculate mice expressing the mouse (C57BL/6; 20 ul of 10% homogenate)
or sheep VRQ (Tg338; 20 ul of 1% homogenate) PRNP.
Results: PrPScwas detected in 4/15 sheep in the brainstem at the level of the obex,
with an average incubation period of 41 months. Sheep #424 (the animal whose brain
was passaged to mice) also had PrPScin the cerebrum, but PrPScwas not detectable in
any lymphoid tissues.
Inoculum from the CWD-positive sheep did not cause disease or result in detectable
PrPScin ovinized mice (Tg338) after incubation of 800 days. However, upon passage
to C57BL/6, 4/20 mice were positive with an average incubation period of 684 days.
Upon second passage to C57BL/6 mice, the attack rate increased to 14/15 with a mean
incubation period of 380 dpi.
Conclusions: The CWD agent from white-tailed deer transmits to sheep via intracranial
inoculation demonstrating that there is not an absolute species barrier between sheep
and white-tailed deer. In affected sheep, distribution of PrPScwas limited to the
central nervous system, suggesting that environmental shedding of CWD prions from
sheep would be negligible. CWD isolates from cervids usually do not transmit to wild-type
mice, but after passage through sheep, this isolate readily passed to C57BL/6 mice.
It was unexpected that the CWD agent from sheep did not further adapt in Tg338 mice.
This data suggests that the CWD agent from white-tailed deer is unlikely to present
a major risk to sheep, but further assessments should be conducted in mice expressing
the ARQ ovine prion protein.
Funded by: The United States Department of Agriculture
Grant number: N/A
Acknowledgement: The authors wish to thank Leisa Mandell and Kevin Hassall for technical
assistance.
Prion disease in TgMHu2ME199K mice skeletal muscle
Kati Frida, Orli Binyamina,b, Areen Usmana,b, and Ruth Gabizona
a
Department of Neurology, The Agnes Ginges Center for Human Neurogenetics, Hadassah
University Hospital, Jerusalem, Israel;
b
Medical School, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel
Aims: Myositis and PrP accumulation were observed in muscles of diverse prion affected
human and animal models. While in transmissible prion disease muscles are most likely
infected by the corresponding brain prions, in genetic CJD muscle pathology may also
result from a spontaneous mechanism related to the individual properties of each mutant
PrP protein. In this work, we looked for morphological and pathological abnormalities
in the muscles of TgMHu2ME199K mice, a model of genetic CJD linked to the E200K PrP
mutation. Next, we investigated whether mutant PrP in these mice muscles accumulates
as a PK resistant form in an age and disease dependent way, as is the case for PrP
in the brains of TgMHu2ME199K mice. Based on the results from this project, we aim
to consider whether a muscle biopsy from humans can contribute to early disease diagnosis
and treatment follow-up in gCJD.
Material and Methods: Muscle tissue from young (asymptomatic) and adult (sick) TgMHu2ME199K
mice were tested by immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry for a line of parameters.
In some experiments, we also examined muscles from adult TgMHu2ME199K mice treated
with Granagard, a nano-formulation of PSO which significantly delays disease progression
in these mice. First, we tested the morphology and pathology of muscle tissue in TgMHu2ME199K
mice as compared to wt mice. Next, we tested the aggregation and PK resistance of
muscle PrP as compared to brain PrP at both ages. Also, we compared by immunofluorescence
for MBP and NeuN the location of aggregated PrP. We also examined the expression of
PAX7, a marker of muscle stem cells, in muscle from wt as well as treated and untreated
TgMHu2ME199K mice.
Results: Histological results revealed morphological abnormalities in the muscles
of sick TgMHu2ME199K mice, including central nucleus and fat cell infiltrations. Contrarily
to PrP in brains of adult TgMHu2ME199K mice, in skeletal muscles PrP was aggregated
but not PK resistant. Immunofluorescence with NeuN suggest reduced enervation in adult
mice muscles. Most important, PAX7 immunofluorescence demonstrated reduced generation
of stem cells in adult mice muscles, which was mostly corrected by administration
of Granagard.
Conclusions: We conclude that the pathological findings in muscles of adult TgMHu2ME199K
mice may result from both reduced enervation, aberrant accumulation of mutant PrP
and reduced generation of stem cells. Interestingly, Granagard restored generation
of endogenous stem cells in these mice. It remains to be established whether results
from muscle biopsies obtained from gCJD patients can provide similar results.
Funded by: Granalix biotechnologies
Evaluation of the seeding activity of alpha-synuclein in brain and cerebrospinal fluid
tissue samples
Soňa Galuškováa, Tibor Moškoa, Radoslav Matějb,c, Petr Dušekd, and Karel Holadaa
aInstitute of Immunology and Microbiology of the 1stFaculty of Medicine, Charles University
and General University Hospital, Prague, Czech Republic; bDepartment of Pathology
of the 3rdFaculty of Medicine, Charles University and University Hospital Královské
Vinohrady, Prague, Czech Republic; cNational Reference Laboratory for Human Prion
Diseases, Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine of the 3rdFaculty of Medicine,
Charles University and University Thomayer Hospital, Prague, Czech Republic; dDepartment
of Neurology and Center of Clinical Neuroscience of the 1stFaculty of Medicine, Charles
University and General University Hospital, Prague, Czech Republic
Aims: Early and specific diagnosis of synucleinopathies is essential for the prognosis
and the life quality of the patient. However, diagnosis remains difficult with up
to 25% cases being misdiagnosed. Real-Time Quaking-Induced Conversion (RT-QuIC) assay
represents a new promising diagnostic method of synucleinopathies.
We evaluated the ability of RT-QuIC to detect the presence of α-synuclein seeding
activity in post-mortem brain homogenate (BH) and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples.
Material and Methods: Total of 15 BH and 14 CSF samples were obtained post-mortem
from patients with autopsy confirmed Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB, n = 6), Alzheimer
disease with Amygdala Lewy Bodies (AD/ALB, n = 3) and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease with
α-synuclein deposits (CJD/αSyn = 6). Control group (n = 14 for BH and n = 17 for CSF)
consisted of other neurodegenerative diseases.
End point seeding activity of samples was analyzed using RT-QuIC developed by Groveman
et al., 2018. Reaction mix (98 or 85 µl) consisted of 40 mM phosphate (pH = 8.0),
170 mM NaCl, 10 µM Thioflavin T (ThT) and 0.1 mg/ml human recombinant (WT) α-synuclein,
was seeded with 2 µl of serially diluted BH or 15 µl of CSF sample. The mixture was
supplemented with six 800-micron silica beads. Reaction was incubated 60 hours at
42°C with incubation (1 min) and shaking (400 rpm, 1 min) cycles.
Results: Seeding activity of aggregated α-synuclein was detected in 13 out of 15 BH
samples. Two CJD/αSyn samples were classified as negative. Samples gave the highest
fluorescence signal at 10−2– 10−3dilutions. At 10–5all samples, except one, gave negative
results. Samples with DLB gave the highest signal with the mean max fluorescence value
(MMFV) 12.9 × 104. The group of samples with CJD/αSyn gave the lowest signal, with
the MMFV 9 × 104.
Analyzing CSF samples, the seeding activity was detected in all samples except one
with AD/ALB diagnosis. 100x diluted CSF samples gave generally better results, with
the highest MMFV 23 × 104for DLB samples. Similarly, as for the BH, samples with CJD/αSyn
gave the lowest signal with the MMFV 15 × 104.
Conclusions: Our pilot retrospective study confirmed the ability of RT-QuIC to detect
seeding activity of α-synuclein in the patient samples. Interestingly, CSF samples
gave overall better results than BH. Samples with DLB diagnosis gave the best RT-QuIC
performance, either BH or CSF. The lowest ThT signal in CJD/αSyn samples may corresponds
to younger age of the patients and suggests that α-synuclein deposits might be less
developed than in other groups of patients.
Funded by: The Ministry of Health Czech Republic and Czech Health Research Council/
Charles University Grant Agency/ General University Hospital Grant Agency
Grant number: NU21-04-0053/ 36,252/ GIP-20-L-13-212
Acknowledgement: We would like to thank Dr. Byron Caughey for providing bacterial
plasmids with recombinant α-synuclein.
The VM1 subtype of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease: phenotypic and molecular characterization
of a novel subtype of human prion disease
Ellen Gelpi*a,b, Simone Baiardi*c,d, Carlos Nose, Sofia Dellavallec, Iban Aldecoab,f,
Raquel Ruizg, Lourdes Ispiertoh, Domingo Escuderoh, Virgina Casadoi, Elena Barrancoj,
Anuncia Boltesk, Laura Molina-Porcelb, Nuria Bargallól, Marcello Rossic, Angela Mammanac,
Anna Ladoganam, Elisabeth Stoegmannn, Ingrid Simonitsch-Kluppo, Gregor Kasprianp,
Sigrid Klotza, Romana Höftbergera, Herbert Budkaa, Gabor G. Kovacsq,r,s, Isidre Ferrert,
Sabina Capellaric,u, Raquel Sanchez-Valleb,v, and Piero Parchic,d *contributed equally
aDivision of Neuropathology and Neurochemistry, Department of Neurology, Medical University
of Vienna and Austrian Reference Center for Human Prion Diseases (ÖRPE); bNeurological
Tissue Bank of the Biobank-Hospital Clinic-IDIBAPS, Barcelona, Spain; cIRCCS, Istituto
delle Scienze Neurologiche di Bologna, Bologna, Italy; dDepartment of Experimental,
Diagnostic and Specialty Medicine (DIMES), University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy;
eGeneral Subdirectorate of Surveillance and Response to Emergencies in Public Health,
Department of Public Health in Catalonia, Barcelona, Spain; fDepartment of Pathology,
Center for Biomedical Diagnosis, Hospital Clinic de Barcelona, University of Barcelona,
Barcelona, Spain; gDepartment of Immunology, Center for Biomedical Diagnosis, Hospital
Clinic, Barcelona, Spain; hCognitive and Movement Disorders Unit, Hospital Germans
Trias i Pujol de Badalona, Barcelona, Spain; iNeurology Department, Hospital de Mataró,
Barcelona, Spain; jDepartment of Geriatrics, Hospital General de Granollers, Barcelona,
Spain; kDepartment of Neurology, Hospital General de Granollers, Barcelona, Spain;
lRadiology Department, Image Diagnosis Center, Hospital Clínic, Barcelona, Spain and
Magnetic Resonance Image core facility of IDIBAPS, Barcelona, Spain; mDepartment of
Neuroscience, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Rome, Italy; nDepartment of Neurology,
Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; oDepartment of Pathology, Medical University
of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; pDepartment of Biomedical Imaging and Image-Guided Therapy,
Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; qTanz Centre for Research in Neurodegenerative
Disease, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; rDepartment of Laboratory
Medicine and Pathobiology and Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto,
Ontario, Canada; sLaboratory Medicine Program & Krembil Brain Institute, University
Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; tDepartment of Pathology and Experimental
Therapeutics, University of Barcelona; Bellvitge University Hospital-IDIBELL; CIBERNED;
Barcelona; Spain; uDepartment of Biomedical and Neuromotor Sciences (DIBINEM), University
of Bologna, Bologna, Italy; vNeurology Department, Alzheimer disease and other cognitive
disorders unit, Hospital Clinic de Barcelona, Spain
Aims: To describe a novel sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) subtype.
Material and Methods: Comprehensive clinical, histopathological, immunohistochemical
and molecular characterisation of human post-mortem brain tissue. Case identification
from the Spanish and Italian CJD surveillance Centres.
Results: Six sCJD cases with a new phenotype were identified (4 in Catalonia and 2
in Italy). Patients carried the methionine (M)-valine (V) genotype at PRNP codon 129
combined with PrPSc type 1. The clinical and neuropathological profile was reminiscent
of the VV1 sCJD subtype rather than the typical MM1/MV1. Patients had relatively long
disease duration (mean of 20.5 vs. 3.5 months of MM1/MV1 patients) and typical MRI
findings with cortical hyperintensities, but no typical EEG features for CJD. Histological
findings included prominent spongiform change with larger vacuoles than those observed
in sCJD MM1/MV1 (as in VV1), and a lesion profile with prominent cortical and striatal
involvement. The PrPSc deposition pattern was characterized by faint synaptic deposits
that contrasted with the prominent spongiform change (as happens in VV1) combined
with coarse, patch-like deposits in the cerebellar molecular layer, which is unusual
for VV1. Western blot analysis revealed a PrPSc type 1 profile with physicochemical
properties similar to those of the type 1 protein linked to the VV1 sCJD subtype.
Conclusions: We have identified a novel subtype of sCJD affecting mainly elderly patients
with a unique clinicopathological phenotype likely representing the V1 sCJD strain
propagation in the 129 MV host genotype.
Funded by: The Austrian Reference Center for Human Prion diseases (OERPE) is funded
by the Austrian Federal Ministry of Social Affairs, Health, Care and Consumer Protection.
This study was supported by a grant to E.G. from the ‘Medizinisch-Wissenschaftlichen
Fonds des Burgermeisters der Stadt Wien’, and from the Italian Ministry of Health
(Ricerca corrente) S.K. holds a grant from the ‘Hochschuljubiläumsfondsder Stadt Wien’.
Grant number: Medizinisch-Wissenschaftlichen Fonds des Burgermeisters der Stadt Wien
(project no. 18,097), Hochschuljubiläumsfondsder Stadt Wien (project no. H-283459/2019).
Acknowledgement: We are indebted to the Neurological Tissue Bank of the IDIBAPS Biobank,
the Prion Disease Tissue collection at IRCCS-ISNB, and the Neurobiobank of the Medical
University of Vienna for sample and data procurement. We particularly thank brain
donors and their families for generous tissue donations for research purposes. Without
them, this research would not have been possible. We also thank the Austrian Ministry
of Social Affairs, Health, Care, and Consumer Protection for supporting the Austrian
Reference Center for Human Prion Diseases (OERPE). We are also grateful to Sara Charif,
Veronica Santiago (IDIBAPS Biobank, Barcelona), Benedetta Carlà (IRCCS, ISNB), and
Judith Ludwig (Medical University of Vienna) for excellent technical assistance.
New anti-prion compounds able to reduce the pathologic aggregation of alpha-synuclein
and PABPN1 and to lessen ER stress
L. Gentilea,*, PH. Nguyena,*,#, M. Sinanea,#, J. Dhiabb,#, K. Nguyena, C. Pagea, P.
Conana, A. Nasira, G. Friocourta, C. Trolletb, H. Galonsc, N. Oumatac,#, and C. Voisseta,#
aInserm, Univ Brest, EFS, UMR 1078, GGB, Brest, France; bInserm, Institut de Myologie,
Centre de Recherche en Myologie, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France; cLaboratoire
de chimie organique 2, Inserm U1022, Université Paris Descartes, Paris, France *
Present address: Host Parasite Interactions Section, Laboratory of Intracellular Parasites,
NIAID, NIH, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, Hamilton, MT, USA #These authors contributed
equally to this work.
Aims: In an effort to identify compounds able to reduce the adverse effects of the
pathogenic aggregation of proteins responsible for protein misfolding diseases (PMDs)
such as Prion diseases, a series of 26 original compounds were synthetized and screened
for their activity against PrPScPrion. The 5 best anti-prion compounds identified
were further challenged for their capacity to reduce misfolded protein aggregation
and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, two major hallmarks of PMDs.
Material and Methods: Anti-prion activity was evaluated using MovS6 cells, PABPN1
protein aggregation was evaluated using Ala17 OPMD muscle cells, CHO-KI and PC12 differentiated
cells were used to evaluate cytoprotection against ER stress.
Results: 4 out of 5 anti-prion compounds were able to reduce the toxic aggregation
of WT and mutant A53T alpha-synuclein proteins in yeast-based models. 3 out of 5 anti-prion
compounds were able to reduce the pathologic nuclear aggregation of PABPN1 protein
in a cellular model of oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy, and 5 out of 5 were shown
to protect CHO cells and neuronal cells from ER stress-induced cell death.
Conclusions: This study showed that molecules selected for their anti-prion activity
also possess capacities to reduce the pathogenic aggregation of other proteins, decrease
the adverse effects of protein aggregation like ER stress and promote cell survival.
Funded by: Fondation NRJ, CECAP, Fondation Grand Ouest, Inserm, MESR, association
G. Saleun.
Acknowledgement: Fondation NRJ, CECAP, Fondation Grand Ouest, Inserm
In vivo assessment of Lewy body copathology in idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus:
Prevalence and associations with clinical features and surgery outcome
Giulia Gianninia,b, Sofia Dellavallea, Simone Baiardia,c, Corrado Zenesinia, Sabina
Cevolia,b, Nils Dannerd,e, Henna-Kaisa Jyrkkänend, e, Marcello Rossia, Barbara Polischia,
Corinne Quadaltia, Camilla Stefaninib, Pietro Cortellia,b, David Millettia, Sanna-Kaisa
Herrukaf,g, Giorgio Palandria, Ville Leinonend,e, and Piero Parchia,c
aIRCCS, Istituto delle Scienze Neurologiche di Bologna, Bologna, Italy; bDepartment
of Biomedical and Neuromotor Sciences (DIBINEM), University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy;
cDepartment of Experimental, Diagnostic and Specialty Medicine (DIMES), University
of Bologna, Bologna, Italy; dDepartment of Neurosurgery, Kuopio University Hospital,
Kuopio, Finland; eNeurosurgery, Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Eastern
Finland, Kuopio, Finland; fDepartment of Neurology, Kuopio University Hospital, FI-70029
Kuopio, Finland; gNeurology, Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Eastern
Finland, FI-70210 Kuopio, Finland
Aims: Idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus (iNPH) is a clinical-radiological syndrome
of elderly individuals characterized by gait disturbances, cognitive decline and urinary
dysfunction. Given the overlapping age distribution and clinical phenotypes with common
age-related neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and Lewy
body disease (LBD), exploring the influence of these co-pathologies on clinical features
and surgery outcome represents a crucial step. The recent introduction of the alpha-synuclein
(α-syn) real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC) assay, an ultrasensitive technique
that detects misfolded α-syn using an amplification strategy, has recently provided
a robust in vivo biomarker for Lewy body (LB) pathology.
Material and Methods: We measured CSF α-syn seeding activity by RT-QuIC in 293 iNPH
patients from two independent cohorts from Italy and Finland. In participants who
showed a positive α-syn seeding profile, we evaluated the number of positive replicates,
the peak of the fluorescence response (Imax), and the lag phase (time to threshold).
We also compared the results obtained in iNPH participants with those of two control
groups. They included 89 age-matched individuals who died of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
(CJD), as representative of the general population, and 45 patients with dementia
of Lewy bodies (DLB), representing a full-blown LBD. Finally, in the Italian cohort,
we investigated the association between positive α-syn RT-QuIC result, baseline clinical
features, and shunt surgery outcome at six months.
Results: Sixty (20.5%) iNPH patients showed α-syn seeding activity with no significant
difference of frequency between cohorts. In contrast, the prevalence observed in CJD
was only 6.7% (p = 0.002). The comparison of the number of positive replicates and
the RT-QuIC kinetic parameters between the iNPH and DLB groups showed reduced seeding
activity in the former group (fewer positive replicates, longer lag phase, and lower
Imax (all p < 0.001)). In the Italian cohort, α-syn RT-QuIC positivity was associated
with higher axial and upper limb rigidity (p = 0.003 and p = 0.011, respectively)
and lower MMSEc scores (p = 0.003) at baseline. There were no significant associations
between positive CSF α-syn seeding activity and surgical outcome at six months.
Conclusions: LB pathology affects many iNPH patients and contributes to clinical phenotype
by worsening cognitive and motor (parkinsonian type) impairment but does not significantly
influence the surgical outcome at six months. The comparison with the DLB cohort indicates
that LB pathology is, on average, less severe in the iNPH than in the DLB. The effect
of LB pathology on the clinical benefit after surgery over a more extended period
remains to be determined.
Funded by: Grants from the Italian Ministry of Health (‘Ricerca corrente’). Kuopio
University Hospital VTR Fund, Sigrid Juselius Foundation and Academy of Finland
Acknowledgement: We wish to thank the members of the BOLOGNA PRO-HYDRO Study Group
(Raffaele Agati, Luca Albini-Riccioli, Giovanna Calandra-Buonaura, Lorenzo Chiari,
Emanuele La Corte, Elena Magelli, Paolo Mantovani, Alessandro Pirina, Vito Antonio
Piserchia, Luciano Romano, Michelangelo Stanzani-Maserati, Luisa Sambati), and Marita
Parviainen for their contributions.
Modeling Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease using human iPSC-derived Neurons and Brain Organoids
Aldana D. Gojanovicha#, Nhat T.T. Leb#, Robert C.C. Mercerb#, Alice Ananec, Seonmi
Parka, Bei Wub, David A. Harrisb and Gustavo Mostoslavskya,d,e
aCenter for Regenerative Medicine of Boston University and Boston Medical Center,
Boston, Massachusetts, USA; bBoston University School of Medicine, Department of Biochemistry,
Boston, Massachusetts, USA; cCreutzfeldt-Jakob disease Foundation, Israel; dBoston
University School of Medicine, Department of Microbiology, Boston, Massachusetts,
USA; eBoston University School of Medicine, Department of Medicine Boston, Massachusetts,
USA #equal contributions
Aims: To develop a new model of hereditary Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD) using induced
Pluripotent Stem Cells (iPSC) from a cohort of E200K CJD individuals, both carriers
and non-carriers and their differentiated neuronal, astrocyte and brain organoid progeny
to characterize the role of mutant prions in neural injury.
Material and Methods: We report the establishment of the largest CJD E200K-specific
iPSC library and their differentiation towards cortical neurons to characterize the
mutant PrP. Samples for reprogramming were obtained from 22 individuals of a large
family including carriers and non-carriers of the E200K mutation. Some of these iPSC
lines were selected for differentiation into pyramidal cortical neurons, a brain region
highly affected by this mutation as well as astrocytes and brain organoids. Utilizing
CRISPR-based gene editing we generated isogenic corrected vs non-corrected lines.
We performed the first ever sc-RNA-Seq analysis comparing the corrected vs mutant
iPSC-derived brain organoids.
Results: By analyzing the biochemical properties of PrP and Tau protein, we found
that the E200K hiPSC-derived neurons accumulate pathological forms of PrP which co-localize
with paired helical filaments of tau protein. At the postsynaptic site, NMDR and PSD95
protein colocalization is disrupted in neurons expressing E200K PrP. Besides, through
differentiation of these iPSC lines into brain organoids we were able to obtain a
stable 3D platform for disease modeling and characterize their transcriptional signature
at single cell resolution.
Conclusions: Our study shows, for the first time, that hiPSC-derived neurons and brain
organoids expressing endogenous levels of mutant PrP can model certain aspects of
human prion disease, offering a powerful platform for investigating subtype pathologies
and testing putative therapeutics.
Funded by: NIH
Grant number: R21NS111499-01
Structure-defined Aβ polymorphs promote different pathological changes in susceptible
mice
Ruben Gomez-Gutierreza,b, Ujjayini Goshc, Katherine Doa, Wai-Ming Yauc, Nazaret Gameza,b,
Carlos Kramma, Hamid Shiranid, Jonathan Schulza, Antonia Gutierrezb,f, Peter R. Nilssond,
Robert Tyckoc*, Claudio Sotoa*, and Rodrigo Moralesa,f*
aDepartment of Neurology. The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston.
Houston, Texas, USA; bDpto. Biología Celular, Genética y Fisiología, Instituto de
Investigación Biomédica de Málaga-IBIMA, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Málaga.
Málaga, Spain; cLaboratory of Chemical Physics, National Institute of Diabetes and
Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health. Bethesda, Maryland,
USA; dDepartment of Physics, Chemistry and Biology, Linköping University, Linköping,
Sweden; eCentro de Investigación Biomédica en Red sobre Enfermedades Neurodegenerativas
(CIBERNED). Madrid, Spain; fCentro Integrativo de Biologia y Quimica Aplicada (CIBQA).
Universidad Bernardo O’Higgins. Santiago, Chile.
Aims: Compelling evidence in humans and experimental rodents suggest that Alzheimer’s
disease (AD) -associated Aβ exists in a variety of conformational strains. Unfortunately,
current research has not addressed the biological significance of Aβ strain variation
in AD. This issue acquires additional relevance considering that mixtures of Aβ strains
seems to exist in the brains of patients. Aβ strain variation may explain the pathological
and clinical differences observed among people afflicted by AD.
Material and Methods: Here, we used brain-derived and synthetic Aβ strains to assess
for potential differences in propagation and pathological manifestations.
Results: In a first set of experiments, two synthetic-Aβ40 strains (2F and 3F) that
have been thoroughly studied for their structural motifs, were biochemically characterized
and injected in the brains of 50 days old Tg2576 mice. We assessed prion-like transmission
of these materials by analyzing Aβ deposition 250 days later. A second set of experiments
involved the administration of AD brain homogenates from individuals displaying diverse
amyloid pathology. These human brain extracts were intra-cerebrally injected into
30 days old APP/PS1 mice that were sacrificed 150 days later. Pathological differences
in both experiments were found at different levels, including the type and anatomical
distribution of the aggregates, Aβ40/Aβ42 ratios, reactivity of amyloid deposits to
dyes able to discriminate among misfolded protein conformations, among others. Importantly,
differences in astro- and micro-glial activation were also observed.
Conclusions: Our data support the concept and biological relevance of conformational
strain variation in non-prion protein misfolding disorders. Our findings may help
to identify the most deleterious particles responsible for AD and design conformation-specific
strategies for diagnosis and treatment.
Funded by: NIH/NIA and Alzheimer’s Association
Grant number: R56AG061878, RF1AG059321, and AARGD-18-566,576
Cattle with the EK211 PRNP polymorphism are susceptible to the H-type bovine spongiform
encephalopathy agent from either E211K or wild type donors after oronasal inoculation
Justin J. Greenleea, Eric D. Cassmanna, S. Jo Moorea,b, and M. Heather West Greenleec
aVirus and Prion Research Unit, National Animal Disease Center, ARS, United States
Department of Agriculture, Ames, IA, USA; bOak Ridge Institute for Science and Education
(ORISE), U.S. Department of Energy, Oak Ridge, TN, US; cDepartment of Biomedical Sciences,
Iowa State University College of Veterinary Medicine, Ames, IA, US
Aims: In 2006, a case of H-type bovine spongiform encephalopathy (H-BSE) was reported
in a cow with a previously unreported prion protein polymorphism (E211K). The E211K
polymorphism is heritable and homologous to the E200K mutation in humans that is the
most frequent PRNP mutation associated with familial Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. Although
the prevalence of the E211K polymorphism is low, cattle carrying the K211 allele develop
H-type BSE with a rapid onset after experimental inoculation by the intracranial route.
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether the agents of H-type BSE or H-type
BSE associated with the E211K polymorphism transmit to wild type cattle or cattle
with the K211 allele after oronasal exposure.
Material and Methods: Wild type (EE211) or heterozygous (EK211) cattle were oronasally
inoculated with the H-BSE agent from either the US 2004 case (wild type donor; n = 3)
or from the US 2006 case with the E211K polymorphism (n = 4). Cattle were observed
daily throughout the course of the experiment for the development of clinical signs.
When signs were noted, animals were euthanized and necropsied. Cattle were confirmed
positive for abnormal BSE prions by enzyme immunoassay (EIA; Idexx HerdChek BSE Ag
Test), anti-PrP immunohistochemistry (IHC) on brainstem, and microscopic examination
for vacuolation.
Results: Three-out-of-four (75%) calves with the EK211 genotype developed clinical
signs of H-BSE including inattentiveness, loss of body condition, weakness, ataxia,
and muscle fasciculations and were euthanized. Two of the positive EK211 steers received
H-BSE US 2004 inoculum (Incubation Period (IP): 59.3 and 72.3 months) while the other
positive steer received the E211K H-BSE inoculum (IP: 49.7 months). EIA confirmed
that abundant misfolded protein (O.D. 2.57–4.0) in the brainstem, and IHC demonstrated
PrPScthroughout the brain. All wild type recipient cattle and a single EK211 steer
remained asymptomatic for the duration of the experiment (approximately 7 years post-inoculation)
and no abnormal prion protein was detected in these cattle by EIA.
Conclusions: This study demonstrates that the H-type BSE agent is transmissible by
the oronasal route. Cattle with the EK211 genotype are oronasally susceptible to small
doses of the H-BSE agent from either EK211 or EE211 (wild type) donors. Wild-type
EE211 cattle remained asymptomatic for the duration of the experiment with this small
dose (0.1 g) of inoculum. These results reinforce the need for ongoing surveillance
for classical and atypical BSE to minimize the risk of potentially infectious tissues
entering the animal or human food chains.
Funded by: US Department of Agriculture
Acknowledgement: This research was funded in its entirety by congressionally appropriated
funds to the United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service.
The funders of the work did not influence study design, data collection and analysis,
decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. This research was supported
in part by an appointment to the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) Research Participation
Program administered by the Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE)
through an interagency agreement between the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). ORISE is managed by ORAU under DOE contract
number DE-SC0014664. All opinions expressed in this paper are the author’s and do
not necessarily reflect the policies and views of USDA, ARS, DOE, or ORAU/ORISE.
Prion Disease in Human Cerebral Organoids
Bradley R. Grovemana, Simote T. Foliakia, Katie Williamsa, Brent Racea, Chase Baunea,
Gianluigi Zanussob, and Cathryn L. Haighb
aLaboratory of Persistent Viral Diseases, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute
for Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Hamilton, Montana,
USA; bDepartment of Neurosciences, Biomedicine and Movement Sciences, University of
Verona, Verona, Italy
Aims: Human cerebral organoids (COs) are three-dimensional self-organizing cultures
of cerebral brain tissue generated from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). COs
have been used to model different aspects of human neurodegenerative diseases such
as in Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, and Down’s syndrome dementia. Our
recent application of this CO model to the fatal, transmissible, neurodegenerative
family of human prion diseases has opened new avenues for study that were previously
inaccessible due to limitations in available disease models. Here we further validate
and characterize the CO model for human prion disease.
Material and Methods: COs were generated and maintained following the Lancaster protocol
(Lancaster MA, Knoblich JA (2014) Nat Protoc). After 5 months of maturation, brain
homogenates from different prion disease subtypes were diluted into organoid maintenance
media and applied to the organoid cultures for 1 week with a 1:1 dilution after 24 hours.
Uptake, clearance, and de novo propagation of prion infection were monitored over
several months using Real-Time Quaking Induced Conversion (RT-QuIC) assays and western
blot analysis. For animal studies organoid homogenates were diluted to 1% in PBBS/FBS
and 30 µL were inoculated intracerebrally into Tg66 transgenic mice that overexpress
the homologous human 129 M prion protein. The mice were evaluated for clinical, neuropathological,
and biochemical evidence of prion infection.
Results: Here we show that organoids derived from different iPSC donors with different
genetic background, namely at codon 129, can be infected with various subtypes of
human brain derived prions and maintain many aspects of the original prion subtype.
Pairing the CO model with transgenic mice we have shown that the prions generated
within the organoids maintain and propagate the characteristics of the original inoculum.
Conclusions: These studies demonstrate and validate the utility of COs to model different
aspects of human prion diseases and provide a new platform for investigating the function
of the prion protein and its mutants, prion subtype pathologies, and even testing
putative therapeutics.
Funded by: This research was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the NIH
(NIAID)
Romanian goats’ genetic variability of PRNP gene
Maria Rodica GURĂU, Elena NEGRU, Teodor IONESCU, Anca Amalia UDRISTE, Petruța CORNEA,
and Stelian BĂRĂITĂREANU
University of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary Medicine of Bucharest, Faculty of
Veterinary Medicine, Clinical Sciences, Bucharest, Romania
Aims: Genotyping of Romanian goats in order to establish the PRNP polymorphism and
the potential impact of genetic selection over goat farming.
Material and Methods: Whole blood and root hair samples from Carpathian, French Alpine
and Banat White goat breeds were used to DNA extraction by using the PureLink Genomic-DNA
Kits. The PRNP gene was amplified using Amplitaq Gold 360-DNA Polymerase-250 U kit
and the primers F1 (5`-CATTTATGACCTAGAATGTTTATAGCTGAT-3`) and R1 (5`-TTGAATGAATATTATGTGGCCTCCTTCCAGAC-3`).
The sequencing reactions were performed by outsourcing, CEMIA using the Big Dye Terminator
Cycle sequencing Kit v3.1 and detected with ABI PRISM 3130 (Applied Biosystems). Sequence
alignment and processing was performed using the Mega 5.0 Software and BioEdit.
Results: The following alleles were identified in our study: G37G, W102W, T110T, P110T,
P110S, G127G, I142I, I142M, T142I, H143H, P143P, R143 R, N146 N, R151R, R154 R, H154 R,
P168P, Q168Q, S173S, N173S, R211R, I218I, Q222Q, K222 K, P240P, S240P, P240S, and
S240S. The PRNP alleles proved to confers decreased susceptibility to scrapie were
rare in some breeds and with a uncreased incidence in other breed.
Conclusions: A future genetic selection program seems to have a negative impact over
goat farming for some breed so that the selection genetic programs must be adapted
to the breed.
Funded by: University of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary Medicine of Bucharest
Grant number: 2021–0004/13.07.2021 CaPriRo, within IPC 2021.
Acknowledgement:
This work was supported by a grant of the University of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary
Medicine of Bucharest, project number 2021–0004/13.07.2021 CaPriRo, within IPC 2021.
Germ-line transmission and generation of PRNP mutated cattle using CRISPR-Cas9
Gyeong-Min Gima,b, Dong-Hyeok Kwona,b, Kyeong-Hyun Uhma,b, Min-Ji Kima,b, Ji-Hyun
Parkc, Kil-Young Songc, Won-Wu Leec, Dae-Jin Jungd, Dae-Hyun Kimd,e, Jun-Koo Yid,
and Goo Janga,b,c
aDepartment of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine and the
Research Institute of Veterinary Science, Seoul National University, Seoul 08826,
Republic of Korea; bBK21 Plus program, College of Veterinary Medicine, Seoul National
University, Seoul, Republic of Korea; cLARTBio Inc., Seoul, Republic of Korea; dGyeongsangbukdo
Livestock Research Institute, Yeongju, GyeongSang Buk-Do 36,052, Republic of Korea;
eDepartment of Biotechnology, College of Agriculture & Life Science, Hankyong National
University, Gyeonggi, Republic of Korea
Aims: Even though occurrence of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) has been decreased,
developing bovine models is an important point for basic understanding of prion in
cattle. The objective of this study investigated the possibility that a PRNP knockout
cattle (F0) were born by microinjecting all-in-one CRISPR-Cas9 DNAs into in vitro
fertilized zygotes and its mutation was transmitted into the germ cells and next generation.
Material and Methods: All-in-one plasmid including spCas9, GFP and sgRNA for PRNP
was constructed and microinjected into in vitro fertilized zygotes. GFP expressing
blastocysts were selected and transferred to recipients. Mutation analysis from the
tissue of the offspring using T7E1 assay and deep sequencing was carried out. Oocytes
and semen from the founder (female and male) were collected and mutation of PRNP was
confirmed.
Results: A blastocyst was transferred 18 recipients and 7 calves were born as shown.
There were PRNP mutation in five calves and transgene integration was confirmed by
genomic PCR. The oocytes of a female were collected, fertilized with wild type sperm
and developed to pre-implantation stage. Semen from a male were collected, frozen
for long-term storage, fertilized with in vitro matured oocytes, and developed to
blastocyst. Those blastocysts have PRNP mutation, were transferred into recipients.
In six recipients, pregnancy has been going on to date.
Conclusions: In conclusion, these data demonstrated that PRNP mutation cattle was
born, germline transmitted to next generation and survived to up to date. Those PRNP
mutation cattle and their germ cells will be valuable resources for studying the prion
disease.
Funded by: National Research Foundation of Korea and Seoul National University (SNU)
grant
Grant number: #2017R1A2B3004972 and #550–2,020,005
Acknowledgement: We thank the members of the Goo Jang lab for their valuable comments
and the National Agricultural Cooperative Federation Bucheon Livestock Market and
National livestock institute the technical support.
Selective breeding for rare PRNP variants in farmed whitetail deer in the management
of chronic wasting disease
Nicholas J. Haleya, Rozalyn Donnerb, Kahla Merrettb, Matthew Millerb, and Kristen
Seniora
aDepartment of Microbiology and Immunology, College of Graduate Studies, Midwestern
University, Glendale, Arizona USA; bCollege of Veterinary Medicine, Midwestern University,
Glendale, Arizona USA
Aims: We sought to eliminate highly susceptible prion (PRNP) genotypes in farmed whitetail
deer (WTD) in favor of animals carrying less susceptible PRNP variants, and reduce
the prevalence of chronic wasting disease (CWD) on several endemic properties.
Material and Methods: The project focused on a farmed deer herd made up of two CWD-negative
captive breeding properties and two fully enclosed hunting properties where CWD was
endemic – with historical prevalence >50%. Animals were screened for PRNP genotypes
using PCR and sequencing. Those carrying alleles coding for 95 H, 96S, and 226 K were
selected for breeding. Deer were released at 2 years of age on CWD-endemic properties
for progressively longer durations of time and monitored for CWD status when harvested
12–24 months later.
Results: The frequency of animals homozygous for the highly susceptible 96 G PRNP
allele was reduced to near zero after 4 years of selective breeding, while animals
carrying less susceptible alleles increased in frequency. In the first two years of
harvest, CWD prevalence on both endemic properties decreased significantly, with only
96 G homozygous animals testing positive for CWD.
Conclusions: Deer with rare PRNP variants can be effectively propagated, and this
may be useful in reducing CWD prevalence in endemic areas. Though additional work
is necessary, selective breeding focusing on PRNP genotype alone may be sufficient
to effectively eliminate CWD in farmed WTD populations.
Funded by: Midwestern University Start-up Funds
Grant number: NA
Acknowledgement: We would like to acknowledge the deer farm involved in this project,
who would like to remain anonymous.
Infection of Neuronal Cells by extracellular PrP fibrils
Hazim A. Halima,b, Juan M. Ribesb, Mitali Patelb, George Thirlwayb, John Collingeb,
and Peter- C. Kloehnb
aUniversiti Sains Islam Malaysia, Persiaran Ilmu, Bandar Baru Nilai, Nilai, Negeri
Sembilan, Malaysia; bMedical Research Council Prion Unit at UCL, Institute of Prion
Diseases, University College London, London W1W 7FF, UK
Aims: Extracellular assemblies of amyloid plaques, composed of disease-associated
prion protein (PrPd) are a pathological hallmark of prion diseases, but the pathogenicity
of such amyloid plaques is less well studied. We generated cell-free assemblies of
amyloid PrPdscaffolds (PrPdscaffolds), an experimental model that mimics extracellular
amyloids in vivo. PrPdscaffolds are formed in the extracellular matrix (ECM) of infected
neuronal cells and consist of abundant, micrometer long full-length PrPdfibrils which
remain immobilized on the surface of culture dishes following decellularization. To
address whether infection is established by surface contact or by uptake of PrPdfibrils,
we analyzed the cellular site of de novo formed PrP using myc-Prnp expressing reporter
cells. We further silenced Prnp in reporter cells prior to contact with PrPdscaffolds
to ascertain that infection can be blocked by gene perturbation, a prerequisite for
investigating the cellular underpinning of infection.
Material and Methods: Decellularized ECM was prepared by culturing persistently prion-infected
or uninfected cells for 5 days, followed by trituration of cells under hypoosmolar
conditions. Uninfected myc-Prnp expressing reporter cells were plated onto PrPdscaffolds
and infection of cells was assessed by prion titer determination and by labeling of
PrPdaggregates, respectively. For gene perturbation experiments, reporter cells were
transfected with pools of siRNA against selected gene targets.
Results: Infection of reporter cells, plated onto PrPdscaffolds is unexpectedly fast
and efficient. At two weeks after exposure of reporter cells with cell-free PrPdscaffolds,
infectious titers were equivalent to 2,440 LD50 units per well of a 96-well plate,
when calculated from infections with titered prion-containing brain homogenates. Mice
inoculated with 9 × 105infected reporter cells succumbed to disease at 171 days post
inoculation, only about 10 days later than an equivalent amount of persistently prion-infected
cells. Transient transcriptional silencing of Prnp blocks infection of reporter cells
by at least 80%, when compared with non-targeting controls, confirming that the established
reporter cell assay is amenable to a gene perturbation.
Conclusions: PrPdscaffolds are an experimental tool to study how neuronal cells are
infected by contact with PrPdamyloid. Unexpectedly, extracellular PrPdscaffolds are
highly infectious. Blocking infection of reporter cells by Prnp silencing confirms
that this model can be used to investigate how neuronal cells are infected by PrPdamyloid.
Funded by: Ministry of Higher Education of Malaysia and UK Medical Research Council
(MC_UU_00024/4)
Acknowledgement: We would like to thank Christian Schmidt, Parvin Ahmed and George
Thirlway for conducting the Automated Scrapie Cell Assays.
Transmission of prion infectivity from CWD-infected macaque tissues to rodent models
demonstrates the zoonotic potential of chronic wasting disease.
Samia Hannaouia, Ginny Chenga, Wiebke Wemheuerb, Walter J. Schulz-Schaefferb, Sabine
Gilcha, and Hermann M. Schätzla
aDepartment of Comparative Biology and Experimental Medicine, Faculty of Veterinary
Medicine & Hotchkiss Brain Institute; University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada; bInstitute
of Neuropathology, Medical Faculty, Saarland University, Homburg/Saar, Germany
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a prion disease of cervids. Its rapid geographic
expansion, shedding of infectivity and persistence in the environment for many years
are of concern for humans. Here, we provide the first evidence by transmission experiments
to different transgenic mouse models and bank voles that Cynomolgus macaques inoculated
via different routes with CWD-positive cervid tissues harbor infectious prions that
elicit clinical disease in rodents.
Material and Methods: We used tissue materials from macaques inoculated with CWD to
inoculate transgenic mice overexpressing cervid PrPCfollowed by transmission into
bank voles. We used RT-QuIC, immunoblot and PET blot analysis to assess brains, spinal
cords, and tissues of the gastrointestinal tract (GIT) for the presence of prions.
Results: Our results show that of the macaque materials that induced clinical disease
in transgenic mice,73% were from the CNS (46% spinal cord and 27% brain), and 27%
were from the spleen, although attack rates were low around 20%. Clinical mice did
not display PK-resistant PrPSc(PrPres) in immunoblot, but showed low-levels of prion
seeding activity. Transmission into bank voles from clinical transgenic mice led to
a 100% attack rate with typical PrPressignature in immunoblot, which was different
from that of voles inoculated directly with CWD or scrapie prions. High-level prion
seeding activity in brain and spinal cord and PrPresdeposition in the brain were present.
Remarkably, we also found prion seeding activity in GIT tissues of inoculated voles.
Second passage in bank voles led to a 100% attack rate in voles inoculated with brain,
spinal cord and small intestine material from first round animals, with PrPresin immunoblot,
prion seeding activity, and PrPresdeposition in the brain. Shortened survival times
indicate adaptation in the new host. This also shows that prions detected in GIT tissues
are infectious and transmissible. Transmission of brain material from sick voles back
to cervidized mice revealed transmission in these mice with a 100% attack rate, and
interestingly, with different biochemical signature and distribution in the brain.
Conclusions: Our findings demonstrate that macaques, considered the best model for
the zoonotic potential of prions, were infected upon CWD challenge, including oral
one. The disease manifested as atypical in macaques and transgenic mice, but with
infectivity present at all times, as unveiled in the bank vole model with an unusual
tissue tropism.
Funded by: The National Institutes of Health, USA, and the Alberta Prion Research
Institute/Alberta Innovates Canada.
Grant number: 1R01NS121016-01; 201,600,023
Acknowledgement: We thank Umberto Agrimi, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Rome, Italy,
and Michael Beekes, Robert-Koch Institute Berlin, Germany, for providing the bank
vole model. We thank the University of Calgary animal facility staff and Dr. Stephanie
Anderson for animal care.
Transmission of Cervid Prions to Humanized Mice Demonstrates the Zoonotic Potential
of CWD
Samia Hannaouia, Irina Zemlyankinaa, Sheng Chun Changa, Maria Immaculata Arifina,
Vincent Béringueb, Debbie McKenziec, Hermann M. Schatzla, and Sabine Gilcha
aDepartment of Comparative Biology and Experimental Medicine, Faculty of Veterinary
Medicine; Hotchkiss Brain Institute; University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada; bUniversité
Paris-Saclay, INRAE, UVSQ, VIM, Jouy-en-Josas, France; cDepartment of Biological Sciences,
Center for Prions and Protein Folding Diseases, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD), a prion disease of cervids, spreads efficiently
among wild and farmed animals. Potential transmission to humans of CWD is a growing
concern due to its increasing prevalence. Here, we aimed to determine the zoonotic
potential of CWD using a mouse model for human prion diseases.
Material and Methods: Transgenic mice overexpressing human PrPChomozygous for methionine
at codon 129 (tg650) were inoculated intracerebrally with brain homogenates of white-tailed
deer infected with Wisc-1/CWD1 or 116AG CWD strains. Mice were monitored for clinical
signs and were euthanized at terminal disease. Brains were tested by RT-QuIC, western
blot upon PK digestion, and immunohistochemistry; fecal homogenates were analyzed
by RT-QuIC. Brain/spinal cord and fecal homogenates of CWD-inoculated tg650 mice were
inoculated into tg650 mice or bank voles. Brain homogenates of bank voles inoculated
with fecal homogenates of CWD-infected tg650 mice were used for second passage in
bank voles.
Results: Here, we provide the strongest evidence supporting the zoonotic potential
of CWD prions, and their possible phenotype in humans. Inoculation of mice expressing
human PrPCwith deer CWD isolates (strains Wisc-1 and 116AG) resulted in atypical clinical
manifestations in > 75% of the mice, with myoclonus as leading clinical sign. Most
of tg650 brain homogenates were positive for seeding activity in RT-QuIC. Clinical
disease and presentation was transmissible to tg650 mice and bank voles. Intriguingly,
protease-resistant PrP in the brain of tg650 mice resembled that found in a familial
human prion disease and was transmissible upon passage. Abnormal PrP aggregates upon
infection with Wisc-1 were detectable in thalamus, hypothalamus, and midbrain/pons
regions.
Unprecedented in human prion disease, feces of CWD-inoculated tg650 mice harbored
prion seeding activity and infectious prions, as shown by inoculation of bank voles
and tg650 with fecal homogenates.
Conclusions: This is the first evidence that CWD can infect humans and cause disease
with a distinctive clinical presentation, signature, and tropism, which might be transmissible
between humans while current diagnostic assays might fail to detect it. These findings
have major implications for public health and CWD-management.
Funded by: We are grateful for financial support from the Natural Sciences and Engineering
Research Council of Canada, the National Institutes of Health, Genome Canada, and
the Alberta Prion Research Institute. SG is supported by the Canada Research Chairs
program.
Acknowledgement: We thank Dr. Trent Bollinger, WCVM, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon,
Canada, for providing brain tissue from the WTD-116AG isolate, Dr. Stéphane Haïk,
ICM, Paris, France, for providing brain tissue from vCJD and sCJD cases, and Dr. Umberto
Agrimi, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Italy, for the bank vole model. We thank animal
facility staff for animal care, Dr. Stephanie Anderson for veterinary oversight, and
Yo-Ching Cheng for preparing recombinant PrP substrates. Thank you to Dr. Stephanie
Booth and Jennifer Myskiw, Public Health Agency of Canada, Canada.
No evidence of uptake or propagation of reindeer CWD prions in environmentally exposed
sheep
Erez Harpaza, ״yvind Salvesena, Geir Rune Rausetb, Aqsa Mahmooda, Linh Tranc, Bjרrnar
Ytrehusb,d, Sylvie Lafond Benestadc, Michael Andreas Tranulise, Arild Espenese, and
Cecilie Ersdala
aDepartment of Production Animal Clinical Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine,
Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Sandnes, Norway; bNorwegian Institute for Nature
Research (NINA), Trondheim, Norway; cNorwegian Veterinary Institutes, Norway; dDepartment
of Biomedical Science and Veterinary Public Health, Swedish University of Agricultural
Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden; eDepartment of Preclinical Sciences and Pathology, Faculty
of Veterinary Medicine, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway.
Background and aim: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a prion disease of cervids originally
reported in North America in the 1960s. CWD was diagnosed in 2016 in a wild reindeer
in Nordfjella mountain area in Norway, the first rapport of natural infection in reindeer,
and the first reported CWD in Europe. Detection of more cases in the same area led
to the complete culling and testing of this partially confined reindeer population
of about 2400 animals. Of these, 19 CWD positive reindeer were identified. The affected
area is extensively used as a summer pasture for sheep, with hundreds of installed
mineral licks that attract both sheep and cervids. This overlap in area use raised
concerns for cross-species prion transmission between reindeer and sheep. The aim
of the study was to investigate potential uptake and propagation of CWD prions in
sheep under natural conditions, and to investigate spatial and time-relevant overlaps
between reindeer and sheep.
Material and methods: Global positioning system (GPS) data from sheep and reindeer
was collected and analyzed, including tracking of one of the CWD positive reindeer.
Since prions can accumulate in lymphoid follicles following oral uptake, samples of
gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) from 425 lambs and 78 adult sheep, which had
grazed in the region during the relevant timeframe, were analyzed for the presence
of prions. The recto-anal mucosa associated lymphoid tissue (RAMALT) from all the
animals were examined by immunohistochemistry (IHC) and enzyme-linked immunosorbent
assay (ELISA), and the ileal Peyer’s patch (IPP) from a subsample of 37 lambs were
examined by IHC, for the detection of prions. All samples were analyzed histologically
with respect to lymphoid follicles.
Results: GPS data showed an overlap in area use between the infected reindeer herd
and the sheep. In addition, the GPS positions of an infected reindeer and some of
the sampled sheep showed temporospatial overlap. No prions were detected in the 12,746
lymphoid follicles found in the GALT of all the investigated sheep. The mean number
of lymphoid follicles was 22.6 for RAMALT and 37.8 for IPP.
Conclusion: The absence of prions in the GALT of sheep that have shared pasture with
CWD-infected reindeer, may suggest that transmission of this novel CWD strain to sheep
does not easily occur under the conditions found in these mountains. We also document
that the lymphoid follicle rich RAMALT could be a useful tool to screen for prions
in sheep.
Funded by: The Fund for Research Fees of Agricultural Products and the Agricultural
Agreement Research Fund, canalized through the Research Council of Norway
Grant number: 294,885
mGluR5 inhibition delays cognitive decline and incubation time in a mouse model for
prion disease, but only if applied before onset of symptoms
Kristin Hartmanna, Christiane Hartmanna, Cheng Fangb, David Harrisb, Diego Sepulveda-Fallaa,
Markus Glatzela, and Susanne Krasemanna
aInstitute of Neuropathology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg,
Germany; bDepartment of Biochemistry, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston,
Massachusetts, USA
Aims: Toxic signaling of oligomeric protein species via binding to the cellular prion
protein (PrP) have been implicated in a variety of neurodegenerative diseases including
Alzheimer’s (AD) and Parkinson disease (PD). Metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGluR5)
is one of the receptors that were identified as PrP signaling partner and pharmacologic
inhibition of mGluR5 was successfully shown to improve cognitive performance in mouse
models of AD and LTP impairment in in vitro models for PD. While broad inhibition
of mGlu-receptors led to prolonged survival in a mouse prion model, when delivered
directly with prion infection, the sensitive time frame for therapeutic intervention
during disease progression was not determined. Here, we investigate the ability of
the highly specific mGluR5 inhibitor CTEP to stall disease when applied at different
time points during disease progression.
Material and Methods: We investigated the impact of chronic oral treatment with the
selective mGluR5 inhibitor CTEP in a C57Bl/6 mouse model of prion diseases after cerebral
infection with RML5.0. Mice were adapted to the chow and treatment was started at
different time points post infection. Control chow did not contain CTEP but was otherwise
prepared identically. Animals were monitored daily and behavior of mice was documented.
One cohort was taken at a preclinical time point. While the others were taken at clinical
disease, matching animals were also taken from all groups for better comparison. Brains
of all cohorts were examined in detail via Western Blot, immunohistochemical staining,
and expression analysis. Primary neurons were used to dissect effects on synaptotoxicity
of mGluR5 inhibition by CTEP after treatment with amyloid versus PrPSc.
Results: Whereas treatment starting before onset of symptoms resulted in significant
improvement in survival and cognitive performance, the application of CTEP after onset
of symptoms did not show such effects. Of note, the amount of misfolded PrPScin brain
tissue as determined by Western Blot was comparable in all groups. Interestingly,
subacute treatment of primary neurons with CTEP blocked amyloid-induced, but not PrPSc-mediated
synaptotoxicity.
Conclusions: Oral treatment with CTEP to inhibit the mGluR5 significantly prolonged
and improved survival in a prion disease mouse model. However, treatment must start
before the onset of clinical symptoms.
Prion genotypes in Icelandic scrapie flocks: The effect of removing rams with aVRQ
allele from Icelandic breeding stations
Eva Hauksdóttir, and Stefanía Thorgeirsdóttir
Department of Virology and molecular biology, The Institute for Experimental Pathology
at Keldur, University of Iceland, Reykjavík, Iceland
Aims: Iceland does not have a fixed protocol to reduce the number of risk associated
VRQ genotypes in the Icelandic sheep population. However, since 2008, there have been
no VRQ-allele-carrying rams in the Icelandic sheep breeding stations. This study assessed
the effect that removal of VRQ-allele-carrying rams from the breeding stations has
had on the genetic variance of PRNP.
Material and Methods: The assessment was performed by comparing classical scrapie
flocks, as well as their clinical suspect index samples, from the years 2010–2019(experimental
group, n = 1450 and 10, respectively) to 1998–2007 (control group, n = 1081 and 32,
respectively). The process for genotyping samples was DNA isolation, PCR, RFLP and
electrophoresis. The age of the index cases was obtained from their ear tags. When
comparing the distribution of PRNP genotypes between the groups, for both the flocks
and the index samples, a Chi square test was used, and a Mann-Whitney test was used
for age comparison.
Results: A significant difference was detected in the frequency of the corresponding
amino acids at codons 136 and 154 (p < 0.0001 for both) in the classical scrapie flocks.
However, there was no difference when comparing codon 136, in the clinical suspect
index samples, between the groups (p = 0.9784), and no polymorphism was found at codon
154. There was no difference in the comparison of the age of index samples (p = 0.2808)
between the experimental group (median: 36 months; range: 24–48 months) and the control
group (33 months; 12–108 months).
Conclusions: The results imply that the removal of VRQ-allele-carrying rams from the
breeding stations has brought about a change in the genetic variance of PRNP, as there
has been a decrease in the frequency of the risk genotypes that contain VRQ alleles,
in classical scrapie flocks. As there was no difference in the genetic variance of
PRNP or age in the clinical suspect, classical scrapie index samples, we hypothesize
that not enough time has passed for the full effect of this action to be noticeable.
Acknowledgement: We thank Ástríður Pálsdóttir for her contribution in initiating the
PRNP genotyping studies in sheep at Keldur in 1995.
Adipose-Derived Mesenchymal Stromal Cells Decrease Prion-Induced Glial Inflammation
Arielle Haya,b, Tanner Murphya,b,c, Katriana Popichaka,b, Sean Bolanda,b, Mark D.
Zabela,b, and Julie A. Morenoa, b
aPrion Research Center, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA; bDepartment
of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA; cDepartment of Environmental
and Radiological Health Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences,
Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA
Aims: Prion diseases are characterized by the cellular prion protein, PrPC, misfolding
and aggregating into the infectious prion protein, PrPSc, which leads to neurodegeneration
and death. An early pathology of disease is glial inflammation with a shift of resting
glial cells to A1 reactive astrocytes and M1 microglia. Few current therapeutics target
this stage of disease. The aim of this research is to develop a safe treatment that
decreases inflammation and reprograms glials cells to a neuroprotective phenotype.
Mesenchymal stromal cells can migrate to sites of inflammation where they produce
anti-inflammatory molecules in response to inflammatory signals and damaged tissue.
We assessed the therapeutic potential of adipose-derived mesenchymal stromal cells
(AdMSCs) in an in vitro and murine model of prion disease.
Material and Methods: Primary mixed glia and BV2 microglia were infected with mouse-adapted
scrapie and co-cultured with AdMSCs. RNA was isolated and analyzed for markers of
prion-induced inflammation and reactive glia. Prion-infected mice received intranasally-delivered
AdMSCs twice monthly from 10 weeks post-infection (wpi) to 18 wpi. Behavioral assays,
clinical signs and survival of the mice was assessed. Upon sacrifice, brains were
analyzed for number of vacuoles and glial cells, inflammatory cytokines and chemokines,
and amount of PrPSc. Migration of AdMSCs to prion-infected brains was assessed in
an in vitro assay as well as through tracking intranasally-delivered labeled AdMSCs
with live animal imaging in a mouse model.
Results: AdMSCs migrate toward prion-infected brain homogenate and produce the anti-inflammatory
molecules transforming growth factor b (TGFβ) and tumor necrosis factor-stimulated
gene 6 (TSG-6). In an in vitro model of prion infection of both primary mixed glia
and BV2 microglial cell line, co-culturing with AdMSCs led to a significant decrease
in inflammatory cytokines and markers of A1 astrocytes and M1 microglia. This protection
against in vitro prion-induced inflammatory responses is independent of PrPScreplication.
In a murine scrapie model, AdMSCs migrate to the brain when delivered intranasally.
Although intranasal deliveries of AdMSCs did not increase survival or improve behavioral
signs in mice, it did reduce the number of microglia and vacuole counts in the brain.
Conclusions: These data support a role for AdMSCs as a beneficial therapeutic for
decreasing the early onset of glial inflammation and reprogramming glial cells to
a protective phenotype.
Funded by: Webb-Waring Biomedical Research Award and Murphy Turner Fund
Acknowledgement: The authors thank Lab Animal Resources for their animal husbandry.
Our funding sources for this manuscript include the Murphy Turner Fund, CSU College
of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences College Research Council, Peak Serum,
and the Boettcher Webb-Waring Biomedical Research award.
Proteomic analysis of cerebral spinal fluid and plasma from white-tailed deer infected
with CWD
Allen Herbsta, Judd M. Aikenb, Anthony Nessc, and Debbie McKenziec
aUS Geological Survey National Wildlife Health Center, Madison, United States of America;
bAgricultural, Food and Nutritional Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada;
cBiological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
Background: Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) is a contagious prion disease of cervids
that is spreading geographically and increasing in prevalence. The molecules that
respond to CWD prion infection in deer are poorly described.
Aim: We hypothesized that protein biomarkers may be present in the CSF and plasma
of white-tailed deer infected with CWD and that these biomarkers might help describe
the host response to disease.
Material and Methods: We used Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF) and plasma from white-tailed
deer experimentally infected with CWD. Protein samples were digested with trypsin
and labelled with isobaric tags. The labelled peptides were pooled and then fractionated
by high pH reverse phase HPLC. The abundance and identity of labelled peptides in
the fractions were determined by an additional phase of liquid chromatography coupled
to an electrospray ionization mass spectrometer for peptide mass and sequence determination.
Differential protein expression analysis was performed to identify proteins deregulated
by CWD. Plasma was also collected from elk suspected of infection with CWD at slaughter
and assayed by sandwich ELISA.
Results: We obtained 2,883,600 peptide spectra from the CSF of control and prion infected
deer that mapped to 112,617 peptides with a 95% probability. Using thresholds of 2
peptides per protein and a 99% probability, 1200 proteins were identified for differential
analysis. We found 10 proteins upregulated in the CSF greater than 1.5-fold. The upregulated
proteins included haptoglobin, serum amyloid A, lipopolysaccharide binding protein
and serine protease inhibitors, suggesting an acute-phase response to CWD infection
in the CSF.
In the white tailed-deer plasma, we obtained 2,601,930 spectra which mapped to 98,292
peptides with 95% probability. Using thresholds of 2 peptides per protein and a 99%
probability, 340 proteins were identified for differential analysis. Haptoglobin,
serpin A3-8 and serum amyloid A were significantly up-regulated greater than 1.5-fold.
In the elk plasma, analysis by sandwich ELISA found an upregulation of lipopolysaccharide-bind
protein.
Conclusions: These data indicate that an acute phase response and inflammation is
associated with CWD in white-tailed deer. Elk may also elicit an acute phase response
to CWD.
Funded by: Genome Canada, Genome Alberta, the Alberta Prion Research Institute, Alberta
Agriculture and Forestry and the University of Alberta
Grant number: Systems Biology and Molecular Ecology of Chronic Wasting Disease
Susceptibility of ovine bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cell spheroids to scrapie
prion infection
Adelaida Hernaiza, Paula Cobetaa, Belén Marínb, Francisco J. Vázqueza,c, Laura García-Mendívild,
Juan J. Badiolab, Pilar Zaragozaa, Laura Ordovásd, Rosa Boleab, and Inmaculada Martín-Burriel
a,b
aLaboratorio de Genética Bioquímica (LAGENBIO), Facultad de Veterinaria, Universidad
de Zaragoza-IA2, IIS, Zaragoza, Spain; bCentro de Encefalopatías y Enfermedades Transmisibles
Emergentes (CEETE), Facultad de Veterinaria, Universidad de Zaragoza-IA2, IIS, Zaragoza,
Spain; c Departamento de Patología Animal, Facultad de Veterinaria, Universidad de
Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain; dBiomedical Signal Interpretation and Computational Simulation
(BSICoS), Institute of Engineering Research (I3A), University of Zaragoza & Instituto
de Investigación Sanitaria (IIS), Zaragoza, Spain.
Aims: Cellular in vitro models are essential tools for the study of different pathologies
including prion diseases. However, only a few cell lines can be infected and replicate
prions, being the majority of them murine lines that show limited susceptibility to
certain prion strains due to the species barrier. This problem could be solved using
cells from naturally susceptible species. We tried to overcome this problem using
mesenchymal stem cells from a naturally susceptible species and with the purpose of
creating a cellular ambient more similar to the physiological state, these cells were
cultivated in three dimension conditions (spheroids). The aim of this work was to
evaluate the viability and susceptibility of ovine bone marrow-derived mesenchymal
stem cell (oBM-MSC) spheroids to scrapie prion infection.
Material and Methods: Spheroids from oBM-MSCs carrying the ARQ/ARQ genotype were created.
Some spheroids were maintained in growth conditions and others were subjected to neurogenic
differentiation. To evaluate the viability, a MTT assay was performed in differentiated
and undifferentiated spheroids subjected to three conditions: spheroids inoculated
with scrapie-infected sheep brain homogenate, spheroids inoculated with non-infected
sheep brain homogenate and control spheroids without inoculum. The inoculum was removed
after 48h in contact with the spheroids. The viability was studied at three infection
times: 2 dpi (days post-inoculation), 5 dpi and 8 dpi. In addition, to study the capacity
of spheroids to be infected and replicate prions, differentiated and undifferentiated
spheroids were infected with scrapie-infected sheep brain homogenate. The inoculum
was also removed after 48 h in contact with the spheroids and the levels of pathological
prion protein (PrPSc) were measured by ELISA at three infection times: 2dpi, 5dpi
and 8 dpi. The PrPSc presence was also confirmed by immunocytochemical analysis.
Results: The viability results showed the survival of spheroids after inoculation.
Regarding to the ELISA assay, the levels of PrPSc in both undifferentiated and differentiated
spheroids decreased initially at 5 dpi but, afterwards, an increase of PrPSc signal
was observed at 8 dpi showing the ability of spheroids to maintain prion infection.
This infection capacity was also observed in the immunocytochemical analysis.
Conclusions: These results show that oBM-MSC spheroids constitute a useful in vitro
cellular model with potential for the study of prion diseases.
Funded by: Gobierno de Aragón and the European Social Fund co-financed predoctoral
grant Order IIU/2023/2017 and RTI2018-098711-B-I00: Transmission, replication, toxicity
and therapeutic targets for prion diseases in cell models and bioassays (BIOPRIONCELL).
Transcriptomic analysis of scrapie-infected mesenchymal stem cells
Adelaida Hernaiza, Belén Marínb, Francisco J. Vázquez a,c, Juan J. Badiolab, Pilar
Zaragozaa, Rosa Boleab, and Inmaculada Martín-Burriel a,b
aLaboratorio de Genética Bioquímica (LAGENBIO), Facultad de Veterinaria, Universidad
de Zaragoza-IA2, IIS, Zaragoza, Spain; bCentro de Encefalopatías y Enfermedades Transmisibles
Emergentes (CEETE), Facultad de Veterinaria, Universidad de Zaragoza-IA2, IIS, Zaragoza,
Spain; cDepartamento de Patología Animal, Facultad de Veterinaria, Universidad de
Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain
Aims: Cellular in vitro models have been proven as useful tools to study many aspects
of neurodegenerative diseases, including prion diseases. Previous studies have shown
that mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are susceptible to prion infection and toxicity,
decreasing their proliferation potentical. The aim of the present study was to elucidate
the molecular pathways and biological routes involved in the prion infection of MSCs.
Material and Methods: Ovine bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells carrying the ARQ/ARQ
genotype were seeded and cultured in three different conditions: control cells (without
inoculum), MSCs infected with positive-scrapie brain inoculum and MSCs infected with
negative-scrapie brain inoculum. The inocula were removed after 48 h in contact with
the cells and two infection times were studied; 2 dpi (days post-inoculation) corresponding
to the time of inocula removal and 4 dpi. Each condition was analyzed per triplicate
in each time. Total RNA of cell cultures (n = 18) was purified to perform a RNA sequencing
assay with subsequent enrichment and differential expression analyses.
Results: The greatest differences regarding to differentially expressed genes (DEGs)
were found at 2 dpi comparing cultures infected with scrapie and control brain with
a total of 4,183 DEGs, being 2,112 upregulated and 2,071 downregulated. The number
of DEGs decreased at 4dpi (1,665 DEG, 826 upregulated and 839 downregulated). Among
the DEGs found between positive-infected and negative-infected MSCs at 2 dpi and 4
dpi, only 792 were common between the two infection times. On the other hand, GO enrichment
revealed several significant biological processes enriched in positive-infected MSCs
in the two infection times such as oxidoreductase activity, cytoplasmic part, structural
molecule activity, protein kinase activity and protein phosphorylation. Moreover,
KEGG analysis also identified enriched pathways in scrapie-infected MSCs associated
with Alzheimer, Parkinson and Huntington diseases, lysosome, ferroptosis and autophagy.
Conclusions: Genes differentially regulated in cultures inoculated with scrapie brains
at early phases post inoculation were enriched in genes involved in pathways related
with Alzheimer disease, Parkinson disease and Hungtinton disease, all of them considered
prion-like neurodegenerative diseases. Those genes were also involved in pathways
known to be dysregulated in prion diseases like the lysosome pathway, confirming the
susceptibility of ovine MSC to prion toxicity and the reproduction of molecular mechanisms
occurring in vivo.
Funded by: Gobierno de Aragón and the European Social Fund co-financed predoctoral
grant Order IIU/2023/2017 and RTI2018-098711-B-I00: Transmission, replication, toxicity
and therapeutic targets for prion diseases in cell models and bioassays (BIOPRIONCELL).
Two new decontamination process effective against the variant- and the sporadic-VV2
CJD prion strains
L. Herzoga, F. Reinea, M. Moudjoua, H. Rezaeia, V. Béringuea, and A. Igela,b
aVIM, INRA, UVSQ, Université Paris-Saclay, Jouy-en-Josas, France; bFB Product, Torcé
viviers en charnie, France
Aims: Prions are a class of pathogens with a high risk of transmission that defy standard
inactivation and sterilisation processes and therefore require special vigilance.
Thanks to the development of prion-detection tools, it has been demonstrated that
the high majority of prionicidal process validated at that time against only 263 K
hamster prion strain, barely eliminate human prion strain, requiring The European
and French Medicine agencies to re-examine their standardized protocol for validation
of inactivation process. We previously discussed methodologies and technical issues
raised by these new guidelines with respect to the choice of the cell-free assay,
the human prion strain type and the nature of the prion-containing biological material.
The two objectives of this work were: i) to developpe a robust protocol which may
be served as a standard for human prion decontamination assay and ii) to validate
new decontamination process efficient against human prion strains.
Material and Methods: To assess effectiveness of decontamination procedures, stainless
steel wires were contaminated with vCJD, sCJD-VV2 and 263 K prion-infected brain homogenates.
After washing with different prionicidal treatments (TFD Premium, Anilon, and preconized
treatments) the residual prion seeding-activity present in the surface of the wire
or in the treated-brain homogenate were quantified using relevant bioassay and PMCA.
Results: Thanks to our approaches, we are now able to detect with a high sensitivity
the presence of vCJD and sCJD-VV2 prion particles attached to a surface by PMCA and
by bioassays. Most importantly, we highlighted that all human prion strain does not
show the same susceptibility to inactivation treatments. The sCJD-VV2 prion strain
appears more resistant to the inactivation process tested than vCJD prion. We demonstrated
that the formulation of TFD Premium and the Anilon used in washing machine are completely
efficient to inactivate human prion strains tested in our study. We also demonstrated
that TFD Premium used in a soaking bath is more efficient than the 1 M sodium hydroxide
during one hour.
Conclusions: For the first time we validated two new prionicidal formulations against
a panel of human prion strains. The use of these formulations in washing machine or
in soaking made these processes accessible to all medical’s facilities and laboratories.
The French Agency for Medicines and Health Products Safety (ANSM) just validate the
use of the TFD premium as a prionicidal process efficient against human prion strain.
Funded by: FB Product
Characterization of miRNA changes in Chronic Wasting Disease in Relation to Developing
Early Detection Models
Nicholas R. Heyera, Mark D. Zabela and Jason E. Bruemmmerb
aMicrobiology Immunology and Pathology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, USA;
bNational Wildlife Research Center, United States Department of Agriculture, Fort
Collins, USA
Aims: One aim of this project is to find a curated list of the most significant differences
in miRNA in a Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) infected cervids and a negative control
to aid in subsequent longitudinal studies in transgenic mice.
Material and Methods: Brain homogenizes from 70 animals (35 CWD+, 35 CWD-) will be
confirmed for a prion infection via three rounds of PMCA and then a western blot.
RNA extraction and then size selection was then performed in order to enrich the sample
for the miRNAs that are of interest. After this next generation sequencing was performed,
the reads were cleaned with Trimmomatic then mapped using minimap2 to the GCF_019320065.1
genome, as it is the only cervid with a chromosome level assembly in order to remove
any possible contaminating reads. The reads then must be remapped to the mouse reference
genome (GRCm39) as there are no miRNAs annotated on a cervid genome, and since we
will be doing the longitudinal study in transgenic mice. The reads could then be normalized
off of the most stable gene across all samples as determined by NormFinder. The normalized
data was then input into R, then using the ‘glmnet’ package and using Elastic-Net
Logistic regression the best predictive miRNAs were found as determined by finding
the maximum value for the lambda penalty that keeps the false discovery rate under
1% in a 20-fold cross-validation test. To test the accuracy of the model we will then
generate ROC curves for the model and find an average AUC.
Expected Results: Based on a paper by Jessy A. Slota et. al. in 2019 we expect to
find at least 21 miRNAs that differ significantly between CWD+ and CWD- samples. Moreover,
since we are using the same sample size we also expect that the best predictive model
will only include ~6 miRNAs specifically if our results are consistent we expect mmu-miR-185-5p,
mmu-miR-500-3p, mmu-miR99a(−5p), mmu-miR-125b-5p, mmu-miR-181c-5p and mmu-miR-181d-5p
to be included, the orthologs in mouse of what was found in the previous paper.
Conclusions: The results of this study serve to confirm the findings of the previously
mentioned paper so that we have a set of punitive miRNA indicators of CWD and a pipeline
for testing the effectiveness of them. Subsequently, we will longitudinally assess
at transgenic mice inoculated with CWD with regular sequencing of miRNA to see when
or if it could be a reliable, early, and non-lethal detection tool for CWD.
Funded by: United States Department of Agriculture Cooperative Agreement
Grant number: APP-18407
Knockout Mice for the Sporadic CJD Risk Gene STX6 are Overtly Healthy, but have Extended
Incubation Times to Mouse Prions
Elizabeth Hilla, Emma Jonesa, Jacqueline Linehana, Sebastian Brandnerb, Michael Farmera,
Thomas Coysha, Emmanuel Asantea, Emmanuelle Viréa, John Collingea, and Simon Meada
aMRC Prion Unit at UCL, UCL Institute of Prion Diseases, Courtauld Building, 33 Cleveland
Street, London W1W 7FF, United Kingdom; bInstitute of Neurology, UCL, Queen Square
House, London, WC1N 3BG
Background: STX6, which encodes syntaxin-6, a SNARE protein primarily involved in
early endosome to trans-Golgi network retrograde transport, was recently proposed
as a risk gene for sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD). Specifically, increased
brain expression of STX6 may increase susceptibility to prion disease. Interestingly,
the underlying molecular mechanisms may be common to other neurodegenerative diseases
with syntaxin-6 also being identified as a genetic risk factor for progressive supranuclear
palsy and modified protein expression of syntaxin-6 has been causally associated with
Alzheimer’s disease.
Aims:
Explore the effect of syntaxin-6 (Stx6) expression on incubation time and neuropathology
in prion-infected mice.
Perform physiological and behavioural analysis on the Stx6
−/−mice to inform the feasibility of targeting syntaxin-6 as a novel, genetically
validated therapeutic target in multiple neurodegenerative diseases.
Material and Methods: Stx6
−/−, Stx6
±and Stx6
+/+C57BL/6 N mice were intracerebrally inoculated with RML (n = 20/group) or ME7 (n = 20/group)
prions or PBS (n = 5/group). Mice were culled following definite scrapie sick diagnosis
and incubation period calculated. Immunohistochemical characterisation of neuronal
loss, spongiform vacuolation, astrogliosis, microgliosis and PrP deposition was performed.
PBS-inoculated mice were additionally phenotypically characterised in terms of weight
and mass of white adipose tissue and underwent preliminary behavioural analysis.
Results: Knockout of Stx6 in mice extended incubation time by 12 days following inoculation
with RML or ME7, representing an 8% and 7% increase in survival relative to wildtype
controls respectively. Heterozygous Stx6±
mice showed an 8% prolongation of incubation time following RML inoculation, although
no extension in survival was seen with ME7-inoculated animals.
Although no differences in neuronal loss, spongiform change or PrP deposition were
noted between the different genotypes, a modest increase in astrogliosis was seen
in ME7-inoculated Stx6−/−
animals and a variable effect of Stx6 expression on microgliosis was observed at endpoint.
Stx6
−/−mice are viable and fertile with no gross neurological impairments. Interestingly,
investigation of physiological phenotypes in Stx6
−/−mice revealed a subtle metabolic defect and preliminary behavioural analysis suggested
minor motivation and motor defects.
Conclusions: The statistically significant prolongation in incubation period in mice
with reduced Stx6 expression with two different prion strains provides evidence for
a pathological role of Stx6 expression in prion disease. Lowering syntaxin-6 levels
could be explored as a therapeutic strategy, for example, by testing the effects of
lowering expression later in the course of prion disease and related neurodegenerative
disorders.
Funded by: Medical Research Council
Grant number: MC_UU_00024/1
Acknowledgement: MRC Harwell for the generation of the mouse model. The Transgenics
group at the MRC Prion Unit at UCL for assistance with the characterisation of the
mouse lines as well as Malin Sandberg, Huda Al-Doujaily and Michael De Oliveira for
support with generating inocula and measuring PrP expression. All the staff at our
animal facility including Lucy Draper, Ami Woodcock and Thomas Horan for breeding
the lines; as well as Nick Kaye, Craig Fitzhugh and Gavin Graham for work in the inoculation
experiment. Tamsin Nazari, Fabio Argentina, Florin Pintilli and Helena Costa for help
with histology.
alpha-Synuclein as a surfactant of synaptic condensates
Christian Hoffmanna, Roberto Sansevrinoa, Johannes Tromma, Gwendolin Schneidera, Silvio
O. Rizzolib, Tiago Outeiroc, and Dragomir Milovanovica
aLaboratory of Molecular Neuroscience, German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases
(DZNE), Berlin, Germany; bInstitute of Neuro- and Sensory Physiology, University Medical
Center Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany; cDepartment of Experimental Neurodegeneration,
Center for Biostructural Imaging of Neurodegeneration, University Medical Center Göttingen,
Göttingen, Germany
Aims: Compelling evidence suggests that liquid-liquid phase separation is emerging
as a major mechanism for organizing macromolecules, particularly proteins with intrinsically
disordered regions, in compartments non-limited by a membrane or a scaffold. Hundreds
of synaptic vesicles (SVs) form biomolecular condensates through the interaction with
synapsins, the highly abundant family of synaptic phosphoproteins. Another major family
of disordered proteins at the presynapse includes synucleins, most notably alpha-synuclein.
The precise physiological role of alpha-synuclein in synaptic physiology remains elusive,
albeit its role has been implicated in nearly all steps of the SV cycle. Here, we
aim to dissect the role of alpha-synuclein on the physiological synapsin/SV condensates
and pathological inclusions made of synphilin 1, another synaptic protein implicated
in Parkisnon’s Disease.
Material and Methods: To determine the effect of α-synuclein on the synapsin phase,
we employ the reconstitution approaches using natively purified SVs from rat brains
and the heterologous cell system to generate synapsin condensates. We employed a battery
of assays to characterize liquid-liquid phase separation properties such as FRAP,
live-cell imaging, pharmacological treatments and determining the phase diagram of
condensates.
Results: We demonstrate that synapsin condensates recruit alpha-synuclein, and while
enriched into these synapsin condensates, alpha-synuclein still maintains its high
mobility. The presence of SVs enhances the rate of synapsin/ alpha-synuclein condensation,
suggesting that SVs act as catalyzers for the formation of synapsin condensates. Notably,
at physiological salt and protein concentrations, alpha-synuclein alone cannot trigger
the phase separation of SVs. The excess of alpha-synuclein attenuates the kinetics
of synapsin/SV condensate formation, indicating that the molar ratio between synapsin
and alpha-synuclein is important in assembling the functional condensates of SVs.
alpha-Synuclein can be depleted from synapsin condensates by synphilin 1, another
intrinsically disordered, scaffold protein at the presynapse implicated in Parkinson’s
Disease. Interestingly, synphilin 1 can form fluid condensates by itself, and alpha-synuclein
shows the ability to fully wet synphilin condensates in a salt-dependent manner.
Conclusions: alpha-Synuclein acts as a surfactant modulating the packing physiological
SV condensate in a concentration-dependent manner. Furthermore, alpha-synuclein is
wetting the surface of the aberrant synphilin inclusions recapitulating the architecture
of Lewy Bodies. Understanding the molecular mechanism of alpha-synuclein interactions
at the nerve terminals is crucial for clarifying the pathogenesis of synucleinopathies,
where alpha- synuclein, synaptic proteins, and lipid organelles all accumulate as
insoluble intracellular inclusions.
Funded by: DM is supported by the start-up funds from DZNE and the German Research
Foundation (SFB 1286/B10 and MI 2104). CH is supported by the IMP grant of Deutsche
Demenzhilfe.
Grant number: SFB 1286/B10 and DFG Sachbeihilfe MI 2104
Acknowledgement: The authors thank the funding sources for the support.
Calcium-dependent serine-threonine phosphatase and calcineurin inactivation mediated
by baicalein attenuates prion protein-mediated neuronal cell damage
Jeong-Min Hong, Jong-Hoon Kim, Ji-Hong Moon, Jae-Won Seol, and Sang-Youel Park
Biosafety Research Institute, College of Veterinary Medicine, Jeonbuk National University,
Gobong ro, Iksan, Jeonbuk Korea
Aims: Prion diseases are a group of incurable and fatal neurodegenerative disorders
characterized by neuronal cell death. Calcineurin and autophagy mediate prion-induced
neurodegeneration, suggesting that the inhibition of calcineurin and autophagy may
have a therapeutic benefit. Baicalein has been previously reported to exert neuroprotective
effects against calcium-dependent neuronal cell death.
Material and Methods: SK-N-SH cells were used to determine calcineurin phosphatase
activity and calcium contents.
Results: In the present study, we investigated whether baicalein attenuates prion
peptide-mediated neurotoxicity and reduces calcineurin. We found that baicalein treatment
inhibits prion protein-induced apoptosis. Baicalein inhibited calcium up-regulation
and protected cells against prion peptide-induced neuron cell death by calcineurin
inactivation. Furthermore, baicalein increased p62 protein levels and decreased LC3-II
protein levels, suggesting autophagic flux inhibition and related baicalein inhibition
of prion protein-induced neurotoxicity.
Conclusions: These data demonstrated that baicalein attenuates prion peptide-induced
neurotoxicity via calcineurin inactivation and autophagic flux reduction. This conclusion
suggests that baicalein may be an effective therapeutic drug against neurodegenerative
diseases, including prion diseases.
Funded by: National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) funded by Ministry of Education
Grant number: 2019R1A6A1A03033084
ARR/ARR genotype sheep show no resistance to ovine adapted c-BSE infection by the
oral route
Alvina Huora, Frédéric Lantierb, Jean-Yves Doueta, Séverine Lugana, Naïma Arona, Chloé
Mesica, Hervé Cassarda, Tomás Barrioa, Hugh Simmonsc, Isabelle Lantierb, and Olivier
Andreolettia
aUMR IHAP 1225, INRAe/ENVT, Toulouse, France; bISP, INRAe, Nouzilly, France; cAPHA,
Weybridge, UK
Aims: In sheep, the susceptibility to Prion diseases is strongly determined by the
polymorphisms at codons 136 (A or V), 154 (R or H) and 171 (R, Q or H) of the PRNP
gene. Several studies reported the absence of transmission of classical Bovine Spongiform
Encephalopathy (c-BSE) in A136R154R171/ARR PRNP genotype sheep following oral challenge.
On this basis, selection of the ARR allele has been promoted as a mean to prevent
c-BSE propagation in sheep population. However, some data suggested that ARR/ARR resistance
to TSE agent infection might be lower than initially described. This study aims at
(i) documenting the transmissibility by the oral route of ovine adapted c-BSE agent
in sheep (including ARR/ARR sheep) and (ii) the risk for human health that could result
from such transmission.
Material and Methods: ARQ/ARQ and ARR/ARR lambs were orally challenged using c-BSE
agent previously adapted in sheep. Animal groups from each genotype were killed at
4 and 10 months post-inoculation (mpi) and at the clinical stage of the disease. Blood
samples were regularly collected in each animal. The c-BSE agent (seeding activity)
levels in the blood and tissues samples were quantified by PMCA endpoint titration.
Bioassays in human PrP- expressing mice (Valine129 and Methionine129 variants) were
used to gauge the capacities of the propagated Prions to cross the human species barrier.
Results: In both ARR/ARR and ARQ/ARQ c-BSE orally challenged animals, a 100% efficient
transmission was observed. Although incubation period in ARR/ARR sheep were significantly
longer than in ARQ/ARQ animals, both groups displayed a similar distribution of the
c-BSE agent in their organism. At the clinical stage of the disease, c-BSE seeding
activity titers measured by PMCA were similar in tissues from ARQ/ARQ and ARR/ARR
sheep.
Bioassays in bovine and human PrP-expressing mice indicated that the passage of c-BSE
in ARR/ARR sheep did not alter its strain properties or apparent zoonotic potential.
Conclusions: ARR/ARR genotype does not confer resistance against oral infection by
c-BSE agent adapted in ovine. This finding highlights the limitations of the ARR/ARR
allele selection policy as a mean to prevent and control c-BSE occurrence and spread
in farmed sheep populations.
Beyond this, our results also illustrate the fact that the crossing of transmission
barriers can deeply alter TSE agents’ biological properties without affecting the
phenotypic traits classically used to identify strains.
Funded by: EU granta, EU FEDER/INTERREGb,REDPRIONc
Grant number:aQLK-CT 2001–309 (‘BSE in sheep’), bEFA282/13 TRANSPRION, cEFA148/16
Acknowledgement: All contributors and funders
Serial RT-QuIC to increase sensitivity and specificity for CWD
Soyoun Hwanga, Konstantin Alekseeva,b, Danielle Beckleya,b, and Eric M. Nicholsona
aVirus and Prion Research Unit, National Animal Disease Center, Agricultural Research
Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Ames, IA, USA; bOak Ridge Institute
for Science and Education (ORISE) through an interagency agreement between the U.S.
Department of Energy (DOE) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
Aims: The study goal is to evaluate the potential to enhance diagnostic sensitivity
and specificity for CWD through the use of serial RT-QuIC of fecal samples from white-tailed
deer. The basis for this is supported by αobservations of more rapid and sensitive
detection of tissue based RT-QuIC detection of prion disease.
Material and Methods: Tissue and fecal samples used in this work are from previously
completed animal studies at National Animal Disease Center. Serial RT-QuIC assay conditions
were were initially optimized using brain homogenate samples to ascertain optimal
first-round reaction times, with this first round reaction time applied to RT-QuIC
reactions seeded with fecal samples from CWD inoculated white-tailed deer. The solvent
conditions for fecal and brain samples are independently determined.
Results: Serial RT-QuIC resulted in faster overall detection times with better ability
to discriminate positive and negative samples fundamentally increasing both the sensitivity
and specificity for CWD affect animals.
Conclusions: Serial RT-QuIC can be useful for rapid detection of CWD in white-tailed
deer using fecal samples. Such an enhancement should be considered in the advancement
of RT-QuIC as an approved assay for detection of CWD.
Funded by: USDA appropriated funds
Acknowledgement: All samples used in this study were provided by Dr. Justin Greenlee
at National Animal Disease Center, USDA, Ames, IA, USA.
Chemical Optimization of Cellular Prion Protein Degraders
Nicole Innocentia,b, Valerio Bonaldoa, Giovanni Spagnollic, Tania Massignanc, Dino
Gasparottoa,b, Giorgia Susina,b, Giorgia Contessia,b, Cecilia Perruccia,b, Laura Copata,b,
Eleonora Parolina,b, Massimo Casagrandab, Samuele Brugnarab, Giacomo Ambrosinoa,b,
Andrea Astolfid, Maria Letizia Barrecad, Ines Mancinib, and Emiliano Biasinia
aDepartment CIBIO & University of Trento; bDepartment of Physics, University of Trento;
cSibylla Biotech S.R.L; dDepartment of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Perugia
Aims: We have recently developed an approach for selectively reducing the level of
target proteins by impairing their folding process rather than targeting their native
conformations. This method, called Pharmacological Protein Inactivation by Folding
Intermediate Targeting (PPI-FIT), is made possible by computational algorithms allowing
the full atomistic reconstruction of folding and misfolding processes of polypeptides.
The rationale underlying PPI-FIT is that targeting a folding intermediate with small
ligands could promote its degradation by the cellular quality control machinery, which
recognizes such artificially stabilized intermediates as improperly folded species.
We have applied PPI-FIT to target the cellular prion protein (PrP), a key player in
prion diseases, and identified a pharmacological degrader (named SM875) capable of
dose-dependently suppressing the expression of the protein (1). We capitalized on
a unique rationale, solid preliminary data, key experimental tools, and a highly cross-disciplinary
team to move SM875 along the preclinical drug discovery pipeline. This effort could
bring the first pharmacological degrader against prion diseases to the clinical phase.
Material and Methods: We designed and performed a synthesis scheme for SM875. The
correct structure of the molecule was verified by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR),
mass spectrometry (MS), and infrared (IR) spectroscopy. Such a scheme allowed us to
introduce modifications into the chemical scaffold of the compound, leading to tens
of different analogs. Each molecule was then tested in vitro to assess the ability
to suppress PrP.
Results: We tested 35 synthetic analogs differing from the parent compound SM875 for
one or more chemical substitutions. Dose-dependent analysis of each molecule in an
imaging-based cellular assay allowed us to draw a first structure-activity relationship
for SM875, which was used to refine the docking model of the compound-pocket interaction.
These results represent fundamental steps along the SM875 optimization pipeline and
encourage searching for additional analogs with improved pharmacological and pharmacokinetic
properties.
Conclusions: Our data represent the first step to move SM875 along the drug-discovery
pipeline, which could ultimately lead to a drug administrable in vivo and the subsequent
validation in animal models of prion diseases, fundamental steps to translate this
new approach to the clinical phase.
References:
1. Spagnolli et al. Commun Biol. 2021
Funded by: Fondazione Telethon, Italy
Grant number: GGP20043
Funded by: CJD Foundation, USA
The fidelity of prion templating in vitro depends on the identity of the prion strain
Kezia Jack, Mark Batchelor, John Collinge, and Jan Bieschke
UCL Institute of Prion Diseases/MRC Prion Unit, London, UK
Aims: Although prions are all formed from the same single protein sequence, different
prion strains cause consistent disease symptoms and characteristics, meaning phenotypic
information is contained in the physical structure of the prion. The fidelity of templating
can be influenced by seed structure and folding environment. In my project, I aim
to investigate in vitro which of these two factors has a stronger influence on the
structural templating of prions.
Material and Methods: I have used a native state aggregation assay to fibrilise two
different PrP monomers (23–231 and 91–231) using ex vivo prions (RML, ME7) and synthetic
PrP fibrils as seeds. The resulting fibrils were propagated over multiple rounds of
seeding. To probe the structures of the resulting fibrils in a quantitative and high-throughput
way, I have developed a spectral fingerprinting method using luminescent conjugated
oligothiophene dyes.
Results: Fibrils seeded by RML prions, ME7 prions and synthetic fibrils had significantly
different structures. Over subsequent seeding rounds, the seeding fidelity varied
depending on which strain was used as initial seed, and whether the PrP substrate
included or lacked the N-terminal amino acids (23–89).
Conclusions: The N-terminal region is not incorporated into genuine prions, and so
it presence or absence alters the folding environment of the amino acids that are
incorporated into the fibril. This suggests that the interplay between seed structure
and folding environment is complex, and the relative strengths vary with different
strains.
Funded by: UKRI, MRC
Grant number: MRC MC_UU_00024/6
Synthetic prions with high specific infectivity generated from recombinant PrP.
Graham S, Jackson, Adam Wenborn, Jemma Betts, Ines Whitworth, Christian Schmidt, Jacqueline
Linehan, Jonathan DF Wadsworth, and John Collinge
MRC Prion Unit, UCL Institute of Prion Diseases, UK
Aims: To generate synthetic prions from recombinant PrP with high specific infectivity
to facilitate their isolation and subsequent characterisation, including a determination
of their atomic structure.
Material and Methods: We have developed a modified method of Protein-Misfolding by
Cyclic Amplification (PMCA) which utilises recombinant prion proteins (rPrP) and an
extract of brain homogenate from PrP-knockout mice. When used in a serial format synthetic
prions can be replicated de novo to very high titres in combination with extreme dilution
of the intiating seeds. The resultant synthetic prions have been purified to near
homogenity with respect to protein and characterised using a variety of methods. prions
have been quantitatively titred and possess a specific infectivity equal to or in
excess of those extracted ex vivo. In common with the propagation of prions in mammalian
hosts our synthetic prions can encode distinct strains, dependent upon the original
initiating ‘seed’.
Results: The purity of isolated, synthetic prions has been assessed using silver-stained
SDS-PAGE and mass spectrometry which has confirmed the absence of significant protein
contaminants. Quantification of PrP content by ELISA in conjunction with cell-culture
measurements of infectivity have established the purified prions have a specific infectivity
equivalent to those isolated from mammalian brain which was confirmed by transmission
in rodent bioassay. The overall architecture of the isolated prions visualized by
negative stain electron microscopy appeared closely similar to that of prion rods
isolated from rodent brain. Cryo-electron microscopy confirms the structures seen
by negative stain and the determination of an atomic structure is currently underway.
Conclusions: Synthetic prions with high specific infectivity can be generated from
recombinant PrP in the presence of a brain homogenate extract. The resulting prions
can be purified to homogeneity and do not contain any proteinaceous component other
than PrP. Following digestion with proteinase K and analysis by mass spectrometry
a core of residues 85–231 remain which is in common with prions obtained ex vivo.
The infectious titre or concentration of synthetic prions generated is higher than
that contained within typical brain homogenates and following purification, prion
rods visualized by cryo-electron microscopy closely resemble those obtained from mammalian
brain. Thus post-translational modifications such as glycosylation are not a prerequisite
for the formation of infectious prion rods.
Funded by: UK Medical Research Council
Grant number: MC_U123170362
Citrullinated GAPDH and vimentin in the pathology of prion diseases
B. Janga, MJ. Kimb, YJ. Leea, MJ. Choia, SJ. Parka, A. Ishigamic, YS. Kima,d, and
EK. Choia,b
aIlsong Institute of Life Science, Hallym University, Seoul, Korea; bDepartment of
Biomedical Gerontology, Graduate School of Hallym University, Chuncheon, Korea; cMolecular
Regulation of Aging, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Gerontology, Tokyo, Japan; dDepartment
of Microbiology, College of Medicine, Hallym University, Chuncheon, Korea
Aims: Protein citrullination, the calcium (Ca2+)-dependent peptidylarginine deiminase
(PAD)-mediated conversion of a protein arginine residue to a citrulline residue, has
emerged as a pathophysiologic outcome in neurodegeneration. However, the roles, functions,
and expression of citrullinated proteins have not yet been elucidated because available
antibodies are limited.
Material and Methods: We developed mouse monoclonal IgG1 or IgM specific for citrullinated
GAPDH and vimentin to investigate the pathogenesis of prion diseases in animal models,
in patients with prion diseases, and in vitro.
Results: Glycolytic enzyme GAPDH is citrullinated at R13 and R200. Citrullination
did not regulate GAPDH enzyme activity. Full-lenth 37 kDa and fragments 25 kDa in
size were mainly citrullinated at R200 residue but not at R13 residue, and were highly
detected in sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD). The type III intermediate filament
protein vimentin citrullinated at R450 was specifically detected in scrapie-infected
mice. Vimentin was also highly citrullinated and was mainly expressed in reactive
astrocytes and in neuro-inflammatory marker YKL-40-positive cells in the brain tissues
of sCJD patients. Citrullination led to increased cytoplasmic and integral membrane/organelle
vimentin enrichment. Caspase sensitivity of vimentin was also changed by citrullination.
Conclusions: Our findings suggest that these newly developed antibodies may be useful
for identifying disease activity and the pathogenesis of human disorders.
Funded by: National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant funded by the Korea government
(Ministry of Science and ICT)
Grant number: 2022R1A2C1006085; NRF-2020R1A2C2009566
Acknowledgement:
Neuropathology of 8 patients of the New Brunswick cluster of Neurological Syndrome
of Unknown Cause; human Chronic Wasting Disease or blue-green algae?
Gerard H. Jansena, Dean A. Fergussonb, John M. J. Woulfea, and Alexander S. Eastonc
aDepartment of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario,
Canada; bClinical Epidemiology Program, The Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa,
Ontario, Canada; cDepartment of Pathology, QEII Health Science Centre, Halifax, Nova
Scotia, Canada
Aims: Since late 2019 patients were reported from one Canadian province to the Canadian
CJD surveillance, and it was suggested these suffered from a new unknown neurological
disease, possibly human CWD. In March 2021 this cluster became world news. 48 of the
patients of this cluster of Neurological Syndrome of Unknown Cause were investigated
by the Oversight Committee established by the New Brunswick government. 96% of cases
had been referred by one local neurologist. Ten patients had died at the time of writing
of this abstract, and eight came to autopsy. In April 2021, following the results
of the first autopsies, suggestions for other environmental factors causing this cluster
were made: aberrant amino acid BMAA from blue-green algae. The Oversight Committee
was briefed in August 2021 of the results of our study, and partly based on those,
on 24 February 2022 the province of New Brunswick concluded that there was no evidence
to support a new mysterious illness.
Material and Methods: Brain tissue was obtained at autopsy as formalin fixed (8/8)
and frozen (7/8). Routine stains were performed, and PrP (12F10), TDP43, β-amyloid,
Tau, P62, α-Synuclein. Slides were reviewed by 2 independent neuropathologists. Western
blotting for PrP was performed (7/8).
Results: In none of these 8 cases microscopical or immunohistochemical features of
a prion disease were found. No misfolded prion protein was detected by WB. Pathology
showed that the group of 8 consisted of: one case of vascular dementia; one case without
morphological changes (consistent with clinical history); one case of neoplasia; and
5 cases of neurodegenerative disease. The latter group showed in each case mixed dementia
with as main component Alzheimer disease (2/5), neocortical Lewy body pathology (2/5),
or frontotemporal lobe dementia TDP43 (1/5).
Conclusions:
No prion disease was found in any of the 8 autopsy cases.
An inhomogeneous group of diagnoses was found in the 8 cases. Considering the 48 total
cases and a conservative diagnostic acumen, the probability of having all 8 consecutive
autopsy cases representing a new mystery illness is exteremly remote (p = 0.0001 using
classical probability theorem). Therefore, the cluster constitutes not a new disease,
but a cluster of clinical misdiagnoses.
The suggestion that blue-green algae BMAA would be causing known misfolding diseases,
initiating this cluster, can be dismissed as 3/8 patients did not suffer from a misfolding
disease. Moreover, the original presentation in this cluster is not consistent with
this hypothesis as all 8 were initially suggested to have a ‘new-unknown’ disease,
not a ‘known’ neurodegenerative disease.
Funded by: Pathology work-up and Western blotting was funded by Public Health Agency
of Canada. No other funding/support was received.
Acknowledgement: The University of Ottawa Neuropathology Laboratory Services staff;
Olga Agah, Eric Labelle, and Sharlene Faulkes. The National Microbiology Laboratory
in Winnipeg staff: Dr. J. David Knox and Anne Peterson.
RAD51 demonstrates amyloid properties in vivo and in vitro
Daniel Kachkina, Julia Sopovaa,b, Kirill V. Volkovc, Alexandr G. Bobylevd, Sergey
Fedotova, Ivan I. Kostromae, Aleksandr A. Rubela, and Anna Yu. Aksenovaa
aLaboratory of Amyloid Biology, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, Russia;
bCenter of transgenesis and genome editing, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg,
Russia; cResearch Resource Center ‘Molecular and Cell Technologies’, Research Park,
St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, Russia; dInstitute of Theoretical
and Experimental Biophysics, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia; eRussian
Research Institute of Hematology and Transfusiology, St.Petersburg, Russia
Aims: Amyloids are highly ordered fibrillar protein polymers capable of self-assembly
and possessing intermolecular cross-β structure. The revelation of the role of amyloids
in the development and progression of cancer has been one of the important developments
in recent years.
During the screening of potentially amyloidogenic proteins, we discovered that the
human protein RAD51 has the potential for amyloid aggregation. RAD51 is one of the
key proteins of homologous DNA double-strand break repair responsible for genome integrity
and stability. In the course of our study, we demonstrated the amyloid properties
of human RAD51 protein and proposed the role of its aggregation on the progression
of cancer.
Material and Methods: We have purified the recombinant protein from E. coli, aggregated
it in vitro and studied its amyloid properties. We stained RAD51 aggregates with amyloid-specific
dyes such as Thioflavin T and Congo red. Aggregation dynamics and seeding potential
of RAD51 aggregates were studied by using Thioflavin T assay. The resistance of RAD51
aggregates to the action of ionic detergent (1% SDS) was examined. Fibrils of RAD51
were visualized on a transmission electron microscope. X-ray diffraction analysis
was used to confirm the cross-beta structure of the fibrils formed by RAD51. Tissues
of patients with various forms of hematologic malignancies were analyzed for the presence
of an aggregated form of the RAD51 protein with SDD-AGE assay.
Results: In this work, we demonstrated that a key protein that maintains genome stability,
RAD51, has amyloid properties in vitro. We have shown that RAD51 in vitro forms detergent-resistant
aggregates that have an unbranched fibrillar structure. RAD51 aggregates bind with
amyloid-specific dyes. Aggregates of RAD51 dyed with Congo red glow in polarized light.
Analysis of the RAD51 fibrils by X-ray diffraction demonstrated a cross-β structure
that characterizes amyloid proteins. Moreover, in the tissues of patients with multiple
myeloma and acute leukaemia SDS-resistant aggregates of the RAD51 protein were detected.
We propose here that amyloid aggregation of RAD51 may be relevant to cancer development.
Conclusions: To our knowledge we have demonstrated the amyloid properties of the human
RAD51 protein for the first time.
Funded by: Saint Petersburg State University and Russian Science Foundation
Grant number: Pure ID: 93,025,998, 92,561,695 (SPSU) and № 20–14-00148 (RSF)
Cell type-specific translatome signatures in pre-onset prion disease mice
Lech Kaczmarczyka,b, and Walker S. Jacksona,b
aWallenberg Center for Molecular Medicine, Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences,
Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden; bGerman Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases,
Bonn, Germany
Aims: To identify potential therapeutic targets we aimed to identify molecular responses
of specific cell types to early-stage prion disease.
Material and Methods: We employed RiboTag translational profiling to identify molecular
responses of five cell types at pre-onset and onset disease stages of mice infected
with the RML strain of mouse adapted scrapie prions. The two disease stages were identified
from serial electroencephalography (EEG). The cell types included astrocytes plus
four neuron subtypes with varying vulnerabilities to prion disease.
Results: Serial EEG showed that theta frequency waves gradually increased in RML infected
mice starting at 13 weeks post injection (WPI) and became significant at 18 WPI, although
typical features of mouse scrapie (e.g., ataxia, kyphosis) were still absent. At this
stage, translatome responses were surprisingly strong in all cell types studied. At
the pre- onset stage of 10 WPI, parvalbumin and somatostain neurons showed no coordinated
response but the other three cell types showed coordinated responses, each with a
uniquesignature. Specifically, astrocytes downregulated genes needed for ribosome
biogenesis, glutamatergic neurons altered genes needed for the cytoskeleton, and GABAergic
neurons altered several core circadian rhythm genes. In a follow-up study, interference
of the circadian rhythm only slightly enhanced disease of RML infected mice
Conclusions: The strong response seen at 18 WPI indicates that during early signs
of diminishing brain function (e.g., EEG theta), brain cells are already severely
altered and therapies may need to tackle multiple problems. At 10 WPI, well before
the emergence of EEG theta increase, clinical signs and neuropathological changes,
cells make specific and disparate molecular responses. Since parvalbumin neurons have
been reported to be especially vulnerable in human and animal prion disease, the lack
of response at 10 WPI suggests they are unable to detect the ensuing disease and provides
no obvious molecular target in these cells to engage therapeutically. Furthermore,
the minimal enhancement of disease severity following circadian rhythm interference
suggests there may be little therapeutic benefit from rigorously controlling it. Nonetheless,
a few interesting genes were identified, one of which we found activated by other
aggregated proteins such as amyloid beta and alpha synuclein. To test for any therapeutic
potential, a novel knock-in mouse line to control its expression has been created.
Funded by: Internal funding of the Wallenberg Center for Molecular Medicine and the
German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases
Liquid-liquid phase separation of the prion protein promotes the formation of neurotoxic
aggregates; a critical role of the N-terminal domain
Janine Kampsa,b, Nuwin Mohamada, Verian Baderc, Konstanze F. Winklhoferb,c, and Jörg
Tatzelta,b
aDepartment Biochemistry of Neurodegenerative Diseases, Institute of Biochemistry
and Pathobiochemistry, Ruhr University Bochum, Germany; bCluster of Excellence RESOLV,
Bochum, Germany; cDepartment Molecular Cell Biology, Institute of Biochemistry and
Pathobiochemistry, Ruhr University Bochum, Germany
Aims: Formation of biomolecular condensates through liquid-liquid phase separation
(LLPS) has been described for several pathogenic proteins linked to neurodegenerative
diseases and is discussed as an early step in the formation of protein aggregates
with neurotoxic properties.
We have demonstrated that the unstructured N-terminal domain of the prion protein
(PrP) is necessary and sufficient to promote LLPS, emphasizing the important role
of intrinsically disordered low-complexity domains (LCD) in phase separation. The
liquid-like state of the PrP condensates was proven by fluorescence recovery after
photobleaching (FRAP) and droplet fusion assays. Mechanistically, LLPS of PrP is driven
by a highly conserved polybasic motif in the N-terminal domain, previously identified
as binding site for neurotoxic Aβ oligomers, presumably largely via cation-π interactions
(Kamps et al., 2021). Previous studies revealed that LCDs not only promotes LLPS but
also the formation of different types of assemblies, including reversible amyloid-like
fibrils (hydrogels) and irreversible amyloids, depending on the chemical milieu. We
therefore tested whether the LCD of PrP is also implicated in a conformational transition
of natively folded PrP into aberrant protein assemblies with neurotoxic activity.
Material and Methods: We analyzed the formation of different types of protein assemblies
by various methods, including super-resolution structured illumination microscopy
(SR-SIM), fluorescent recovery after photobleaching (FRAP), Thioflavin T staining,
circular dichroism spectroscopy, dynamic light scattering and atomic force microscopy
(AFM). The cytotoxic activity of the protein assemblies formed were tested in our
established cell culture models, including primary neurons.
Results: We have identified specific conditions in vitro under which biomolecular
condensates formed by full length prion protein either dissolve or transform into
undynamic assemblies with cytotoxic activities.
Conclusions: Our experiments provided evidence for the concept that the unstructured
N-terminal domain of PrP can modulate the conformational transition of PrP into protein
assemblies with distinct biological activities.
Funded by: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Grant number: EXC 2033 – 390,677,874 – RESOLV, TA 167/6-3, TA 167/11-1
Prion photocatalytic inactivation
Eirini Kanataa, Ioannis Paspaltsisa, Sotirios Sotiriadisb, Matthias Schmitzc, Athanasios
Arsenakisd, Christina Niovi Papanikolaoua, Zoi Patsania, Dafni Dodopouloua, Dimitra
Paschaloudia, Chrysanthi Berberidoue, Sofia Tsoumachidoue, Ioannis Pouliose, Dimitra
Dafoub, Konstantinos Xanthopoulosa, and Theodoros Sklaviadisa
aSchool of Pharmacy, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece; bSchool
of Biology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece; cDepartment
of Neurology University Medical School Göttingen, Germany; dSterimed S.A., Thessaloniki,
Greece; eSchool of Chemistry, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki,
Greece
Aims: Prions are infectious agents extremely resilient to standard decontamination
methods. Advanced oxidation processes generate strong oxidizing agents which non-selectively
attack and minearilize organic compounds, previously applied for pathogen inactivation,
including prions. We evaluated heterogenous and homogenous photocatalytic oxidation
on prion inactivation, aiming to simulate prion as a possible contaminant in liquid
waste and assess the feasibility of photocatalytic prion inactivation within this
context.
Material and Methods: We treated final stage RML-mice brain homogenate (0.1% w/v)
with TiO2 P25 nanoparticles and UV-A illumination (heterogenous) or with the photo-Fenton
reagent, Fe3+/H2O2/UV-A (homogenous photocatalytic oxidation). For increased efficiency,
H2O2 (1000 mg/l) was included. UV-A light lamps were used as light source, whereas
controls (brain homogenate and catalyst without H2O2 and UV-A illumination) were included.
Material treated for 6 or 12 h was administered intraperitoneally to C57Bl/6 J mice,
while control mice received control material. Animals were examined for the appearance
of symptoms and sacrificed at terminal stage or >1 year after challenge if no symptoms
had developed. Brain tissue was sampled for neuropathological evaluation, WB and RT-QuiC
analysis.
Results: Our bioassay indicated that the heterogenous photocatalytic treatment (catalyst:
TiO2) efficiently deactivates RML prions. Animals receiving material treated for 12 h
did not develop clinical symptoms and were sacrificed at 400 dpi (9/9). Treatment
for 6 h reduced significantly the titer as 78% of mice (7/9) did not develop symptoms
(and were sacrificed at 400 dpi). In contrast, animals receiving material treated
with homogenous photocatalysis (catalyst: FeCl3) were not protected and succumbed
to disease. In this case a longer treatment moderately reduced infectivity, as evidenced
by the longer survival interval and the smaller penetration (8/9 mice for 6 h treatment
and 7/9 mice for 12 h treatment developed symptoms and were sacrificed). WB and RT-QuiC
analyses are underway to investigate residual PrPScin Conclusions: Our data highlight
the feasibility of utilizing heterogenous photocatalytic oxidation for prion inactivation.
Prions may occur in medical liquid waste, and although we tested simulated material
carrying substantially higher prion loads than expected in real medical liquid waste,
efficient prion inactivation was achieved within a reasonable timeframe (12 h), significantly
reducing the risk of prion infectivity. We are currently developing an industrial
scale reactor for efficient medical liquid waste management.
Funded by: The work was implemented in the framework of «Competitiveness, Entrepreneurship
and Innovation» co-financed by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) of the
European Union and national resources through the Operational Programme Competitiveness,
Entrepreneurship and Innovation (EPAnEK).
Grant number: T1EDK-02678asymptomatic animals.
Investigation of the role of RNA editing in immunoregulation in Creutzfeldt – Jakob
disease pathogenesis
Korina. Karagiannia, Alba M. Morenob, Spyros. Pettasa, Eirini Kanatac, Juan C. Espinosab,
Konstantinos Xanthopoulosc, Juan M. Torresb, Dimitra Dafoua, and Theodoros Sklaviadisc
aDepartment of Genetics, Development and Molecular Biology, School of Biology, Aristotle
University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece; bCentro de Investigación en Sanidad
Animal (CISA-INIA-CSIC), Valdeolmos, Madrid, Spain; cLaboratory of Pharmacology, School
of Pharmacy, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece
Aims: This study aims to investigate in depth the role of RNA editing alterations
in molecular mechanisms involved in sporadic Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (sCJD) initiation
and progression, emphasizing on immunoregulation, through targeted investigation of
microglial populations. Our central hypothesis is that altered RNA editing in microglial
cells provides epitranscriptomic changes representing a novel mechanism contributing
to transcriptome diversity and subsequent translational changes triggered by or resulting
in protein misfolding. Thus, our study focused on in vivo and in silico studies in
resident (microglia) and peripheral (macrophages) immune cell populations from a humanized
CJD in vivo animal model in early, middle and later disease stages, to reveal transcriptomic
and RNA editome signatures that specifically relate to increasing levels of pathology,
from minimal PrPScaccumulation to massive neuronal loss. Emphasis was given to parallel
comparison of microglia and peripheral macrophages under physiological and neuroinflammatory
conditions.
Material and Methods: We utilized Tg340-PRNP129 MM mice infected with postmortem material
from sCJD patients of the most susceptible genotype (MM1 subtype), a sCJD model that
faithfully recapitulates the molecular and pathological alterations of the human disease.
Hu-sCJD Tg340 mice and corresponding aged-matched controls, were sampled in four critical
time points (0, 60, 120 & 180 days post infection -dpi). Microglia and peripheral
macrophages were isolated using CD11b antibody-coupled microbeads. Transcriptomic
and epitranscriptomic profiles were obtained through deep RNA sequencing analysis
using the IonTorrent platform. RNAseq data were subjected to an advanced ‘in house’
QC pipeline, followed by gene expression and RNA editing analyses based on the DESeq
and REDItools/SPRINT algorithms.
Results: Global microglial RNA editing profiles (editomes) were established during
disease progression. RNA editing events mediated by both ADAR (A-I) and APOBEC (C-U)
were identified. Similar to bulk tissue analysis (cortex) of the same animal model
(https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1803521116), reduced global RNA editing was detected
with disease progression. Differential RNA editing in microglial transcripts, identified
several differentially edited transcripts (e.g. (B2m, Paqr8), replicating and further
extending our previous bulk tissue analyses, thus allowing a cell-type specific RNA
editing analysis. Pathway analysis identified molecular processes affected by RNA
editing alterations during disease progression. Further functional prediction in silico
analyses are conducted for selection of the most potent targets to be used for subsequent
experimental verification of RNA editing perturbations and for functional assays.
Comparative analysis between microglia and peripheral macrophages are conducted to
investigate whether RNA editing perturbations in the brain are reflected in the periphery.
Conclusions: Our data shed light into microglial RNA editing changes occurring during
sCJD progression, enabling elucidation of disease-associated microglial processes.
Similar analysis on peripheral macrophages are expected to provide information regarding
the biomarker potential of peripheral macrophages, provided that microglia-macrophages
editome correlations are identified.
Acknowledgement:
This research has been co‐financed by the European Regional Development Fund of the
European Union and Greek national funds through the Operational Program Competitiveness,
Entrepreneurship and Innovation, under the call RESEARCH – CREATE – INNOVATE (project
code:T1EDK-03884)
Fundació La Marató de TV3, Grant/Award Number: 201,821–31.
Project PID2019-105837RB-I00 from MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501,100,011,033
Long double stranded RNA is detected in 22 L scrapie infected mouse br
Yervand E. Karapetyan, and Sonia Frasquilho
Integrated Biobank of Luxembourg, Dudelange, Luxembourg
Aims: The nature of the infectious agent causing scrapie and other TSEs remains an
enigma. The protein-only prion hypothesis posits host glycoprotein’s abnormal conformer
as the primary or sole component of the infectious agent. On the other hand, viral
nucleic acids have long been sought in scrapie to explain the existence of multiple
agent strains. Despite a plethora of different approaches to the search, no scrapie-specific
nucleic acid sequences have been found in infected tissues. Most viruses induce the
synthesis of long double stranded RNA (dsRNA) during their replication in cells of
infected tissues, and thus the detection of long dsRNA would be an indication of viral
infection.
Material and Methods: J2 monoclonal antibody against long dsRNA (longer than 40 base
pairs) is a useful tool for screening of cells and tissues for the presence of suspected
viral infection; however, this antibody has not previously been used for testing of
scrapie infected tissues. We have validated and optimized the method for the immunohistochemical
detection of long double stranded RNA using J2 antibody in formalin fixed and paraffin
embedded tissues with Ventana Benchmark XT automated stainer. Then we applied this
method to test two CD1 mouse brains terminally infected with 22 L scrapie strain and
three CD1 age and sex matched uninfected mouse brains.
Results: Using J2 IHC we detected strong immunostaining for long dsRNA in the cytoplasm
of neurons in two out of two 22 L scrapie infected mouse brains. We observed the strongest
staining in the neurons of the brainstem and thalamus of the infected mice. No staining
was observed in the neurons of the corresponding regions of all three uninfected mouse
control brains.
Conclusions: For the first time we present direct evidence of viral infection in mouse
scrapie brains demonstrated by immunohistochemical detection of long dsRNA only in
infected tissues and not in controls.
The sequencing of these long dsRNAs using J2 immunoprecipitation of total RNA extracts
from infected brains and applying specific dsRNA-seq methods will shed light on the
issue of the nature of the infectious agent in scrapie and other TSEs.
Funded by: Integrated Biobank of Luxembourg
Acknowledgement: We thank Dr. Daisuke Ishibashi for providing the 22 L mouse brains
blocks and Dr. Michel Mittelbronn and his group for providing the control mouse brains.
Immunological role of cellular prion protein (PrPC) during cytomegaloviral infection
Dubravka Karnera, Daria Kveštaka, Paola Kučan Brlića, Maja Cokarić Brdovčaka, Berislav
Lisnića, Ilija Brizića, Vanda Juranić Lisnića, Mijo Golemaca, Jelena Tomacb, Giuseppe
Legnamec, Hermann C Altmeppend, Milena Hasane, Stipan Jonjića, and Tihana Lenac Roviša.
aCenter for Proteomics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Rijeka, Rijeka, Croatia;
bDepartment of Histology and Embryology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Rijeka,
Rijeka, Croatia; cPrion Biology Laboratory, Department of Neuroscience, Scuola Internazionale
Superiore di Studi Avanzati (SISSA), Trieste, Italy; dInstitute of Neuropathology,
University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany; eCytometry and Biomarkers
UTechS, Center for Technological Resources and Research, Institut Pasteur, Paris,
France
Aims: Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infection is the most common congenital viral infection
and the leading cause of lasting perinatal brain damage, with the inflammatory response
being the primary cause of pathogenic manifestations. Accordingly, it has been shown
that anti-inflammatory drugs can reduce abnormalities in newborn mice infected with
mouse cytomegalovirus (MCMV). Since contemporary antiviral drugs have inadequate efficiency,
finding new therapeutic targets that can reduce brain damage is of utmost importance.
There are growing indications that cellular prion protein (PrPC) dampens the immune
response in various organs and prevents collateral, immune response-mediated pathologies.
In addition to being expressed on immune cells, PrPCcan also bind to immune cells,
suggesting its interaction with immune receptors. Our primary goal is to characterize
the role and impact of PrPCon the course and severity of congenital cytomegalovirus
infection and associated brain pathology.
Material and Methods: Intraperitoneal infection of newborn mice with MCMV recapitulates
the major hallmarks of human congenital CMV infection: virus dissemination to the
brain parenchyma, neuroinflammation and altered brain development. To determine the
correlation between PrPCexpression, inflammation and developmental and functional
changes, we compare the following parameters in infected newborn WT and PrPC-KO mice:
i) viral load; ii) cytokines (FACS, xMAP technology); iii) activation status and transcriptional
profiles of immune cells (FACS, scRNA-seq); iv) CMV-related brain anomalies (IHC).
In addition, we monitor the impact of CMV on PrPCbiology at the cellular level in
vitro (antibody development, FACS, confocal microscopy, immunoblot).
Results: We show that CMV infection in different cell lines and primary cells affects
the amount of PrPC. After initial strong induction of PrPCexpression at early time
points of infection, cell-associated PrPClevels are largely reduced, partially by
triggering its ADAM10-mediated cell surface shedding. Intriguingly, PrPC-KO mice have
significantly lower virus titers in multiple organs, including the brain. Immune cell
subsets and mechanisms responsible for more efficient virus clearance in the absence
of PrPCprotein are still being investigated.
Conclusions: Obtained data indicate that PrPCis involved in the immune response to
CMV infection in newborn mice. Absence of PrPCimproves control of the virus due to
enhanced immune system activation.
Funded by: Croatian Science Foundation, University of Rijeka, Strengthening the capacity
of CerVirVac for research in virus immunology and vaccinology
Grant number: IP-2020-02-6617, uniri-biomed-18-233, KK.01.1.1.01.0006
Acknowledgement: This work has been supported in part by Croatian Science Foundation
under the project (IP-2020-02-6617) and by the University of Rijeka under the project
number (uniri-biomed-18-233) and by the grant ‘Strengthening the capacity of CerVirVac
for research in virus immunology and vaccinology’, KK.01.1.1.01.0006, awarded to the
Scientific Centre of Excellence for Virus Immunology and Vaccines and co-financed
by the European Regional Development Fund.
Ex vivo target engagement of the Abeta oligomer disassembling compound RD2 in patient
derived brain homogenates
Bettina Kassa, Sarah Schemmerta, Christian Zafiua,c, Marlene Pilsa,b,c, Oliver Bannacha,b,c,
Janine Kutzschea, Tuyen Bujnickia, and Dieter Willbolda,b,c,d
aInstitute of Biological Information Processing, Structural Biochemistry (IBI-7),
Forschungszentrum Jülich, Jülich, Germany; bInstitut für Physikalische Biologie, Heinrich-Heine-Universität
Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany; cattyloid GmbH, Düsseldorf, Germany; dPriavoid GmbH,
Düsseldorf, 40,225, Germany
Aims: Soluble Aβ oligomers are highly toxic and may be responsible for development
and progression of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Elimination of toxic and prion-like Aβ
oligomers is therefore a promising therapeutic strategy. Inhibition of Aβ aggregation
is too late in patients having prion-like replicating Aβ oligomers in their brain.
Thus, direct disassembly of already existing Aβ oligomers into native Aβ monomers
in their physiological conformation is the most promising mode of action (MoA). This
MoA is not relying on the immune system and independent of the conformation of the
Aβ oligomer strain/polymorph to be disassembled. To realize this MoA, the compound
RD2 was developed to stabilize Aβ monomers in their native intrinsically disordered
protein (IDP) conformation. RD2 has demonstrated already to directly eliminate soluble
Aβ oligomers in vitro and in vivo and to improve cognition or decelerate neurodegeneration
in four different animal models in four different laboratories. Here, we wanted to
test, if RD2 is able to disassemble Aβ oligomers obtained from AD patient derived
brain tissue.
Material and Methods: Aβ oligomers in AD patient derived brain tissue homogenates
were incubated with different concentrations of RD2 and control compounds. Aβ oligomer
concentrations were determined longitudinally by the sFIDA assay, a single-particle
sensitive method for quantitating protein oligomers and aggregates.
Results: RD2 concentration and incubation time-dependent reduction of Abeta-oligomer
concentration in AD patient brain derived homogenates was observed. Control compounds
did not reduce Aβ oligomer concentrations.
Conclusions: Incubation time and concentration dependent RD2 disassembly of Aβ oligomers
from human brain homogenate suggest a very efficient ability of RD2 to fulfill its
mode of action, namely the direct disassembly of Aβ oligomers into their Aβ monomer
building blocks. Kinetic analysis and the mode of action resemble very much that of
catalytic chaperones.
Altered expression of glymphatic system-related proteins in prion diseases: Implications
for the role of the glymphatic system in prion disease
Yong-Chan Kim, and Byung-Hoon Jeong
Korea Zoonosis Research Institute, Jeonbuk National University, Iksan, Republic of
Korea
Aims: Prion diseases are fatal and irreversible neurodegenerative diseases caused
by a pathogenic form of prion protein (PrPSc) derived from a cellular form of prion
protein (PrPC). Although several cellular mechanisms, including endoplasmic reticulum
(ER)-mediated degradation (ERAD), unfolded protein response (UPR) and autophagy, can
be activated to remove PrPSc, overactivation of these cellular mechanisms exacerbates
disease progression. Thus, identification of a novel therapeutic target is necessary.
Recent studies have reported that aquaporin 4 (AQP4) is dramatically upregulated in
the brains of several different prion diseases. Since AQP4 is a key protein of the
glymphatic system, which is the perivascular waste clearing system of the brain, and
since altered expression of AQP4 has been observed in prion diseases, the glymphatic
system may be associated with prion diseases. Thus, investigation of the association
between the glymphatic system and prion diseases is important.
Material and Methods: We investigated the expression pattern of glymphatic system-related
molecules in prion-infected mice at 7 months postinjection and sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease (CJD) patients by western blotting and immunohistochemistry (IHC). In addition,
we evaluated the protective effect of glymphatic system-activated drugs, including
dexmedetomidine and clonidine, in prion-infected mice by western blotting and survival
analysis.
Results: We identified altered band patterns of cleaved agrin and upregulation of
neurotrypsin in prion-infected mice and sporadic CJD patients. We found dramatic clearance
of PrPSc and amelioration of astrocytosis in dexmedetomidine- and clonidine-treated
prion-infected mice at 5 months postinjection. In addition, we observed a significantly
delayed incubation period in dexmedetomidine- and clonidine-treated prion-infected
mice.
Conclusions: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of novel glymphatic
system-related biomarkers and potential therapeutic substances in prion diseases.
Funded by: National Research Foundation of Korea
Grant number: 2021R1A2C1013213, 2022R1C1C2004792
Acknowledgement: Yong-Chan Kim was supported by the BK21 plus program in the Department
of Bioactive Material Sciences.
Large-scale lipidomic profiling identifies novel potential biomarkers for prion diseases
and highlights lipid raft-related pathways
Yong-Chan Kim, and Byung-Hoon Jeong
Korea Zoonosis Research Institute, Jeonbuk National University, Iksan, Republic of
Korea
Aims: Prion diseases are transmissible spongiform encephalopathies induced by the
abnormally-folded prion protein (PrPSc), which is derived from the normal prion protein
(PrPC). Previous studies have reported that lipid rafts play a pivotal role in the
conversion of PrPC into PrPSc, and several therapeutic strategies targeting lipids
have led to prolonged survival times in prion diseases. In addition, phosphatidylethanolamine,
a glycerophospholipid member, accelerated prion disease progression. Although several
studies have shown that prion diseases are significantly associated with lipids, lipidomic
analyses of prion diseases have not been reported thus far.
Material and Methods: We intraperitoneally injected phosphate-buffered saline (PBS)
or ME7 mouse prions into mice and sacrificed them at different time points (3 and
7 months) post-injection. To detect PrPSc in the mouse brain, we carried out western
blotting analysis of the left hemisphere of the brain. To identify potential novel
lipid biomarkers, we performed lipid extraction on the right hemisphere of the brain
and liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (LC/MS) to analyze the lipidomic profiling
between non-infected mice and prion-infected mice. Finally, we analyzed the altered
lipid-related pathways by a lipid pathway enrichment analysis (LIPEA).
Results: We identified a total of 43 and 75 novel potential biomarkers at 3 and 7
months in prion-infected mice compared to non-infected mice, respectively. Among these
novel potential biomarkers, approximately 75% of total lipids are glycerophospholipids.
In addition, altered lipids between the non-infected and prion-infected mice were
related to sphingolipid, glycerophospholipid and glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchor-related
pathways. In the present study, we found novel potential biomarkers and therapeutic
targets of prion disease.
Conclusions: To the best of our knowledge, this study reports the first large-scale
lipidomic profiling in prion diseases.
Funded by: National Research Foundation of Korea
Grant number: 2021R1A2C1013213, 2022R1C1C2004792
Acknowledgement: Yong-Chan Kim was supported by the BK21 plus program in the Department
of Bioactive Material Sciences.
Increasing incidence of Creutzfeldt-Jakob-disease in Austria – An epidemiological
Update
S. Klotza,b, Günther Regelsbergera,b, Thomas Ströbela,b, Romana Höftbergera,b, and
Ellen Gelpia,b
aDivision of Neuropathology and Neurochemistry, Department of Neurology, Medical University
of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; bAustrian Reference Center for Human Prion diseases (Österreichisches
Referenzzentrum zur Erfassung und Dokumentation menschlicher Prionen-Erkrankungen,
ÖRPE)
Aims: To report epidemiological facts on human transmissible spongiform encephalopathies
(TSEs) in Austria between 1996 and 2021.
Material and Methods: The Austrian Reference Centre for Human Prion Diseases (Österreichisches
Referenzzentrum zur Erfassung und Dokumentation menschlicher Prionen-Erkrankungen)
registers all cases of human TSEs in Austria since its establishment in 1996. The
collected data was evaluated to give epidemiological information.
Results: Over 6800 CSF samples have been analyzed for 14-3-3 protein between 1996
and 2021. Since 2017 the Real-Time Quaking Induced Conversion (RT-QuIC) assay was
added. The number of referrals for 14-3-3 protein analysis in CSF showed a constant
increase since 1996 with a mean of 122 referrals per year from 1996 to 2008, and of
375 from 2009 until 2021. More than 700 brains were examined neuropathologically due
to a suspicion of prion disease. The total number of definite human prion disease
cases in Austria between 1996 and 2021 was 391. The average yearly incidence from
1996 until 2021 was 1.91 per million inhabitants. When comparing the average yearly
incidence in the years from 1996–2008 and the more recent years from 2009 until 2021
we observed an increase of the yearly incidence from 1.49 to 2.33 cases per year.
In 2021 the incidence was at an all times high with 4.14 cases per 1 million inhabitants
per year. 92% of the cases were sporadic cases of Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (sCJD),
8% were genetic prion disease cases, and 5 cases of iatrogenic CJD have been registered.
There are no cases of variant CJD in Austria. The mean age at death from 1996 to 2021
was 67.8 years. 51.41% of patients were female and 48.59% were male. Frequent alternative
neuropathological diagnoses in suspect cases were Alzheimer’s disease, Lewy body disorders,
vascular encephalopathy, metabolic encephalopathies and viral or limbic encephalitis.
No false positive RT-QuIC results have been found.
Conclusions: The numbers of referrals for CSF analysis and also the yearly incidence
of prion disease cases showed an increase over time between 1996 and 2021. This is
likely due to an active surveillance of TSEs in Austria which is made possible by
the good collaboration between the treating neurologists, pathologists and neuropathologists.
Other contributing factors are an increase in awareness in the community and the implementation
of the RT-QuIC assay. The peak of a yearly incidence of 4.14 cases per million inhabitants
in 2021 needs further investigation.
Funded by: The ‘Austrian Reference Center for Human Prion diseases’ (Österreichisches
Referenzzentrum zur Erfassung und Dokumentation menschlicher Prionen-Erkrankungen)
is funded by the Austrian Federal Ministry for Social Affairs, Health, Nursing and
Consumer Protection
Grant number: /
Acknowledgement: We thank Prof. Gabor Kovacs and Prof. Herbert Budka, and all colleagues
for their involvement in CJD surveillance.
Scratch a downer cow: improving clinical diagnosis of atypical BSE in cattle
T. Konold, L. Phelan, L. Read, A. McKenna, J. Hills, and H. Abdu
Department of Pathology & Animal Sciences, APHA Weybridge, Addlestone, UK
Aims: Atypical Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) is a supposedly spontaneous
prion disease further classified as H-type or L-type BSE, which occurs sporadically
in older cattle and is usually confirmed in fallen stock cattle. Studies to investigate
tissue distribution of the agent are based on experimental disease because of the
lack of reported clinical suspects in the field. Although the clinical presentation
has been described in the past in experimentally inoculated cattle, the subsequent
studies presented here aimed to find consistent clinical markers that may help farmers
and veterinarians to consider atypical BSE in the suspect diagnosis of diseased cattle
so that they can be presented for more detailed postmortem examination and tissue
collection.
Material and Methods: In two separate experiments, two groups with two and three Holstein-Friesian
calves respectively were each inoculated intracerebrally with H-type and L-type BSE
brain inoculum and monitored clinically until clinical end-stage. Disease was confirmed
by Western Immunoblot. A blood sample was collected from five animals for blood biochemistry.
Results: All cattle developed atypical BSE, confirmed by Western immunoblot, with
a survival time of 14 months (H-type) and 15 months (L-type) respectively. Eight cattle
displayed the nervous syndrome, and only two cattle (both L-type) developed the dull
syndrome. Most consistent clinical signs were difficulty getting up (four of five
H-type and all five L-type BSE cases) leading to recumbency in three cattle, ataxia/
dysmetria in all cattle and a positive scratch test (four of five H- and L-type BSE
cases each, also in recumbent cattle) whereby scratching of the tail head resulted
in head or lip movement. All five cattle (three H-type, two L-type), which had a blood
sample taken, presented with a creatine kinase level above the upper normal limit
of 211 IU/l.
Conclusions: Naturally occurring atypical BSE cases, if experimentally produced disease
mimics natural disease, will present as ‘downer cows’, with animals unable to get
up and creatine kinase levels likely to be increased suggestive of muscle trauma.
Neurological gait abnormalities are likely to precede recumbency. In the absence of
a clear cause, such as hypocalcaemia, and the presence of a positive scratch test,
atypical BSE should be considered in the differential diagnosis of downer cows.
Funded by: Grant number: SE1961, SE1962
Acknowledgement: We thank the Department of Food, Environment and Rural Affairs for
funding and staff at the Department of Pathology and Animal Sciences for inoculation,
animal husbandry and tissue collection at necropsy.
Aggregation and misassembly of the Disrupted-in-schizophrenia 1 (DISC1) protein defines
a subset of patients with schizophrenia and recurrent affective disorders
Carsten Korth
Department Neuropathology, University of Düsseldorf, Germany
Aims: To investigate the biological significance of protein aggregation and misassembly
in major psychiatric diseases.
Material and Methods: Cell-based and cell-free techniques of recombinant protein expression.
Immunological detection assays. Generation of a transgenic rat modestly overexpressing
the full-length, non-mutant DISC1 protein (tgDISC1 rat), its behavioral, neurochemical,
neuropathological and biochemical analysis. Analysis of post mortem brains and ante
mortem cerebrospinal fluid from patients with schiophrenia and healthy controls with
immunological techniques.
Results:
DISC1 aggregates were demonstrated in a subset of patients with schizopohrenia both
ante mortem in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in fM concentrations, and in post mortem
brains
the tgDISC1 rat models DISC1 protein aggregates and displays changes in dopamine homeostasis,
behavioral and neuroanatomical changes consistent with schizophrenia
the tgDISC1 rat displays a immunological signature translatable to patients with schizophrenia.
Conclusions: Protein misassembly and aggregation is not limited to neurodegenerative
diseases and can be, although in a subtle way, associated to chronic mental illness
without causing massive cell death. DISC1 protein misassembly or aggregation is a
specific feature for a subset of patients with schizophrenia („DISC1opathies“), and
possibly other patients with recurrent affective disorders. The tgDISC1 rat is a valid
model of this subset allowing more extensive direct translational studies in sporadic
DISC1opathies and the development of causative pharmacological treatments.
Funded by: DFG (KO1679/3-1), BMBF (01EW1003), EU-FP7 (#607616), NARSAD (#20350)
Acknowledgements: Coauthors Svenja Trossbach, Marlene Pils, Oliver Bannach, Julia
Rutsch, Dieter Willbold, Sophie Erhardt, Jospeh Huston, Ruter Leliveld, Philipp Ottis,
An-Li Wang, Hannah Hamburg, Hans-Jürgen Bidmon, Peter Falkai, Andrea Schmitt, Ovidiu
Popa, Philip Seeman, Laura Hecher, Verian Bader, Ingrid Prikulis, et al.
Abeta dimers are antiprions that interfere with seeded nucleation in vitro and in
vivo
Carsten Kortha, Else van Gerresheima, Andreas Müller-Schiffmanna, Arne Herringb, Kathy
Keyvanib, Lothar Gremerc, and Sandra Schäbled
aDepartement Neuropathology, University of Düsseldorf, Germany; bDepartment Neuropathology,
University of Essen, Germany; cDepartment of Physical Biology, University of Düsseldorf,
Germany; dDepartment of Comparative Psychology, University of Düsseldorf, Germany
Aims: To investigate the interaction of soluble Abeta oligomers with insoluble Abeta,
and on Abeta prion spreading, in vitro and in vivo.
Material and Methods: The tgDimer mouse which is transgenic for Thy1-APPS679C/Swe
and expresses exclusively Abeta S8C dimers was crossed to tgCRND8 mice, as well as
to tgGFAP-luciferase mice. Mice were analyzed by immunohistochemistry (IHC), stereology
and biochemistry (post mortem) as well as bioluminescence imaging (using luciferin)
and behavior (CognitionWall; ante mortem). For cell-free in vitro experiments, Abeta42
wildtype and Abeta42 S8C were synthesized and purified, before subjection to a thioflavinT
test.
Results:
Genetic crossing of tgDimer with tgCRND8 mice led to a decrease number of plaques
whereas the size of the plaques remained similar.
Inoculation of tgDimer/GFAP-luc mice with Abeta prions purified from tgCRND8 mice
did not lead to any evidence of Abeta prion spreading or astrogliosis as seen by absent
bioluminescence or IHC, whereas the positive control, tgAPP23 mice, displayed Abeta
prion spreading oafter inoculation with the same inoculum as previously established.
in the cell-free thioflavin T assay, Abeta S8C dimers inhibited Abeta wildtype aggregation
at substochiometric concentrations.
Conclusions: Abeta S8C dimers inhibit nucleation/seeding of Abeta plaques, but not
their growth. The variable interaction of Abeta dimers with insoluble Abeta can therefore
be a contributing factor in the heterogeneity of Abeta neuropathology in Alzheimer’s
disease. Abeta S8C dimers are homologous antiprions, adapting a concept established
in the yeast prion field to mammalian prions. Likely, more homologous or heterologous
antiprions exist that modulate actively the neuropathology and disease course of Alzheimer’s
disease
Funded by: DFG KO1679 10–1
Fast Axonal Transport of PrPSc
Sam M. Koshya, Ronald A. Shikiyaa, Anthony E. Kincaidb, and Jason C. Bartza
aMedical Microbiology and Immunology, Creighton University, Omaha, NE, USA; bDepartment
of Pharmacy Science, School of Pharmacy Science and Health Professions, Creighton
University, Omaha, NE, USA
Aims: Current studies indicate PrPScslow axonal transport based on immunohistochemistry,
immunoblot analysis of tissue homogenates, detection of spongiosis, or the presence
of prion infectivity using animal bioassay. A shortcoming of these methods is that
they have low sensitivity and measure both inoculum PrPScand newly replicated PrPSc,
confounding the observed PrPSctransport rates. In this study, we aim to:
Utilize highly sensitive PMCA to measure transport of inoculum PrPScin a replication
deficient system to more accurately calculate PrPSctransport rate.
Investigate the role of PrPCin PrPScaxonal transport.
Material and Methods: Hamster-adapted 263 K scrapie PrPScwas unilaterally inoculated
into mouse sciatic nerve (ScN). At specified timepoints post-inoculation (p.i.), ScN,
spinal cord (SC) segments, and midbrain were harvested. 10% tissue homogenates or
HY TME brain homogenate dilutions were seeded into uninfected hamster or mouse brain
substrate, underwent PMCA, and analyzed by immunoblot. The above tissue structures
were dissected from an adult mouse and the distance between structures was determined.
PrPSctransport rate was determined based on the distance between structures and the
timepoint of PrPScsignal appearance in those structures.
Results: PMCA was able to detect down to 5 × 10–12μg eq. of HY hamster PrPScseed after
two rounds while negative control unseeded PCMA reactions failed to amplify PrPSc.
After two PMCA rounds, we failed to detect PrPScin the uninoculated ScN, cervical
SC, or midbrain at 24 hours p.i. We detected PrPScin the inoculated ScN, lumbar SC,
and thoracic SC at 24 hours p.i. Based on a distance of 25 mm from the inoculation
point to the lumbar SC, PrPSctransport rate was calculated as greater than 25 mm/day.
Conclusions: PMCA is more sensitive than animal bioassay and in combination for its
specificity for amplification of hamster PrPScallowed for detection of inoculum PrPScwithin
tissues at earlier timepoints compared to previous studies. PMCA detection of PrPScin
the lumbar SC at 24 hours p.i. indicates a rate of PrPSctransport of at least 25 mm/day,
well above established slow transport rates (0.3–8 mm/day). Based on this, we hypothesize
that PrPScuses fast axonal transport, having implications for treatment and mitigation.
Funded by: NIH NINDS
Grant number: 1R01NS107246
Acknowledgement: We thank Creighton University Animal Resource Facility Staff for
excellent animal care.
Photodynamic inactivation of prions reduces infectivity in mouse bioassay but not
seeding activity in RT-QuIC.
Marie Kostelanska, Tibor Mosko, Zdenka Backovska Hanusova, and Karel Holada
Institute of Immunology and Microbiology, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University
in Prague, Czech Republic
Aims: Prions are the most resistant infectious agents to the conventional sterilization
procedures. Effective techniques recommended for prion sterilization include highly
corrosive chemicals like 2% NaClO or 1 M NaOH. These are incompatible with most delicate
medical tools. We have previously demonstrated that nontoxic disulfonated hydroxyaluminium
phtalocyanine (AlPcOH(SO3)2) can be used to inactivate prions by photodynamic inactivation
(PDI). The aim of this study was to compare the effectiveness of prion inactivation
in the mouse model and in RT-QuIC assay.
Material and Methods: The PDI was performed on 1% RML strain of prions or control
CD1 mouse brain homogenates (BH) treated with 25 µg ml−1of AlPcOH(SO3)2 and exposed
to red light (18 min, 4 × 2.5 W LED). Control RML inoculums was prepared similarly
but was kept in the dark. In mouse bioassay, CD1 female mice (n = 10) were intracerebrally
inoculated with a 25 µl of AlPcOH(SO3)2-light treated RML BH or control RML BH containing
AlPcOH(SO3)2 but not irradiated by light. Other controls included mice (n = 5) inoculated
with untreated, uninfectious CD1 BH or CD1 BH containing AlPcOH(SO3)2 either irradiated
or nonirradiated. The animals were sacrificed after reaching the terminal disease
phase. The presence of PrPresin mouse brains was detected by WB and seeding activity
by second generation RT-QuIC assay using end point dilution.
Results: Mice inoculated with PDI-treated RML BH (at 10–2dilution) survived significantly
longer (204 ± 23 days) than mice inoculated with the BH containing an identical amount
of AlPcOH(SO3)2, that was not exposed to light (165 ± 11 days). Their survival was
also significantly longer than that of mice inoculated with straight 10–2, 10–3and
10–4dilutions of the RML BH, which survived 169 ± 11, 165 ± 12 and 176 ± 15 days respectively.
Comparison of survival time based on the regression line suggested a decrease in the
prion infectivity titer of the RML BH of more than 4 orders of magnitude after PDI
treatment. In contrast, seeding activity of PDI-treated RML BH in RT-QuIC assay decreased
less than half log10. AlPcOH(SO3)2 did not have any effect on seeding activity of
control CD1 or RML BH (light/dark).
Conclusions: We have proved the effectiveness of the PDI of prions by bioassay (4
log10 decrease) and by WB. The seeding activity in RT-QuIC assay did not correspond
to decrease of infectivity or loss of PrPresanalyzed by WB after PDI. This suggests
that infectivity and seeding activity may not be the properties of prions tied strongly
together.
Funded by: Czech health research council (AZV ČR)
Grant number: NV18-04-00179
Detection of Chronic Wasting Disease Muscle Tissue by PMCA RT-QuIC
Caitlyn N. Krafta, David W. Bissingerb, Clare E. Hooverc, Nathaniel D. Denkersa, Candace
K. Mathiasona, and Edward A. Hoovera
aPrion Research Center, Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology, College
of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins,
Colorado, USA; bSchool of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, Davis,
CA, US; cAstraZeneca Inc., Waltham, Massachusetts, USA
Aims: Prion diseases affecting animals that are consumed by humans pose a significant
public health risk – most notable being bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or Mad Cow
Disease. Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) affects moose, elk, and deer, all of which
are consumed by humans. While evidence of CWD transmission to humans has not been
demonstrated, establishing which muscles contain CWD prions is of high interest. Conventional
assays, such as immunohistochemistry (IHC) and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA),
are inadequate in detecting the low concentration of prions found outside neural or
lymphatic tissues. Here we combined two prion amplification assays–protein misfolding
cyclic amplification (PMCA) and real-time quaking induced conversion (RT-QuIC) to
demonstrate the presence of prion seeding activity in muscles throughout the body
of white-tailed deer.
Material and Methods: Hamstring and tongue were collected post-mortem from 31 CWD-inoculated
white-tailed deer. Five additional muscles (neck, backstrap, tenderloin, calf, rump)
were collected from a subset of deer (n = 7). All tissues were homogenized at 10%
(w/v) in 1X PBS. For PMCA, 5 rounds of amplification were run using cervidized transgenic
mice (Tg(CerPrP) 5037) normal brain homogenate as substrate. PMCA products were diluted
in 0.1% SDS and analyzed by RT-QuIC. Samples were also analyzed by RT-QuIC, with and
without an iron oxide bead (IOB) extraction. Truncated recombinant Syrian hamster
prion protein (rhaPrP; 90–231) was used as substrate. In attempt to detect PrPCWD,
IHC was performed on select samples using the BAR-224 antibody.
Results: Hamstring muscles were analyzed using PMCA/RT-QuIC where seeding activity
was detected in 16 of 31 (51.6%) samples. Only 3 of 31 (9.7%) samples tested positive
by IOB or standard RT-QuIC with no prion deposition detectable by IHC. Tongue from
select deer was then analyzed by PMCA-RT-QuIC, which demonstrated prion seeding activity
in 12 of 13 (92.31%) samples. IOB and standard RT-QuIC each detected positivity in
8 of 13 (61.5%) samples yet IHC remained negative. Other muscles analyzed by PMCA-QuIC
revealed seeding activity in 4 of 7 (57.1%) backstrap and tenderloins, 3 of 7 (42.8%)
rump, 2 of 5 (40%) calf, and 1 of 5 (20%) neck samples. Negative deer (n = 4) muscles
remained negative in all assays.
Conclusions: We conclude that PMCA combined with RT-QuIC allowed for better detection
of prions in the muscles of CWD-positive deer, with tongue exhibiting the most consistent
seeding activity. Overall, this data provides added knowledge to the extent of CWD
prion distribution within white-tailed deer muscles.
Funded by: This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants
RO1-NS061902-09 R to EAH, PO1-AI077774 to EAH, and R01-AI112956-06 to CKM
Acknowledgement: We abundantly thank Sallie Dahmes at WASCO and David Osborn and Gino
D’Angelo at the University of Georgia Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources
for their long standing support of this work through provision of the hand-raised,
CWD-free, white-tailed deer used in these studies.
Nasal swab detection of prion shedding in CWD-infected white-tailed
Caitlyn N. Kraft, Nathaniel D. Denkers, Candace K. Mathiason, and Edward A. Hoover
Prion Research Center, Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology, College
of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins,
Colorado, USA
Aims: The continuing spread of chronic wasting disease (CWD) reinforces the pressing
need for rapid detection of CWD prions shed by live cervids with minimally invasive
methods. Prion replication in the nasal olfactory mucosa has been demonstrated by
studies in deer, elk, and hamsters, yet the temporal profile of CWD prion shedding
in nasal secretions has not been documented. Here we report a longitudinal study of
nasal prion shedding using serial nasal swabs correlated to longitudinal tonsil biopsies
and terminal tissues from white-tailed deer orally exposed to low doses of CWD prions.
Material and Methods: White tailed deer were inoculated per os (PO) with either 10
mg, 1 mg, or 300ng of CWD positive brain or saliva containing equivalent amounts of
prion seeding activity assessed by real-time quaking induced conversion (RT-QuIC).
Tonsil biopsies and nasal swabs were collected every 2 or 3 months post-inoculation
throughout the duration of the study. Four swabs were collected at each timepoint
(2 per nostril), and suspended in 1 mL 1X PBS at time of collection, and then spun
to collect fluids and nasal mucosal cells. Samples were assayed by iron-oxide magnetic
extraction and real-time quaking induced conversion (IOME RT-QuIC) using truncated
Syrian hamster prion protein (rhaPrP; 90–231) as substrate. We correlated the RT-QuIC
findings with the results of longitudinal tonsil biopsies and terminal tissue assays.
Results: We first detected nasal shedding of prion seeding activity 10 of the 18 deer
(3–16 months; mean = 9.1) shortly after the first detection of RT-QuIC positivity
in tonsil biopsies. Detectable nasal shedding persisted thereafter in 9 of the 10
animals. Nasal swabs remained negative in remaining 8 deer, even though all were CWD-infected
as determined by tonsil biopsies and terminal tissue assays. Positive seeding activity
was demonstrated in obex, frontal cortex, and olfactory bulb of all deer that had
positive nasal swab results. Furthermore, deer near the endpoint of clinical disease
shed more frequently. Nasal shedding frequency did not appear to vary among the narrow
range of CWD prion dose administered. Control material inoculated deer (n = 2) remained
negative in all assays at all time periods.
Conclusions: CWD prion seeding activity can be detected in nasal secretions from CWD
infected deer using minimally invasive nasal swab sampling and IOME RT-QuIC. Nasal
shedding of prion seeding activity occurred shortly after seeding activity was detected
in tonsil in over half the animals studied, and became most consistent in later, near
clinical phases of CWD infection when brain infection was present.
Funded by: This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants
RO1-NS061902-09 R to EAH, PO1-AI077774 to EAH, and R01-AI112956-06 to CKM.
Acknowledgement: We abundantly thank Sallie Dahmes at WASCO and David Osborn and Gino
D’Angelo at the University of Georgia Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources
for their long standing support of this work through provision of the hand-raised,
CWD-free, white-tailed deer used in these studies.
High resolution structures of infectious mammalian prions reveal a common prion fold
Allison Krausa, Forrest Hoytb, Heidi G. Standkea, Efrosini Artikisc, Cindi L. Schwartzb,
Bryan Hansenb, Kunpeng Lia, Andrew G. Hughsonc, Matteo Mancaa, Olivia R. Thomasa,
Gregory J. Raymondc, Brent Racec, Gerald S. Baronc, Byron Caugheyc
aDepartment of Pathology and Cleveland Center for Membrane and Structural Biology,
Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, OH, USA; bResearch
Technologies Branch, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Hamilton, MT, USA; cLaboratory
of Persistent Viral Diseases, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Hamilton, MT, USA
Aims: Protein-based self-propagation is a shared characteristic of the disease-related
misfolded proteins of prion, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases, among others. High
resolution structures are now available for disease-specific tau and -synuclein fibrils,
and here, we describe high resolution structures of ex vivo and highly infectious
PrP prions.
Material and Methods: We derived 263 K and aRML prions from the brains of clinically
ill animals, and determined their titres using mouse bioassays. We used cryogenic-electron
microscopy (cryo-EM) and helical reconstruction techniques to achieve high resolution
cryo-EM maps with which to build de novo atomic models.
Results: High resolution structures of 263 K and aRML prion fibrils indicated surprisingly
conserved organizational topologies with significant and strain-specific variability
of motifs therein. Shared features between 263 K and aRML strains include the cross-section
of the fibril being comprised of a single polypeptide backbone, with monomers being
stacked 4.9 Å apart to form the parallel in register intermolecular -sheet fibril
architecture. To accommodate the up to 137 amino acid sequence in the core, the polypeptide
backbone is organized as a series of -sheets and loops arranged as three -arches,
with a central -strand dividing N and C-terminal lobes. While a single monomer comprises
the cross-section, variations in the planarity of the monomer leads to uneven exposed
surfaces at the fibril ends where incoming monomers will be refolded. Additional densities
were also observed outside the protein amyloid core for both 263 K and aRML prions,
and outside of those attributable to glycan and glycolipid anchor placement in 263 K
prions, being most often directly adjacent to cationic residues. The nature of these
densities is as of yet unclear, however, such densities also occur adjacent to the
polybasic cluster at amino acids 100–110, a region previously implicated as a potential
cofactor coordination site, and critical modulator in the generation of de novo infectious
prions.
Conclusions: Our evidence, together with other recent descriptions of murine prion
structures, indicates that infectious prions are amyloids with large protease-resistant
cores organized as parallel in register intermolecular -sheet architectures. Collectively,
rodent prions share a common modular arrangement of their amyloid cores, with motif
variations that are specific to the strain. This is suggestive that key structural
domains of ex vivo prions are not inherently encoded in the occurrence of high -sheet,
parallel in register assemblies – instead – key structural domains of disease causing
prions underpin the replication and propagation characteristics of prion strains in
ways that are linked to the divergent pathogenic outcomes.
Funded by: This work was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the NIAID;
Mary Hilderman Smith, Zoë Smith Jaye, and Jenny Smith Unruh in memory of Jeffrey Smith;
and the Britton Fund, and CWRU School of Medicine.
Tau seeds precede earliest Alzheimer’s changes and are prevalent in synucleinopathies
and other neurodegenerative diseases
Matteo Mancaa*, Heidi G. Standkea*, Mikayla L. Huntleya, Olivia R. Thomasa, Christina
D. Orrúb, Andrew G. Hughsonb, Yongya Kimc, Annie Hinikerc, David G. Coughlinc, Douglas
Galaskoc, and Allison Krausa
aDepartment of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland,
OH, United States 44,106; bRocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Hamilton, MT 59840; cDepartment
of Neurosciences, University of California San Diego
Aims: Neurofibrillary tau tangles are a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease neuropathological
change. However, it remains largely unclear how distinctive Alzheimer’s disease tau
seeds (i.e. 3 R/4R) correlate with histological indicators of tau accumulation. Furthermore,
AD tau co-pathology is thought to influence features and clinical progression of other
neurodegenerative diseases including Lewy body disease; yet direct and reliable measurements
of different types of tau seeds in such diseases is an unmet need.
Material and Methods: Here, we use tau real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC)
assays to selectively quantitate 3 R/4R tau seeds in the frontal lobe as a brain region
that accumulates histologically identifiable tau pathology at late-stage disease.
Results: Seed quantitation across a spectrum of neurodegenerative disease cases and
controls indicate tau seeding activity can be detected well before accompanying histopathological
indication of tau deposits and even prior to the earliest evidence of Alzheimer’s
related tau accumulation anywhere in the brain. In addition, Alzheimer’s tau seeds
occur in all cases evaluated here inclusive of primary synucleinopathies, frontotemporal
lobar degeneration and age-comparable controls albeit at multi-log lower levels than
Alzheimer’s cases. α-synuclein seeding activity confirmed synucleinopathy cases and
further indicated the co-occurrence of α-synuclein seeds in some Alzheimer’s disease
and primary tauopathy cases. Our analysis indicates that tau seeds in the mid-frontal
lobe correlate with the overall Braak tau stage, Alzheimer’s disease neuropathologic
change, and frontal lobe digital quantitative immunohistochemistry measurements supporting
the quantitative predictive value of tau RT-QuIC assays. Our data also indicates 3 R/4R
tau seeds are elevated in female cases compared to males at higher (≥ IV) Braak stages,
and that, in the cases of synucleinopathy, 3 R/4R tau seeding levels differ with Lewy
body stage.
Conclusions: This study suggests 3 R/4R tau seeds are widespread even prior to the
earliest stages of Alzheimer’s disease changes, including in normal individuals, and
are prevalent across multiple neurodegenerative diseases as specific biomarkers to
further define disease subtypes.
Funded by: This work was supported by Biomarkers Across Neurodegenerative Diseases
(BAND), a partnership between the Alzheimer’s Association, The Michael J. Fox Foundation
for Parkinson’s Research, The Weston Brain Institute, Alzheimer’s Research UK (to
A.K., D.G.). D.C. is supported by NINDS NS120038 and D.C., D.G. by NIA AG062429, A.H.
by an Alzheimer’s Association AACSF Research Grant and A.K. by BAND, NIH/NINDS and
NIA (R01NS118760 and R01AG067607), Case Western Reserve University, the Britton Fund,
and the Clifford V. Harding and Mina K. Chung Professorship in Pathology. This work
was supported in part by the Intramural Research Program of the NIAID, NIH (C.D.O.,
A.G.H.).
Grant number: As indicated above under funding.
Acknowledgement: We thank the families and donors who have made this research possible;
Jeff Metcalf at the UCSD Shiley-Marcos Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center for their
assistance identifying and obtaining the tissue for this study; Dr. Lawrence Hansen
for expert neuropathological characterization; Dr. Byron Caughey and Dr. Brent Race
for the provision of tau knock-out brain tissue.
Optimizing inactivation of CWD prions with humic acid
Alsu Kuznetsovab, Isa Dzhabrailova,b*, Anthony Nessa,b, Debbie McKenziea,b, and Judd
Aikenb,c
a Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada;
b Centre for Prions and Protein Folding Diseases, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada; c Department
of Agricultural, Food and Nutritional Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta,
Canada * Presenting Author
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is an environmentally transmissible prion disease
of cervids. The shedding of CWD prions by infected animals presents a challenge for
CWD management, as prions can contaminate the environment, remaining bioavailable
for years. Soil decontamination protocols used to date are destructive and expensive,
often requiring further land reclamation following the procedure, and not readily
expandable to large swaths of land. We have shown that one of soil organic matter
compounds, humic acids (HA), have anti-prion properties, making them capable of inactivating
prions and reducing infectivity. Since the composition of humic substances is variable,
we are investigating the biochemical properties of HA, and determining which may enhance
prion inactivation. Our work helps elucidate the optimal conditions for CWD prion
inactivation, allowing us to better understand the effect of HA outside of controlled
laboratory conditions.
Material and Methods: CWD infected brain homogenates were incubated with a variety
of HA solutions and PrPCWDlevels detected by immunoblotting. We compared commercially
available HA with HA extracted from different soil horizons for their ability to degrade
CWD prions. HA was fractioned by molecular weight to determine if an HA fraction optimally
inactivates prions. Prion inactivation was compared at varying temperatures and incubation
lengths, both in solution and following prion adsorption to a surface.
Results: HA incubation with CWD brain homogenates reduces PrPCWDsignal irrespective
of temperature and whether PrP is adsorbed to soil or wood chips. The HA effect was
immediate but increased with exposure times. Natural soils showed better prion inactivation,
likely due to a higher carbon content, and our fractionation studies revealved higher
molecular weight HA to be most efficient at inactivating PrPCWD.
Conclusions: Humic substances present a unique soil remediation strategy for CWD prion
infected soil, providing the opportunity to inactivate prions while simultaneously
improving soil properties as HA is commonly used in fertilizer. We demonstrate conditions
which may serve to enhance HA prion inactivation. Our work helps understand the optimal
conditions for CWD prion inactivation and may be a steppingstone for environmentally
compatible interventions, aimed at reducing prion contamination of endemic soils.
Funded by: NFRFEGrant number: 2019–00943
PrPCWDdetection in soils from CWD endemic regions
Alsu Kuznetsovaa,b, Erin Moffatb, Trent Bollingerb, Debbie McKenziec, and Judd M.
Aikenc
aDepartment of Renewable Resources, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada; bUniversity
of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, Canada; cCentre for Prions and Protein Folding Diseases,
University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a fatal, transmissible prion disease affecting
free ranging and farmed cervids. One remarkable property of CWD prions is their persistence
in external environments and their ability to remain infectious for years. Soils are
a natural environmental reservoir of shed CWD prions. Prion detection in soils is
challenging as recovery of soil-bound PrPCWDbecomes more difficult with time. PrPCWDdetection
in soils is necessary for identifying CWD contaminated lands. The aim of this study
is to develop a reliable method to detect PrPCWDin soils from CWD-endemic regions.
Materials and Methods: Soil samples were collected from CWD-endemic regions with high
prevalence level of disease (South Saskatchewan, Canada); sites were distinguished
as with or without recent deer activity based on camera monitoring. Prions were extracted
from soils with an SDS-buffer and used as a seed in uninfected brain homogenates (from
transgenic cervidized mice) for serial PMCA. After 4–5 rounds of PMCA, the amplification
products were PK-digested and analyzed by immunoblot for PrPCWD. To define the sensitivity
of the assay, dilutions of CWD infectious brain homogenates were spiked into soils
(CWD-negative region). PrPCWDspiked into soil was detectable after 3 rounds of PMCA
at 10–6dilution after 1-day of incubation with soil and at 10–3after 15-weeks of incubation
with soil.
Results: Soils from the high prevalence CWD-endemic region (prairie Chernozems and
alluvial soils) were collected near the stations for deer activity monitoring. A total
of 15 soils from farmlands and natural landscapes sites with and without recent deer
activity were sampled. PrPCWDwas detected in 11 of the 15 soils sampled. Sites known
to have recent deer activity accounted for most of the positive soils.
Conclusions: We can detect CWD prions from soils from CWD-endemic regions. This represents
a significant improvement in soil-bound PrPCWDdetection benefiting both surveillance
and mitigation approaches.
Funded by: North Dakota Fish and Game Department, RDAR (#2022N067RC), APRI-AB Innovates
(CWD-RP-2122007_30), Genome Canada and Genome Alberta
Acknowledgement: We thank our funding agencies for supporting this research
Comparison of PMCA performance using identical sets of vCJD tissue homogentes spiked
into blood components
Kaetan Ladhani, and Jillian K Cooper
The National Institute for Biological Standards and Controls (NIBSC), Blanche Lane,
SouthMimms, United Kingdon, EN6 3QG
Aims: Directly compare the performance of laboratories performing PMCA for the detection
of vCJD in blood using a) Standard tissue homogenates b) Tissue homogenates spiked
into normal donor blood components.
Assess the impact of different seed concentration steps used by laboratories on assay
sensitivity and specificity.
Investigate different methods used for seed concentration ‘in house’.
Material and Methods: We have generated standards from vCJD tissues (brain and spleen)
that have been widely used for the assessment of methods used to detect PrPSc. Using
non-UK sourced blood spiked with serially diluted vCJD tissues, provided blinded to
tester, we have established test sensitivity with these common sample sets. A large
number of individual normal blood donor blood components have been generated for the
assessment of specificity.
Different approaches are used for initial concentration of the seed material used
for the PMCA assay. We have compared these both externally through the analysis of
spiked panels as well as in house.
Results: Using panels of vCJD tissues spiked into blood components we have independently
assessed the performance of laboratories using PMCA for the detection of vCJD and
compared sensitivity to laboratories using direct detection methods.
Conclusions: Standard sample sets allow direct comparison of method performance and
play an important role in monitoring the progress of method establishment. These reagents
are available to laboratories for independent assessment.
Funded by:/Grant number: National Institute for Health Research Policy Research Programme
Project PR-R17-0916-13,007
Second passage of scrapie in white-tailed deer is discernable from chronic wasting
disease.
Zoe J. Lamberta,b,c, M. Heather West Greenleea, Eric D. Cassmannb, and Justin J. Greenleeb
aDepartment of Biomedical Sciences, Iowa State University College of Veterinary Medicine,
Ames, USA; bVirus and Prion Research Unit, National Animal Disease Center, Agricultural
Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Ames, USA; cOak Ridge Institute
for Science and Education, Oak Ridge, USA
Aims: White-tailed deer (WTD) are susceptible to the scrapie agent from sheep after
oronasal inoculation. Upon initial passage from sheep, 100% of inoculated deer developed
disease. Western-blot profiles were tissue dependent: profiles from cerebrum and retina
were similar to the scrapie inoculum, whereas brainstem and lymph node appeared CWD-like.
The purpose of this study was to examine how the agent of scrapie in WTD may adapt
following subsequent passage in WTD and determine if it can be differentiated from
CWD.
Material and Methods: The inoculum was brain homogenate from a WTD that was challenged
with classical scrapie from a sheep (ARQ/ARQ genotype) and developed clinical signs
at 32.5 months post inoculation. Three WTD received 1 mL of 10% w/v obex inoculum
oronasally, four received 1 mL of 10% w/v cerebrum intranasally. The negative control
animal received no inoculum. Deer were euthanized and necropsied following the development
of clinical signs, including weight loss, hair loss, excessive salivation, diarrhea,
and progressive weakness. Enzyme immunoassay (IDEXX), western blot, and immunohistochemistry
using the primary antibodies Sha 31, 12B2 and F99 were used. Cervidized mice (Tg12)
were inoculated with material from WTD in each group.
Results: All inoculated WTD displayed clinical disease and were positive for abnormal
prion protein by enzyme immunoassay. The average survival time of the obex-inoculated
group was 24.1 months post-inoculation, while that of the cerebrum-inoculated group
was 29.2 months post-inoculation. Both groups had shorter incubation times compared
to the inoculum donor (32.5 months). Western blotting of retinas from all WTD (second
pass) resulted in a similar molecular profile as the retinas of WTD that were inoculated
with the agent of scrapie from sheep (first pass). Immunohistochemical staining also
was similar between inoculation groups and the initial passage from sheep, but different
from WTD inoculated with the agent of CWD. Following bioassays in cervidized mice
(Tg12), all incubation periods were over 300 days, substantially longer than the approximately
150 day incubation period typical with CWD isolates.
Conclusions: Based upon analysis of retinal tissues, it is possible to differentiate
the agents of scrapie and CWD in WTD by both western blot and immunohistochemistry.
Bioassay in cervidized mice further supports this based on incubation periods of WTD-scrapie
being approximately twice that of WTD CWD.
Funded by: This research was funded in its entirety by congressionally appropriated
funds to the United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service.
The funders of the work did not influence study design, data collection and analysis,
decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. This research was supported
in part by an appointment to the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) Research Participation
Program administered by the Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE)
through an interagency agreement between the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). ORISE is managed by ORAU under DOE contract
number DE-SC0014664. All opinions expressed in this paper are the author’s and do
not necessarily reflect the policies and views of USDA, ARS, DOE, or ORAU/ORISE.
Grant number: DOE contract number DE-SC0014664
Doxycycline rescues recognition memory and circadian motor rhythmicity but does not
prevent terminal disease in fatal familial insomnia mice
Giada Lavignaa, Antonio Masonea, Ihssane Bouybayounea, Ilaria Bertania, Jacopo Lucchettib,
Marco Gobbib, Luca Porcuc, Stefano Zordand, Mara Rigamontid, Luca Imerie, Elena Restellia,
and Roberto Chiesaa
aDepartment of Neuroscience, Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario Negri, Milan,
Italy; bDepartment of Molecular Biochemistry and Pharmacology, Istituto di Ricerche
Farmacologiche Mario Negri, Milan, Italy; cDepartment of Oncology, Istituto di Ricerche
Farmacologiche Mario Negri, Milan, Italy; dTecniplast SpA, Buguggiate, Italy; eDepartment
of Health Sciences, University of Milan, Milan, Italy
Aims: Fatal familial insomnia (FFI) is a dominantly inherited prion disease linked
to the D178N mutation in the gene encoding the prion protein (PrP). Symptoms, including
insomnia, memory loss and motor abnormalities, appear around 50 years of age, leading
to death within two years. No treatment is available. A ten-year clinical trial of
doxycycline (doxy) is under way in healthy individuals at risk of FFI to test whether
presymptomatic doxy prevents or delays the onset of disease. To assess the drug’s
effect in a tractable disease model, we used Tg(FFI-26) mice, which accumulate aggregated
and protease-resistant PrP in their brains and develop a fatal neurological illness
highly reminiscent of FFI.
Material and Methods: Mice were treated daily with 10 mg/kg doxy starting from a presymptomatic
stage for twenty weeks. Motor function was assessed periodically by the beam walking
and accelerating rotarod tests; memory was assessed by the novel object recognition
test; onset and progression of neurological illness were scored with a set of objective
criteria; circadian motor activity was measured using Digital Ventilated Cages. Detergent
insolubility and protease resistance were used to assess the effect of the treatment
on the biochemical properties of mutant PrP. Immunohistochemistry was used to assess
gliosis.
Results: Doxy rescued memory deficits and restored circadian motor rhythmicity in
Tg(FFI-26) mice. However, it did not prevent the onset and progression of motor dysfunction,
clinical signs and progression to terminal disease. Doxy did not change the amount
of aggregated and protease-resistant PrP, but reduced microglial activation in the
hippocampus.
Conclusions: Presymptomatic doxy treatment rescues cognitive impairment and the motor
correlates of sleep dysfunction in Tg(FFI-26) mice but does not prevent fatal disease.
Funded by: Fondazione Telethon Italy, the EC and the Italian Ministry of Health.
Grant number: GGP10208, ERARE14-fp-097 – CHAPRION, RF-2016-02362950
Characterizing inhibitory effects of metal ions on CWD prion amyloid formation using
RT-QuIC
Manci Lia,b, and Peter A. Larsena,b
aMinnesota Center for Prion Research and Outreach, University of Minnesota, St. Paul,
MN 55108, USA; bDepartment of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences, University of Minnesota,
St. Paul, MN 55108, USA
Aims: Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) is an emerging infectious prion disease with zoonotic
potential and is now found in several Nordic countries, South Korea, Canada, and 27 U.S.
states. CWD is caused by misfolded prion proteins (PrPCWD) that are resistant to degradation
due to their β-sheet-rich structures (amyloids). PrPCWDcan induce native cellular
prion protein (PrPC) to adopt the misfolded conformation through direct contact. PrPCparticipates
in maintaining metal homeostasis in mammals; for example, PrPCcan mediate the internalization
of both zinc and copper. Several papers have identified links between copper availability
and CWD disease incidence and progression. Real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC)
is a highly sensitive assay to detect PrPCWDseeding activity in vitro. In addition
to assisting future diagnostics of protein misfolding diseases, RT-QuIC has been suggested
for drug pre-screening, especially in assessing the ability of compounds to inhibit
amyloid formation. Among many candidates for controlling CWD in cervids, nutritional
additives with metal ions known to interact with PrPCand have enhanced cellular uptake,
such as copper amino acid complex (Cu-AA) and zinc amino acid complex (Zn-AA), are
ideal candidates to explore potential inhibitory effects on prion amyloid formation.
Moreover, effective delivery of such nutritional additives can be easily achieved
through cervid feed. Here, we aim to investigate the potential impact that Cu-AA and
Zn-AA have on amyloid formation in vitro using RT-QuIC.
Material and Methods: We adapted RT-QuIC to characterize the inhibitory effects of
Cu-AA and Zn-AA on CWD prion amyloid formation in RT-QuIC and compared such effects
with those produced by metals salts alone.
Results: We found that Cu-AA and Zn-AA can more readily inhibit amyloid formation
in vitro than metal salts and the timing of addition affects the effectiveness of
inhibitory effects.
Conclusions: Our results suggest that metal ion additives may exhibit inhibitory effects
on amyloid formation through interactions with PrPC. Future research efforts aimed
at advancing therapeutics for prion diseases using metal complexes are needed.
Funded by: Lyssy & Eckel Feeds
Acknowledgement: We would like to thank Zinpro Corporation for providing us with Performance
Minerals®.
Influence of Cobalamin levels on Prion protein expression
Ewald Lindner
Medical University Graz, Graz, Austria
Aims: In animal models it has been demonstrated that cobalamin deficiency increases
normal cellular prion levels in spinal cord and cerebrospinal fluid. Here we have
investigated whether cobalamin levels affect the expression of prion protein in humans.
Material and Methods: Patients presenting to the department of ophthalmology of the
Medical University of Graz for reasons unrelated to prion diseases were enrolled.
Cobalamin was measured by routine laboratory tests. Surface prion protein on CD14+ monocytes,
CD8+ and CD4 + T cells was analyzed by fluorescence activated cell sorting.
Results: 85 patients were enrolled. Serum Cobalamin levels correlated significantly
with prion protein levels on CD14+ POM1+ monocytes (r = −0.23, p = 0.036), CD8+ POM1+
(r = −0.38, p = 0.001) and CD4+ POM1 + T cells (r = −0.40, p < 0.001).
Conclusions: Our findings suggest an association between cobalamin levels and prion
protein expression in humans.
Funded by: No funding
De-repression of endogenous retroviruses promotes prion-like spreading of proteopathic
seeds
S. Liua,b*, S.-E. Heumüllera*, A. Hossingera, S.A. Müllerc, O. Buravlovaa, S.F. Lichtenthalerc,d,e,
P. Dennera, and I.M. Vorberga,f
aGerman Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases Bonn (DZNE), Bonn, Germany; bPresent
address: German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment (BfR), German Centre for the
Protection of Laboratory Animals (Bf3R), Berlin, Germany; cGerman Center for Neurodegenerative
Diseases (DZNE), Munich, Germany; dNeuroproteomics, School of Medicine, Klinikum rechts
der Isar, Technical University of Munich, Germany; eMunich Cluster for Systems Neurology
(SyNergy), Munich, Germany; fRheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, Germany
*Contributed equally to this manuscript
Aims: Endogenous retroviruses, remnants of viral germline infections, make up a substantial
proportion of the mammalian genome. While usually epigenetically silenced, retroelements
can become upregulated in neurodegenerative diseases, such as amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis and tauopathies. Here we investigate how de-repression of endogenous retroviruses
affects the prion-like spreading of misfolded proteins between cells.
Material and Methods: We use murine and human cell models to study the dissemination
of proteopathic seeds composed of a yeast prion domain or human Tau. Methods include
high-content cell-based assays and proteomics.
Results: We demonstrate that spontaneous upregulation of endogenous retrovirus gene
expression drastically affects the dissemination of protein aggregates between cells
in culture. Viral glycoprotein Env mediates membrane association between donor and
recipient cells and also promotes the intercellular transfer of protein aggregates
packaged into extracellular vesicles. Proteopathic seed spreading can be inhibited
by neutralizing antibodies targeting Env as well as drugs inhibiting viral protein
processing. Importantly, we show that also overexpression of a human endogenous retrovirus
Env elevates intercellular spreading of pathological Tau.
Conclusions: Our data highlight the potential influence of endogenous retroviral proteins
on protein misfolding diseases and suggest that antiviral drugs could represent promising
candidates for inhibiting protein aggregate spreading.
Funded by: Funding information
This work was funded by the Helmholtz Portfolio ‘Wirkstoffforschung’, the ‘Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft’ (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany’s Excellence
Strategy within the framework of the ‘Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology’, by the
German Ministry for Education and research. The funders had no role in study design,
data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
S. Liu, S.A. Müller, S.F. Lichtenthaler, P. Denner and I.M. Vorberg hold pending patent
applications for ‘HERV inhibitors for use in treating tauopathies’: “US Patent Application
No. 17/640,119 based on PCT International application No. PCT/EP2020/074809, claiming
priority to ‘European Application No. 19,195,304.1’.
Grant numbers: EXC 2145 SyNergy – ID 390857198, CLINSPECT-M (FKZ161L0214C) and JPND
PMG-AD (01ED2002B)
Acknowledgement: We thank Leonard Henry Evans for generously sharing anti-MLV antibodies.
The light microcopy (LMF) and laboratory automation facilities (LAT) of the DZNE Bonn
were used for image acquisition.
A non-PrPSc PrP prion
Nuria López-Lorenzoa, Davy Martinb, Enric Vidalc, Sonia Veigaa, Maite Freire Delgadoa,
Yaiza B.Codeseiraa, Vincent Beringueb, Human Rezaeib, and Jesús R. Requenaa
aCIMUS Biomedical Research Institute & Department of Medicine, University of Santiago
de Compostela-IDIS, Santiago de Compostela, Spain; bINRAE, UVSQ, VIM, Université Paris-Saclay,
Jouy-en-Josas, France; cCentre de Recerca en Sanitat Animal (CReSA) – Institut de
Recerca i Tecnologia Agroalimentàries (IRTA), Campus de UAB, 08193 Bellaterra, Barcelona,
Catalonia.
Aims: Prions are responsible for transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, also known
as prion diseases. The most notorious prion is PrPSc, nonetheless, prion protein (PrP)
amyloids can also cause prion diseases, such as the N-terminal amyloid 145Stop, which
is responsible for Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker (GSS) disease.
While infectivity is the sine qua non condition to define a bona fide prion, some
recombinant full-length amyloids also propagate and accumulate in the brain but cannot
cause clinical signs, at least in the first passage.
Recently some of us have shown that full-length PrP amyloids are infectious to transgenic
(Tg)Tg7 mice.
Material and Methods: Here Tg mice expressing ~1x of the bank vole I109 PrP sequence
were intracerebrally inoculated with a bank vole 23–231 PrP amyloid.
Results: All the mice developed clinical signs consisting of ataxia, kyphosis, lethargy
and body weigh lost with an average incubation time of 198 ± 8 days. Brains of clinically
sick mice accumulate PK-resistant PrP fragments of ~20, ~16 and ~13 kDa. These fragments,
where recognized by the C-terminal antibody SAF84 (160–170), but not by SAF83 (126–164).
Moreover, when brain homogenates were treated with PNGaseF, all the mentioned bands
collapsed in a ~ 13 kDa band, corresponding to the ~9.5 kDa PK-resistant amyloid core
plus the GPI anchor.
Conclusions: These results demonstrate the existence of an infectious recombinant
full-length PrP amyloid that has an attack rate of 100% in its first passage in a
~ 1x expression model and presents period of incubation even shorter than some recombinant
PrPScstrains.
In view of the recent results of cryo-EM, showing that PrPScand PrP amyloids share
a PIRIBS architecture, it is no wonder that both conformers can be infectious, despite
their different size. Thus, PrP amyloids must be also considered bona fide prions.
Funded by:
Grant number: This study was funded by research grants MINECO (PID2020-117465GB-I00)
and the Spanish CJD Association (Sergio Rubio).
Identification of biomarkers associated with endoplasmic reticulum stress and proteasome
impairment in natural scrapie
Jenny Lozada, Marina Betancor, Sonia Pérez Lázaro, Rosa Bolea, Juan J. Badiola, and
Alicia Otero
Centro de Encefalopatías y Enfermedades Transmisibles Emergentes, Universidad de Zaragoza-IA2,
Zaragoza, Spain
Aims: The accumulation of misfolded proteins such as PrPSccan alter endoplasmic reticulum
homeostasis triggering the unfolded protein response (UPR). In this pathogenic event,
the molecular chaperones play an important role and are overexpressed in prion diseases.
Several reports in humans and animals have suggested that neurodegeneration is related
to endoplasmic reticulum stress in diseases caused by the accumulation of misfolded
proteins.
These proteins may contribute as biomarkers of ER stress in prion diseases.
Material and Methods: In this study, we investigated the expression of three endoplasmic
reticulum stress markers: PERK (endoplasmic reticulum kinase), BiP (binding immunoglobulin
protein) and PDI (Protein Disulfide Isomerase). In addition, we evaluated the accumulation
of ubiquitin as a marker for protein degradation mediated by the proteasome. These
proteins were studied by immunohistochemistry and western blot in brain tissue of
sheep affected by natural scrapie in clinical and preclinical stages of the disease.
Protein accumulation was semiquantitatively evaluated. Results were compared with
those observed in healthy controls.
Results: PERK accumulation was more intense in clinical and preclinical sheep compared
with healthy animals. PERK immunolabeling revealed significant differences between
groups. The thalamus and hippocampus were the regions showing the most intense PERK
accumulation in clinical sheep. BiP expression levels were higher in clinical and
preclinical sheep compared with controls in several brain areas. PDI was the most
altered marker. Scrapie-infected sheep showed significantly higher levels of PDI than
healthy animals in almost all evaluated brain areas.
Significantly increased intraneuronal and neuropil ubiquitinated deposits in the form
of granules were observed in certain brain areas such as the obex and hippocampus
in scrapie-affected animals compared to controls.
Conclusions: Our results suggest that the neuropathological and neuroinflammatory
phenomena that develop in prion diseases cause endoplasmic reticulum stress in brain
cells triggering the UPR. In addition, the significantly higher accumulation of ubiquitin
aggregates in scrapie-affected animals suggests an impairment of the ubiquitin-proteasome
system in natural scrapie.
Funded by:/ Grant number: RTI2018-098711-B-I00, POCTEFA EFA148/16
Widespread search for potentially protective prion protein variants in the Icelandic
sheep population delivers promising results
Gesine Lühkena, Karólína Elísabetardóttirb, Eyþór Einarssonc, Vilhjálmur Svanssond,
and Stefanía Thorgeirsdottird
aDepartment of Animal Breeding and Genetics, Justus-Liebig University of Giessen,
Giessen, Germany; bHvammshlíð, Skagafjörður, Iceland; cIcelandic Agricultural Advisory
Centre, Sauðárkrókur, Iceland; dDepartment of Virology and molecular biology, Institute
for Experimental Pathology at Keldur, University of Iceland, Reykjavík, Iceland
Aims: Breeding for scrapie resistance in Iceland has not been a real option, since
ARR, the main protective allele combination, has in the past not been found in the
Icelandic sheep breed (1). Instead, culling whole scrapie flocks has been the main
approach to fight this disease in Iceland, with additional means of cleaning of sheep
pens and a sheep free period of 2–3 years. The aim of this research project was to
search for potential scrapie protective prion protein variants in a large group of
Icelandic sheep originating from different regions of the country, with a specific
attention to areas which had not been affected by large scale culling of sheep as
part of an eradication program against various imported infectious diseases in the
past.
Material and Methods: Ear tag or brain samples were collected from ca. 17,000 sheep,
DNA isolated and the full coding region of the prion protein gene (PRNP) sequenced,
or genotyped at codons 136, 137, 138, 151, 154, 171 by pyrosequencing.
Results: Unexpectedly, 14 sheep (0.08%), carrying ARR, were found at one farm in the
far eastern part of Iceland. In addition, a potentially protective polymorphism at
codon 137 (T137), was found in 39 sheep (0.23%) from a total of seven farms located
in different regions of the country. The T137 polymorphism, found earlier at a low
frequency in Icelandic sheep, has been shown to be protective against scrapie in Sarda
sheep in Italy (2).
Conclusions: Although found at a very low frequency, the presence of ARR and T137
offer the possibility of a careful breeding program for scrapie resistance in the
Icelandic sheep breed, the best by including deep pedigree and genomic data in order
not to decrease the diversity of the population. Especially, the use of sheep with
T137 is promising, because in contrast to ARR, they are not all from one ancestry.
An ongoing project should prove the protective effect of the identified variants against
the Icelandic scrapie strains, e.g. with the PCMA and RT-QuIC tests. The number of
scrapie cases has drastically decreased since the height of the epidemic in the 1980s,
but there are still a few cases detected each year, mostly in the North. That area
should therefore be targeted first for breeding for resistance.
References: (1) Thorgeirsdottir et al. 1999. J. Gen. Virol. 80: 2527–2534 (2) Vaccari
et al. 2009. Vet. Res. 40:19
Funded by: Local fund for development of sheep farming in Iceland.
Mortality surveillance of persons potentially exposed to chronic wasting disease
R.A. Maddoxa, R.F. Klosb, L.R. Willb, S.N. Gibbons-Burgenerb, A. Mvilongoa, J.Y. Abramsa,
B.S. Applebyc, L.B. Schonbergera, and E.D. Belaya
aNational Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC), Atlanta, USA; bWisconsin Department of Health Services
(WDHS), Division of Public Health, Madison, USA; cNational Prion Disease Pathology
Surveillance Center (NPDPSC), Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, USA
Aims: It is unknown whether chronic wasting disease (CWD), a prion disease of cervids,
can infect people, but consumption of meat from infected animals would be the most
likely route of transmission. Wisconsin Department of Health Services, Division of
Public Health (WDHS) personnel maintain a database consisting of information collected
from hunters who reported eating, or an intention to eat, venison from CWD-positive
cervids. These data, collected since 2003, allow for the evaluation of causes of mortality
in individuals potentially exposed to CWD.
Material and Methods: The WDHS database contains the name, date of birth, when available,
year of CWD-positive deer harvest, and city and state of residence for each potentially
exposed individual. The database also includes information on how the deer was processed
(self-processed or by a commercial operator) and when applicable, names of others
with whom the venison was shared. Duplicate entries (i.e., those who consumed venison
from CWD-positive deer in multiple hunt years) are determined by first name, last
name, and date of birth. All names in the database are cross-checked with reported
cases of human prion disease in Wisconsin and cases in the National Prion Disease
Pathology Surveillance Center (NPDPSC) diagnostic testing database. Persons with date
of birth available are also cross-checked with prion disease decedents identified
through restricted-use national multiple cause-of-death data via a data use agreement
with the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS).
Results: The database currently consists of 1561 records for hunt years 2003–2017
and 87 additional records for 2018–2019. Of these, 657 records have accompanying date
of birth; 15 entries were removed as duplicates leaving 642 unique individuals. Of
these individuals, 278 of 426 (66%) who ate venison from a CWD-positive deer and provided
processing information reported self-processing. No matches were found among any persons
in the database cross-checked with WDHS human prion disease surveillance data, NPDPSC
data (February 2022 update), and NCHS data through 2020.
Conclusions: Because of the linkage of person and CWD-positive animal in the WDHS
database, reviewing the cause of mortality in potentially exposed persons is possible.
The number of individuals cross-checked so far is likely only a small percentage of
those potentially exposed to CWD in Wisconsin, and many more years of vital status
tracking are needed given an expected long incubation period should transmission to
humans occur. Nevertheless, the findings of this ongoing review are thus far reassuring.
Prion disease incidence, United States, 2003–2020
R.A. Maddoxa, M.K. Persona, K. Kotobellib, A. Mvilongoa, B.S. Applebyb, L.B. Schonbergera,
T.A. Hammetta, J.Y. Abramsa, and E.D. Belaya
aNational Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC), Atlanta, USA; bNational Prion Disease Pathology Surveillance
Center (NPDPSC), Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, USA
Aims: Mortality data, in conjunction with neuropathological and genetic testing results,
are used to estimate prion disease incidence in the United States.
Material and Methods: Prion disease decedents for 2003–2020 were identified from restricted-use
U.S. national multiple cause-of-death data, via a data use agreement with the National
Center for Health Statistics, and from the National Prion Disease Pathology Surveillance
Center (NPDPSC) database. NPDPSC decedents with neuropathological or genetic test
results positive for prion disease for whom no likely match was found in the NCHS
multiple cause-of-death data were added as cases for incidence calculations, while
those with negative neuropathology results but with cause-of-death data indicating
prion disease were removed. Unmatched cases in the NPDPSC database lacking neuropathological
testing but with a positive real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC) test result
were additionally assessed. Age-specific and age-adjusted average annual incidence
rates were calculated from the combined data; the year 2000 as the standard population
and the direct method were used for age-adjustment.
Results: A total of 7,921 decedents were identified as having prion disease during
2003–2020 for an age-adjusted average annual incidence of 1.2 per million population.
The age-adjusted incidence between males and females (1.3 and 1.1 per million, respectively)
differed significantly (p < 0.0001). The age-specific average annual incidence among
those <55 and ≥55 years of age was 0.2 and 4.8 per million, respectively; incidence
among those ≥65 was 6.1 per million. Eighteen cases were <30 years of age for an age-specific
incidence of 8.0 per billion; only 6 of these very young cases were sporadic (3 sporadic
CJD, 3 sporadic fatal insomnia), with the rest being familial (9), variant (2), or
iatrogenic (1). The age-adjusted annual incidence for the most recent year of data,
2020, was 1.3 per million. However, assessment of RT-QuIC positive cases lacking neuropathology
in the NPDPSC database suggested that approximately 20% more cases may have occurred
in that year; the addition of a subset of these cases that had date of death information
available (n = 44) increased the 2020 rate to 1.4 per million.
Conclusions: Mortality data supplemented with the results of neuropathological, CSF
RT-QuIC, and genetic testing can be used to estimate prion disease incidence. However,
the identification in the NPDPSC database of RT-QuIC-positive cases lacking date of
death information suggests that this strategy may exclude a number of probable prion
disease cases. Prion disease cases <30 years of age, especially those lacking a pathogenic
mutation, continue to be very rare.
Biomarker-driven phenotyping for Alzheimer’s disease and related dementia
Nour Majboura, Zane Jaunmuktaneb, Sebastian Brandnerb, John Collingea,c, Simon Meada,c
aUCL Institute of Prion Diseases, MRC Prion Unit at UCL, London, UK; bDivision of
Neuropathology, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, and The National Hospital
for Neurology and Neurosurgery, University College Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust,
Queen Square, London; cNational Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, University
College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, National Prion Clinic, London, UK
Aims: Structural transformation of certain proteins from the native conformation to
β-sheet-rich pathogenic conformation, often in aggregated form, has been implicated
in many neurodegenerative diseases. In patients with a clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer’s
disease dementia, such structural transition is thought to occur initially with amyloid-beta
and subsequently tau proteins, but is commonly also seen at post-mortem examination
in alpha-synuclein (αSyn) and TAR DNA binding protein 43 (TDP-43) proteins, resulting
in a more complex situation that doesn’t easily align with canonical clinical diagnoses.
Dementia conceptualised as a multi-proteinopathy might also explain the failure of
therapeutic approaches that target just one misfolded protein. Therefore, detection
and quantitation of minute quantities of multiple protein assemblies with specific
beta-sheet content (or proteopathic ‘seeds’) in human biofluids, would be a logical
approach towards more personalized diagnosis. Here, we establish seed amplification-
and immuno- assays that allow rapid and specific quantitation of disease-associated
misfolded protein seeds in Alzheimer’s and related dementia.
Material and Methods: We present the development of a panel of multi-protein quantitative
in vitro seed amplification assays against the proteins Tau, αSyn, and TDP-43. We
then explore the diagnostic power of the panel in a cohort of post-mortem human brain
tissues, including tissues of frontal and temporal cortices from cases with Parkinson’s
disease, dementia with Lewy bodies, frontotemporal lobar degeneration, and Alzheimer’s
disease (with/without αSyn and TDP-43 pathology) (n = 5 per group). We also investigate
potential correlations between biomarkers and pathology data.
Results: We have developed quantitative seed amplification assays (SAAs) that preferentially
detect full-length αSyn or 3 R/4R tau aggregates in human CSF and brain tissues. Low
amounts of given self-propagating protein aggregate (the seed) were robustly quantitated
using ELISA-post-SAA inferring more information about the initial seed quantity compared
to SAA kinetics alone. Our analysis also showed a correlation between seeding kinetics
and disease stage assessed on histopathologic scoring system. Along with amyloid beta
and TDP-43 immunoassays, our multi-protein panel strongly highlighted the overlooked
heterogeneity in subjects with clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease, suggesting
the need for more personalised diagnostic approaches.
Conclusions: Our findings provide deeper understanding of the clinico-pathological
associations of common neuropathologies in Alzheimer’s disease and related dementia
disorders. Our proposed multi-protein panel could potentially improve future studies
and clinical trials aiming at developing target-specific treatments for dementia.
Funded by: MRC Prion Unit at UCL
Tau seeds precede earliest Alzheimer’s changes and are prevalent in synucleinopathies
and other neurodegenerative diseases
Matteo Mancaa*, Heidi G. Standkea*, Mikayla L. Huntleya, Olivia R. Thomasa, Christina
D. Orrúb, Andrew G. Hughsonb, Yongya Kimc, Annie Hinikerc, David G. Coughlinc, Douglas
Galaskoc, and Allison Krausa
aDepartment of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland,
OH, United States 44,106; bRocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Hamilton, MT 59840; cDepartment
of Neurosciences, University of California San Diego
Aims: Neurofibrillary tau tangles are a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease neuropathological
change. However, it remains largely unclear how distinctive Alzheimer’s disease tau
seeds (i.e. 3 R/4R) correlate with histological indicators of tau accumulation. Furthermore,
AD tau co-pathology is thought to influence features and clinical progression of other
neurodegenerative diseases including Lewy body disease; yet direct and reliable measurements
of different types of tau seeds in such diseases is an unmet need.
Material and Methods: Here, we use tau real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC)
assays to selectively quantitate 3 R/4R tau seeds in the frontal lobe as a brain region
that accumulates histologically identifiable tau pathology at late-stage disease.
Results: Seed quantitation across a spectrum of neurodegenerative disease cases and
controls indicate tau seeding activity can be detected well before accompanying histopathological
indication of tau deposits and even prior to the earliest evidence of Alzheimer’s
related tau accumulation anywhere in the brain. In addition, Alzheimer’s tau seeds
occur in all cases evaluated here inclusive of primary synucleinopathies, frontotemporal
lobar degeneration and age-comparable controls albeit at multi-log lower levels than
Alzheimer’s cases. α-synuclein seeding activity confirmed synucleinopathy cases and
further indicated the co-occurrence of α-synuclein seeds in some Alzheimer’s disease
and primary tauopathy cases. Our analysis indicates that tau seeds in the mid-frontal
lobe correlate with the overall Braak tau stage, Alzheimer’s disease neuropathologic
change, and frontal lobe digital quantitative immunohistochemistry measurements supporting
the quantitative predictive value of tau RT-QuIC assays. Our data also indicates 3 R/4R
tau seeds are elevated in female cases compared to males at higher (≥ IV) Braak stages,
and that, in the cases of synucleinopathy, 3 R/4R tau seeding levels differ with Lewy
body stage.
Conclusions: This study suggests 3 R/4R tau seeds are widespread even prior to the
earliest stages of Alzheimer’s disease changes, including in normal individuals, and
are prevalent across multiple neurodegenerative diseases as specific biomarkers to
further define disease subtypes.
Funded by: This work was supported by Biomarkers Across Neurodegenerative Diseases
(BAND), a partnership between the Alzheimer’s Association, The Michael J. Fox Foundation
for Parkinson’s Research, The Weston Brain Institute, Alzheimer’s Research UK (to
A.K., D.G.). D.C. is supported by NINDS NS120038 and D.C., D.G. by NIA AG062429, A.H.
by an Alzheimer’s Association AACSF Research Grant and A.K. by BAND, NIH/NINDS and
NIA (R01NS118760 and R01AG067607), Case Western Reserve University, the Britton Fund,
and the Clifford V. Harding and Mina K. Chung Professorship in Pathology. This work
was supported in part by the Intramural Research Program of the NIAID, NIH (C.D.O.,
A.G.H.).
Grant number: As indicated above under funding.
Acknowledgement: We thank the families and donors who have made this research possible;
Jeff Metcalf at the UCSD Shiley-Marcos Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center for their
assistance identifying and obtaining the tissue for this study; Dr. Lawrence Hansen
for expert neuropathological characterization; Dr. Byron Caughey and Dr. Brent Race
for the provision of tau knock-out brain tissue.
A pipeline for atomic structure determination of infectious ex vivo prion fibrils
by cryo-EM
Szymon W. Mankaa, Adam Wenborna, Jemma Bettsa, Susan Joinera, Helen R. Saibilb, John
Collingeaand Jonathan D.F. Wadswortha
aMRC Prion Unit at UCL, Institute of Prion Diseases, University College London, 33
Cleveland Street, London W1W 7FF, UK; bInstitute of Structural and Molecular Biology,
Department of Biological Sciences, Birkbeck College, University of London, Malet Street,
London WC1E 7HX, UK
Aims: Despite fundamental advances in our understanding of prion biology, key knowledge
gaps remain. These include precise delineation of prion replication mechanisms and
detailed explanation of the molecular basis of prion strains and inter-species transmission
barriers. Key to addressing these questions is the determination of prion structure.
We have sought to address this using highly purified ex vivo prion preparations in
combination with cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM).
Material and Methods: Recent technical and computational advances in our laboratory
have now enabled determination of the first authentic, ex vivo mouse prion fibril
structures by cryo-EM. Key methodological advances in this area include: 1) the development
of a highly efficient and simple method for obtaining high-specific infectivity preparations
of ex vivo prion fibrils from mammalian brain; 2) optimization of the distribution
of infectious prion fibrils on cryo-EM grids; and 3) application of novel methods
for 3D reconstruction of amyloid fibrils from cryo-EM images within the Relion software
package.
Results: We have established a pipeline for ex vivo infectious prion fibril structure
determination that combines multiple recent advances in methodology from sample preparation
through to computational 3D reconstruction. These advances have now enabled us to
solve the near-atomic resolution structures of infectious prion fibrils from two biologically
distinct mouse-adapted prion strains. These data provide the first insight into how
divergent prion strains can emerge from an identical prion protein substrate. The
fibrils of both mouse prion strains share the same underlying modular architecture,
but with markedly altered topology.
Conclusions: We have just entered a very exciting era for prion research, where methods
for prion fibril purification and near-atomic structure determination by single particle
cryo-EM are established. Definition of ex vivo prion fibril structures from multiple
prion strains can now be expected.
Chronic Wasting Disease Interaction with Agricultural Crops
Diana A. Martineza,b, Elizabeth Triscotta,b, Emma Funka,b, Alsu Kuznetsovab,c, Camilo
DuqueVelasquezb,c, Debbie McKenziea,b, Malinda Thilakarathnab, and Judd M. Aikenb,c
aDepartment of Biological Science, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2G8, Canada;
bCentre for Prions and Protein Folding Diseases, University of Alberta, Edmonton,
AB T6G 2M8, Canada; cDepartment of Agricultural, Food & Nutritional Science, University
of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2G8, Canada
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease affecting
cervids. The pathogenesis of CWD is characterized by the misfolding of the normal
prion protein into an infectious isoform. CWD prions enter the environment via body
secretions and excretions shed by infected cervids, contributing to transmission,
persistence, and accumulation of CWD infectivity in the environment. CWD endemic regions
of North America overlap prime agricultural lands. We are investigating the interactions
of CWD prions with crops commonly produced in Alberta.
Material and Methods: Plants samples were either grown in the lab (ex. Wheatgrass)
or obtained from the ALES greenhouse at the University of Alberta. Brain homogenates
from infected deer were applied to the leaves and allowed to incubate for specific
lengths of time. A subset of plants were treated with insecticides prior to contamination.
To determine the plant-prion interactions, leaves were washed with water, and then
Proteinase K (50 ug/ml) digested and analyzed by immunoblot for the presence of PrPCWD.
Results: Analysis of prion contaminated plant material demonstrated that differential
binding capacity of CWD to vegetation is plant species-dependent and affected by temperature
and desiccation. Treatment of plants with insecticidal chemicals, prior to experimental
contamination, affects the binding efficiency of CWD to plant surfaces.
Conclusions: Our data suggest that vegetation serves as a reservoir for CWD; however,
environmental changes (seasonality) and mitigation approaches can alter the interaction
of CWD with plant material.
Funded by: APRI, RDAR
Grant number: 212,200,730,2022N067RC
Generation and characterization of a PrP-HaloTag chimera to study the cellular trafficking
and metabolism of PrP
Antonio Masone, Lorenzo Taiarol, Marvin Oldrati, Ilaria Ortenzi, and Roberto Chiesa
Department of Neuroscience, Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario Negri, Milan,
Italy
Aims: The conformational conversion of the cellular prion protein (PrPC) into a β-sheet-rich,
infectious isoform (PrPScor prion), is the key pathogenic event in prion diseases,
a group of invariably fatal neurodegenerative disorders. To investigate PrPCmetabolism
in health and disease we have generated a PrP chimera containing a HaloTag derived
from a Rhodococcus rhodochrous haloalkane dehalogenase that can covalently bind specific
fluorescent ligands.
Material and Methods: PrP-HaloTag constructs were cloned in pCDNA3.1. HEK293 cells
were transfected with Fugene HD (Promega). Transfected cell clones were isolated by
limiting dilution in medium containing hygromycin 200 μg/ml (Invitrogen). PrP-HaloTag
expression was analyzed by Western blot (WB) or SDS-PAGE after HaloTag labeling. The
cellular localization of PrP-HaloTag was studied by confocal and super-resolution
microscopy (SIM), after labeling with fluorescent cell-permeant or -impermeant substrates
(Promega).
Results: We designed two PrP-HaloTag constructs, named PrP_N-Halo and PrP_C-Halo,
by inserting the HaloTag sequence at either the N or C terminus of PrPC. HEK293 cells
were transiently transfected with these constructs. PrP_C-Halo and PrP_N-Halo were
efficiently expressed and glycosylated, but PrP_N-Halo showed an abnormal pattern
of bands in WB, suggesting protein degradation, and was less efficiently expressed
on the cell surface than PrP_C-Halo. Therefore, we used PrP_C-Halo (hereafter PrP-Halo)
to generate stable HEK293 cell lines, and studied the protein localization using cell-permeant
and -impermeant fluorescent ligands. Cell surface-labeled PrP-Halo was N-terminally
cleaved between amino acid 107 and 114, consistent with physiological PrPCα-cleavage
at site 110/111 during endocytic recycling. Supporting this, a PrP-Halo construct
deleted between amino acid 105 and 125 (PrP-Halo ΔCR) was expressed on the cell surface
but not α-cleaved. When cells were stimulated with a PrPC-degrading compound, cell
surface PrP-Halo was internalized by clathrin-coated pits and degraded through the
lysosomal pathway, as shown by biochemical analysis and super-resolution (SIM) microscopy.
Conclusions: Our analysis indicates that PrP-Halo is correctly expressed on the plasma
membrane of HEK293 cells, it is glycosylated and subjected to physiological α-cleavage.
The possibility of specifically labeling different subsets of PrPCmolecules with cell
permeant and impermeant fluorescent ligands, and to analyze the protein by imaging
and biochemical approaches, will allow to precisely define the cellular trafficking
and metabolism of PrP in normal and pathological conditions.
Funded by: Telethon Italy, Italian Ministry of Health and the CJD Foundation USA.
Grant number: Telethon Italy award GGP15225, Italian Ministry of Health award RF-2016-02362950.
Acknowledgement: Stefano Fumagalli for advice on super-resolution microscopy.
Behavioral deficits, learning impairment, and enhanced hippocampal excitability in
co-isogenicPrnpZH3/ZH3
mice
A. Matamoros-Anglesa,b§, A. Hervera b
§, J. Sorianoc, E. Martíd, P. Carullab, F. Llorense, M. Nuvolonef,g, A. Aguzzif, I.
Ferrerh, A. Gruarti, M. Glatzela, JM. Delgado-Garcíai*, and JA. Del Ríob*
§Equal contribution * Co-corresponding authors
aInstitute of Neuropathology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg,
Germany; bMolecular and Cellular Neurobiotechnology, Institute of Bioengineering of
Catalonia, Barcelona, Spain; Department of Cell Biology, Physiology, and Immunology,
University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain; CIBERNED, Institute of Health Carlos III,
Barcelona, Spain; Institute of Neuroscience, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain;
cDepartament de Física de la Materia Condensada, University of Barcelona, Spain; Institute
of Complex Systems, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain; dDepartment of Biomedicine,
University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain; Bioinformatics and Genomics, Center for
Genomic Regulation, Barcelona, Spain; eDepartment of Neurology, University Medical
School, Göttingen, Germany, Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBELL), L’Hospitalet
de Llobregat, Catalonia, Spain; fInstitute of Neuropathology, University Hospital
of Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland; gAmyloidosis Center, Foundation IRCCS Policlinico
San Matteo, Department of Molecular Medicine, University of Pavia, Pavia, Italy; hBellvitge
University Hospital, IDIBELL, L’Hospitalet de Llobregat, Spain, Department of Pathology
and Experimental Therapeutics, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain; IDivision
of Neurosciences, Pablo de Olavide University, Seville, Spain
Aims: Decades of studies pointed out the participation of PrPCin several physiological
roles, but not without controversy. While previous studies have established a neuroprotective
role in stroke and epilepsy, conflicting evidence for a synaptic function has revealed
both reduced and enhanced long-term potentiation and variable observations on memory,
learning, and behavior in mouse knock-out models. Such evidence has been confounded
by the absence of an appropriate knock-out mouse model to dissect the biological relevance
of PrPC, with some functions recently shown to be misattributed to PrPCdue to the
presence of genetic artifacts in mouse models. Here we elucidate the role of PrPCin
the hippocampal circuitry and its related functions, like learning and memory, using
the new strictly co-isogenic Prnp0/0
mouse (PrnpZH3/ZH3
).
Material and Methods: Behavioral and operant conditioning tests were performed to
evaluate the memory and learning capabilities of the PrnpZH3/ZH3
model. Moreover, kainate was administrated to test the epileptical phenotype in this
knock-out model. Finally, in vivo electrophysiological recordings were carried out
at CA3-CA1 synapses in living behaving mice, and spontaneous neuronal firing and network
formation were monitored in primary neuronal cultures of PrnpZH3/ZH3
vs. wild-type mice.
Results: Results showed decreased motility, impaired operant conditioning learning,
and anxiety-related behavior in PrnpZH3/ZH3
animals. PrPCabsence enhanced susceptibility to high-intensity stimulations and kainate-induced
seizures. However, long-term potentiation (LTP) was not enhanced in the PrnpZH3/ZH3
hippocampus. In addition, we observed a delay in neuronal maturation and network formation
in PrnpZH3/ZH3
cultures.
Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that PrPCpromotes neuronal network formation
and connectivity. PrPCmediates synaptic function and protects the synapse from excitotoxic
insults. Its deletion may underlie an epileptogenic-susceptible brain that fails to
perform highly cognitive-demanding tasks such as associative learning and anxiety-like
behaviors.
Funded by: This research was supported by PRPSEM Project with reference RTI2018-099773-B-I00
from MCINN/AEI/10.13039/501,100,011,033/ FEDER ‘Una manera de hacer Europa’, the CERCA
Programme, and the Commission for Universities and Research of the Department of Innovation,
Universities, and Enterprise of the Generalitat de Catalunya (SGR2017-648), CIBERNED
(CMED2018-2) to JADR and IF. The project leading to these results received funding
from the ‘la Caixa’ Foundation (ID 100010434) under the agreement LCF/PR/HR19/52,160,007
and the María de Maeztu Unit of Excellence (Institute of Neurosciences, University
of Barcelona) MDM-2017-0729 to JADR. JS was supported by FIS2016-78,507-C2-2-P from
(MCIU/FEDER/AEI), SGR2017-1061 from the Generalitat de Catalunya, and the European
Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the grant agreement No.
713,140 (MESOBRAIN). Support was also received from MINECO (BFU2017-82,375-R) and
Junta de Andalucía (BIO-122, UPO-1250734, and P18-FR-823) grants to AG and JMDG. F.LL.
was supported by Instituto Carlos III (grant PI19‐00144). A.M-A. was supported by
the Tatiana Pérez de Guzmán el Bueno Foundation.
Acknowledgment: The authors thank Tom Yohannan for editorial advice and Miriam Segura-Feliu,
María Sánchez-Enciso, and José M. González-Martín for their technical help.
Extracellular vesicles in the pathophysiology of Alzheimer’s disease: understanding
the role of the prion protein
A. Matamoros-Anglesa
§, E. Karadjuzovica, I. Eggera, S. Da Velab, L. Aminc, A. Zafara, B. Mohammadia, C.
Seuringd, B. Siebelse, H. Voße, H. Schlütere, M. Schweizerf, B. Puigg, I. Ferrerh,
F. Zunkei, H. C. Altmeppena, D. A. Harrisc, D. Svergunb, M. Glatzela, and M. Shafiqa§
§Equal contribution aInstitute of Neuropathology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf,
Hamburg, Germany; bEuropean Molecular Biology Laboratory Hamburg, Germany; cDepartment
of Biochemistry, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA; dMulti-User
CryoEM facility, Centre for Structural Systems Biology, Hamburg, Germany; eInstitute
of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf,
Hamburg, Germany; fCore Facility of Electron Microscopy, Center for Molecular Neurobiology,
University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany; gDepartment of Neurology,
Experimental Research in Stroke and Inflammation, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf,
Hamburg, Germany; hBellvitge University Hospital, IDIBELL, L’Hospitalet de Llobregat,
Spain; iDepartment of Molecular Neurology, University Hospital Erlangen, Friedrich-Alexander
University Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany
Aims: Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the leading cause of dementia worldwide. The trigger(s)
is (are) still debated, and available symptomatic treatments show modest efficacy
at best. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) have been related to crucial brain functions,
such as myelin maintenance and neurotransmission. Cellular prion protein (PrPC) is
abundantly expressed on the surface of the EVs. In AD, EV-associated PrPC, along with
proteolytically released extracellular PrPCfragments, sequesters Aβ oligomers (Aβo)
and thus accelerates Aβ fibrillation thereby reduces the presence of neurotoxic Aβ
oligomers load, yet formal evidence is still lacking. Here, we aim to study the role
of PrPCexpressed on Neuro 2a- and human brain-derived EVs on Aβ fibrillization and
AD pathophysiology.
Material and Methods: PrPC-expressing (WT) and -deficient (KO) EVs were obtained from
WT and PrPC-KO Neuro-2a (N2a) cells, respectively. Moreover, EVs were isolated from
frontal cortex of AD patients and age-matched controls by employing a novel protocol
without the need of adding proteases (which affects processing of PrP and other EV
surface proteins). EVs were characterized using Nanoparticle tracking analysis (NTA),
immunoblotting, and electron microscopy (cryo-EM and negative stain TEM). To further
the study objectives, small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), super-resolution microscopy
(SRM), Cryo-EM, proteomic and lipidomic profiling, and associative biochemical and
biophysical methods were employed. Lastly, additional validations and proof-of-concept
experiments will be performed in human iPSC models.
Results: SAXS studies along with SRM and aggregation assays helped us to identify
potent Aβo-sequestering properties of the N2a-derived WT-EVs, compared to KO-EVs.
Lipidomic and proteomic profiling of N2a-derived WT- and KO-EVs pointed towards marked
compositional differences (i.e., higher abundance of certain kinases, RNA- and DNA-binding
proteins in KO-EVs).
Our novel protease-free EV isolation method for brain tissues resulted in EV subpopulations
with conserved ‘native’ surface protein decoration, and highlighted alterations in
PrPCexpression in EV subpopulations specific to AD. ‘Omics’ studies from human brain-derived
EVs are underway and will help us to better understand the described neuroprotective
role of EV-PrP on AD.
Conclusions: Our findings provide new evidence for crucial roles carried out by PrPC-expressing
EVs in the pathophysiology of AD, i.e., their involvement in Aβ aggregation, a related
potential rescue mechanism against Aβo toxicity, and AD-specific EV-mediated intercellular
communication. Non-artifactual EVs (with native protein decoration) derived from human
brain will be useful to achieve better mechanistic insight into EVs’ pathophysiological
roles in AD.
Funded by: i) The Joachim Herz foundation, University of Hamburg (PIER Hamburg/Boston
seed grant); ii) the PIER seed project, and iii) the European Union’s Horizon 2020
research and the Marie Sklodowska-Curie innovation program.
Grant number: i) PHM-2019-03; ii) Project PIF 2020–10); and iii) EXOSOMES_AD (Grant
agreement: N°101030402).
Specific electroencephalogram features in the very early phases of sporadic Creutzfeldt–Jakob
disease
Taiki Matsubayashia, Miho Akazab, Yuichi Hayashic, Tsuyoshi Hamaguchid, Katsuya Satohe,
Koki Kosamif, Ryusuke Aef, Tetsuyuki Kitamotog, Masahito Yamadah,i, Takayoshi Shimohatac,
Takanori Yokotaa, and Nobuo Sanjoa,i
aDepartment of Neurology and Neurological Science, Tokyo Medical and Dental University
Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Bunkyo-ku, Japan; bRespiratory and
Nervous System Science, Biomedical Laboratory Science, Graduate School of Medical
and Dental Sciences, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Bunkyo-ku, Japan; cDepartment
of Neurology, Gifu University Graduate School of Medicine, Yanagido, Japan; dDepartment
of Neurology, Kanazawa Medical University, Uchinada-machi, Japan; eDepartment of Locomotive
Rehabilitation Science, Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences,
Sakamoto, Japan; fDepartment of Public Health, Jichi Medical University, Shimotsuke-shi,
Japan; gDepartment of Neurological Science, Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine,
Aoba-ku, Japan; hDepartment of Neurology and Neurobiology of Aging, Kanazawa University
Graduate School of Medical Science, Takara-machi, Japan; iDepartment of Neurology,
Kudanzaka Hospital, Chiyoda-ku, Japan
Aims: We aimed to analyze the changes in electroencephalography (EEG) findings in
patients with early-stage sporadic Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (sCJD) and clarify their
association with clinical symptoms, because very early EEG features prior to the emergence
of periodic sharp-wave complexes (PSWCs) in sCJD are sometimes difficult to distinguish
from those in non-convulsive status epilepticus (NCSE).
Material and Methods: Fourteen patients with sCJD (eight with MM1/classic and six
with MM2c) were included in this study. The predominant findings of the first EEG
were categorized as 1) lateralized periodic discharges (LPDs), 2) central sagittal
sporadic epileptiform discharges (CSSEDs) showing midline predominant generalized
spike-and-wave complexes and/or sharp waves in the central sagittal regions, or 3)
focal epileptiform discharges. Clinical records, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI),
and changes in EEG were compared between three groups (LPD in MM1/classic, CSSED in
MM1/classic, and focal epileptiform discharge in MM2c).
Results: Three (37.5%) and five (62.5%) patients with MM1/classic sCJD were classified
into the LPD and CSSED groups, respectively. Patients in the LPD group were accompanied
by cortical hyperintensities at the corresponding areas on MRI, while those in the
CSSED group showed hyperintensities on MRI at unassociated cortical areas. The average
duration from onset to the first EEG was not significantly different between the LPD
and CSSED groups (1.67 months vs. 1.6 months, respectively). Follow-up EEG of three
(100%) patients in the LPD group after 2.67 months from onset and four (80%) in the
CSSED group after 3.25 months showed transitions to PSWCs. All patients with MM1/classic
sCJD showed myoclonus on initial EEG, and the average period between onset and appearance
of myoclonus was 1.67 months in the LPD group and 1.6 months in the CSSED group. The
symptomatic side was opposite to the hemisphere showing LPDs or higher-amplitude central
sagittal epileptiform activity.
Conclusions: All patients with MM1/classic sCJD had epileptiform discharge on EEG
prior to the emergence of PSWCs, indicating that physicians must distinguish patients
with sCJD from those with epilepsy because a rapidly progressive cognitive impairment
mimicking CJD may be observed in patients with NCSE. LPDs and CSSEDs on EEG were identified
at the area of brain which reflect severe pathological changes including PrPSc deposition
and spongiform changes in sCJD. These pathological changes were likely associated
with cortical myoclonus before the emergence of PSWCs on EEG. EEG features occurring
before PSWCs could contribute greatly to the early diagnosis of MM1/classic sCJD.
Funded by: a Grant-in-Aid from the Research Committee of Prion Disease and Slow Virus
Infection of the Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare of Japan (TH, KS, RA, YN,
TK, MY, and NS), a Grant-in-Aid from the Research Committee of Molecular Pathogenesis
and Therapies for Prion Disease and Slow Virus Infection of the Ministry of Health,
Labour, and Welfare of Japan (TH, TK and MY), and a Grant-in-Aid from the Research
Committee of Surveillance and Infection Control of Prion Disease of the Ministry of
Health, Labour, and Welfare of Japan (MY, KS, RA, YN, TK, MY, and NS).
Grant number: 20FC2001, and 20FC1054
Acknowledgement: The authors are grateful to the members of the Department of Neurology
and Neurological Science, Tokyo Medical and Dental University Hospital. We would like
to sincerely thank the patients and their families for their participation in this
study. We would also like to thank the members of the Department of Neurology, Gifu
University Graduate School of Medicine, and the Department of Neurology and Neurobiology
of Aging, Kanazawa University Graduate School of Medical Science for their collaboration
with the study.
What happened to the pierrot? – painting alterations of a patient with Alzheimer’s
disease and Lewy body dementia
Kacper Mazurkiewicza, Marcin Wojterab, Adrianna Madeja, Małgorzata Rózgac, Paweł P.
Liberskid, and Beata Sikorskad
aMedical University of Lodz, Lodz, Poland; bDepartment of Old Age Psychiatry and Psychotic
Disorders; Central Clinical Hospital of Lodz; Lodz, Poland; cLodz, Poland; dDepartment
of Molecular Pathology and Neuropathology, Medical University of Lodz, Lodz, Poland
Aims: Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) constitutes leading
causes of dementia worldwide. Visuospatial cognition, perceptual functioning, as well
as other important for creative work traits have been reported to be impaired in both
types of dementias in a disease-specific way. Patients with DLB have all visual perceptual
functions affected and in AD predominant change is spatial. However, best to our knowledge,
there were no prior reports of such changes in cases with mixed pathology. The study
aims to identify the influence of Lewy body dementia with AD co-pathology on patient’s
visual art production. To this end we examined artistic works of a patient with autopsy
confirmed limbic type of Lewy body pathology and AD created at different stages of
the disease.
Material and Methods: We examined a collection of artistic works of a patient with
neuropathologically confirmed Alzheimer disease and Lewy body dementia. The patient
was a female professional artist with a higher artistic education Following qualities
of works: aesthetics, composition, evocative impact, novelty, representation-technique,
technique, bizarreness, facial features were assessed at three different stages of
the disease. Assessment was performed by three evaluators, of whom one was with a
higher artistic education. Additionally, the brain slides were re-examined to check
for pathology in brain regions responsible for functions essential for creative work.
Immunohistochemistry was performed in regions of interest with antibodies against
phTau, ph-alpha-synuclein, amyloid-beta, TDP-43, GFAP, p62.
Results: We observed changes in patient’s artwork in all of evaluated qualities except
for composition, bizarreness and novelty during the progress of the disease. Alzheimer
type pathology was consistent with Braak stage 6 and alpha-synuclein pathology matched
limbic type of DLB according to McKeith. Apart from the hippocampus and the amygdala
abundant tau deposits were present in the occipital cortex. Alpha-synuclein pathology
was most severe in the amygdala and the hippocampus.
Conclusions: We observed influence of changes in motor ability and visuospatial perception
on visual art production throughout the course of the disease. Moreover, we found
that brain regions essential for art perception and creative work were affected by
the pathological process. Damaged occipitoparietal pathway and hippocampal formation
resulting in flawed spatial episodic memory may be associated with observed changes
in the artwork.
Funded by: Statutory funds of Medical University of Lodz
Are rapid tests and confirmatory western blot for cattle and small ruminants reliable
tools for the diagnosis of Chronic Wasting Disease in Europe?
Maria Mazzaa*, Linh Tranb*, Daniela Loprevitea, Maria C. Cavarrettaa, Luana Dell’Attia,
Jørn Vågeb, Knut Madslienb, Turid Vikørenb, Tram T. Vuongb, Elena Bozzettaa#, and
Sylvie L. Benestadb#
* #These Authors equally contributed to this study
aItalian Reference Laboratory for TSEs – Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale del
Piemonte, Liguria e Valle d’Aosta, Turin, Italy; bOIE Reference Laboratory for Chronic
Wasting Disease –Norwegian Veterinary Institute, Oslo, Norway
Aims: The aim of this study was to evaluate the analytical sensitivity of the three
commercially available and approved rapid tests for TSE diagnosis in cattle and small
ruminants for detecting CWD strains circulating in Europe, and of two different confirmatory
western blot methods.
Material and Methods: Five moose and two reindeer, detected as positive through the
Norwegian surveillance programme, were analysed in this study, as well as negative
pools of both moose and reindeer brain tissue. To evaluate the analytical sensitivity
of these methods, dilution series of each homogenate were prepared in negative brain
material. The samples were analysed in parallel at the Italian Reference Laboratory
and Norwegian Veterinary Institute by the following test: TeSeETMSAP Combi (Bio-Rad),
TeSeETMSheep/Goats (Bio-Rad), HerdCheck BSE-Scrapie Ag test (IDEXX) and the two confirmatory
western blot methods, one commercially available (TeSeETMWestern Blot) and one (SAF-Immunoblot)
developed at the Italian NRL for TSEs. For SAF-Immunoblot method five monoclonal anti-PrP
antibodies were chosen among the most commonly used for the diagnosis of animal TSEs
and raised against different regions of the prion protein.
Results: The analyses revealed that all rapid tests are able to identify the different
strains of CWD circulating in Europe, although with different analytical sensitivity.
Both confirmatory western blot methods showed a good sensitivity and were able to
confirm the positive results obtained from rapid tests.
Conclusions: Although this study presents a limitation due to the small number of
samples analysed, it is conceivable that the rapid and confirmatory diagnostic systems
applied in Northern Europe for the CWD surveillance in the cervid populations are
reliable tools.
Performance of second generation CSF RT-QuIC in a clinical CJD Surveillance setting
Neil McKenzie, Kimberley Burns, Mary Andrews, Hatice Kurudzhu, Johnny Tam, John Centola,
Jan Mackenzie, Suvankar Pal, and Alison JE Green
The National CJD Research & Surveillance Unit, Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences,
University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH16 4SB
Aims: The high sensitivity and specificity of CSF RT-QuIC analysis has been a major
advance in the diagnosis of sporadic CJD (sCJD) and has led to its inclusion in the
revised European CJD Surveillance network sCJD diagnostic criteria. Full-length hamster
rPrP is the most widely used RT-QuIC substrate but has an assay time of 80–90 hours
(first generation RT-QuIC). The use of truncated hamster rPrP as an alternative substrate
(second generation RT-QuIC) has been reported to result in a more sensitive and rapid
CSF RT-QuIC assay. Our aim was to compare the performance of the first and second
generation RT-QuIC assays in a clinical CJD surveillance setting.
Material and Methods: First and second generation RT-QuIC assays were performed as
previously described a,b. An initial retrospective study to assess the optimal cut-off
time for the second generation CSF RT-QuIC assay was undertaken with 43 neuropathological
confirmed or probable sporadic CJD patients, (21 M:22 F; mean age (SD) 65 (9.5) years)
and 56 control patients, 31 M:25 F, mean age (SD) 69.5 (11.6) years). A subsequent
prospective study was undertaken with 62 neuropathological confirmed or probable sporadic
CJD patients, (28 M:34 F; mean age (SD) 66.5 (11.0) years) and 47 control patients
(29M:18 F, mean age (SD) 66.3 (13.1) years).
The sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of the first and second generation assays
was assessed as well as the overall reaction time.
Results: The initial retrospective study showed that the optimal combination of sensitivity
and specificity for the second generation CSF RT-QuIC assay was obtained using a cut-off
of 40 hours. The sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of the first generation CSF
RT-QuIC assay was 94%, 100% and 96% respectively, compared to a sensitivity, specificity
and accuracy of 90%, 98% and 94% respectively, for the second generation CSF RT-QuIC
assay.
Of the six sCJD patients that were negative for the second generation RT-QuIC assay,
four patients had a positive first generation CSF RT-QuIC result. One false positive
CSF RT-QuIC result was obtained using the second generation CSF RT-QuIC assay. This
patient had a posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome.
Conclusions: This study shows that the second generation CSF RT-QuIC assay is less
sensitive than the first generation RT-QuIC assay, however the number of sCJD patients
investigated is small. The major advantage of the second generation CSF RT-QuIC assay
is the significant reduction in assay time.
Orrú CD et al, Ann Clin Transl Neurol 2020; 7(11):2262–2271
McGuire LI et al, Ann Neurol 2016;80:160–5
Funded by: The NCJDRSU, UK is funded by the Department of Health and Social Care Policy
Research Programme and the Scottish Government
Grant number: PR-ST-0614-00008
Acknowledgement: Surveillance of CJD is dependent on the co-operation of neurologists
and neuropathologists throughout the UK. The authors are particularly grateful to
the relatives of the patients for their co-operation and support.
Multigenerational Chronic Wasting Disease Mother to Offspring Transmission in Reeves’
muntjac deer
McNulty EE, Nalls AV, and Mathiason CK
Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO USA
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) continues to demonstrate geographic expansion,
now found in captive and/or free-range cervid populations in North America, Asia,
and Scandinavia. CWD mother to offspring transmission has been demonstrated in the
experimental Reeves’ muntjac system, as well as in populations of free-ranging elk
and white-tailed deer. Our studies further explore the potential for multigenerational
transmission as a mechanism to help explain the facile transmission of this fatal
prion disease of cervids.
CWD-infected muntjac dams are able to become pregnant, carry, deliver, and rear offspring
during the long asymptomatic phase of prion infection. Our studies have shown that
CWD prions can be transmitted from mother to first-generation offspring leading to
prion infection and subsequent development of TSE disease, and that transmission occurs
during gestation (Nalls 2013). We have also demonstrated that there are infection
prions within the pregnancy microenvironment by bioassay (uterus, birthing fluids,
and placentomes) (Nalls 2017).
The CWD muntjac system has permitted us to further explore the impact of maternal
infections by assessing first and second generation offspring born to infected dams
for the potential of multigenerational CWD transmission. Here we describe the presence
of CWD infectivity within additional tissues of the pregnancy microenvironment, and
within tissues of second generation non-viable offspring that harbor protein misfolding
cyclic amplification (PMCA) conversion competent amyloid.
Material and Methods: We assessed tissues harvested from clinical terminal muntjac
dams, in-uterine collections of late term fetuses, and full-term second-generation
nonviable muntjac offspring for CWD infectivity by mouse bioassay. Transgenic mice
expressing the cervid prion protein, Tg(CerPrP-E226)5037± (n = 6/cohort or n = 9/cohort),
were either IC inoculated with 10% ovary or mammary gland/lymph node (LN) homogenate,
or IP-inoculated with PMCA-amplified RAMALT, ileum, or obex from first generation
fetuses. Additional cohorts of mice were IP-inoculated with lung, mammary gland, kidney
or uterus harvested from nonviable 2ndgeneration muntjac offspring (n = 2). Mice from
all cohorts were examined for prions by western blot and real time quaking-induced
conversion (RT-QuIC).
Results: All mice inoculated with muntjac dam tissue (n = 18), all mice inoculated
with first generation PMCA-amplified tissue (n = 16) and all mice (n = 20) inoculated
with PMCA-amplified tissue from ‘ gestational CWD-exposed’ second-generation offspring
developed signs consistent with TSE disease, including severe ataxia and weight loss
between 209–373 days pi, and were confirmed CWD positive by western blot and RT-QuIC.
Negative control mice (n = 25) receiving negative dam homogenates and PMCA-amplified
negative age and tissue-matched homogenates remained healthy and TSE-free for the
same duration.
Conclusions: Our data indicates that: (1) multigenerational transmission of infectious
CWD prions from mother-to-offspring may be possible and (2) early and persistent exposure
of the developing embryo to infectious CWD prions in the uterine microenvironment
may help explain the facile transmission of CWD in the native host.
Funded by: NIH
Grant number: 2R01AI112956-06, RO1AI093634-01A1
Acknowledgement: We acknowledge LAR for great animal care
Genome wide association study of survival and age of onset in sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease”
Simon Mead, Holger Hummerich for the International CJD GWAS collaboration
MRC Prion Unit at UCL
Aims: Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) is highly variable in clinical duration
and age at onset. We sought to discover genetic factors that modify these phenotypes
in a large international collaborative study.
Material and Methods: We assembled 4929 cases of probable or definite sCJD by contemporary
diagnostic criteria either included in Jones et al. Lancet Neurology 2020, or newly
genotyped on Illumina’s Global Screening Array. Genotype doses were imputed using
the Michigan Imputation Server, resulting in 6,308,901 SNPs passing quality control.
Clinical duration (median:4, IQR:2.5–9 (months)) was available in 3773 and age at
onset (median:67, IQR:61–73 (years)) in 3767 cases. Phenotypes were modelled as normally
distributed quantitative traits following transformation using methods developed by
Box and Cox. Additive and Heterozygous genetic models were run in SNPtest with sex,
contributing site and genetic ancestry covariates. Secondary analyses included conditional
models, gene-based tests, gene-set analyses and development of polygenetic risk scores.
Results: Phenotypes were successfully transformed to normal distributions allowing
genome-wide analysis without statistical inflation (lambda = 1.000/1.000 for clinical
duration/age). 54 SNPs achieved genome wide significance for the clinical duration
phenotype all at the PRNP locus (top SNP rs1799990, P = 6.25x10−38, beta = 1.417 for
additive model; rs1799990, P = 3.94x10−67, beta = 2.328 for heterozygous model). PRNP
was the nearest gene and obvious outstanding genome-wide determinant of clinical duration.
There was no effect at eQTL SNPs that associate with brain expression of PRNP and
no genome-wide significant SNPs after conditioning for codon 129. There were 50 suggestive
associated SNPs (P < 1 x 10–5, including at regions near to HDHD5 (chromosome 22),
FHIT (chromosome 3) and EREG (chromosome 4). The top Gene-set-based analysis identified
binders of type-5 metabotropic glutamate receptors (GO Molecular Function ontology
n = 1738, P = 2x10−5). Age-based analysis did not identify any genome-wide associations.
We will discuss the utility of polygenetic risk scores in prediction of total survival
in CJD.
Conclusions: Relative to other loci, PRNP is outstanding in modification of the rapidity
of progression of CJD, but not the age at clinical onset. This work suggests additional
non-PrP mechanisms modestly affect survival including support for the already proposed
role of metabotropic glutamate receptor type 5.
Funded by: MRC (UK)
Two-pronged pharmalogical interventions for prion disease targeting propagation and
toxicity
Robert C.C. Mercera, Nhat T.T. Lea, Deepthi Yedlapudia, Jenna Crowellb, Doug Fraserc,
Janelle Vultaggioa, John Alamd, Aaron Beelerc, Glenn C. Tellingb, and David A. Harrisa
aDepartment of Biochemistry, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, USA; bPrion
Research Center, Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology, Colorado State
University, Fort Collins, USA; cDepartment of Chemistry, Boston University, Boston,
USA; dEIP Pharma Inc., Cambridge, USA
Aims: The discovery and characterization of two anti-prion compounds that target distinct
steps in prion pathogenesis: propagation and toxicity
Material and Methods:
The Psychoactive Drug Screening program (PDSP), a small molecule competition binding
assay
RNA-sequencing
ScN2a PrPScclearance assays
Hippocampal spine retraction assays
Immunocytochemistry
CRISPR/Cas9 mediated gene knockout
Large scale chemical synthesis
in vivo drug treatment of RML infected mice
Biochemical assays of brain homogenate
Histopathological analysis
Results: Using a high throughput screen for molecules that prevent mutant (ΔCR) PrP
toxicity, we discovered a novel class of anti-prion compound; phenethyl piperidines.
Further study of this compound class has led, unexpectedly, to the discovery of a
number of additional novel anti-prion compounds, some of which have previously identified
molecular targets and clinical uses. In addition to inhibiting prion propagation when
applied to ScN2a cells, these molecules can prevent the retraction of cultured hippocampal
neuron dendritic spines following exposure to purified prion preparations. We have
identified central nervous system receptors/channels that bind to these molecules
using the Psychoactive Drug Screening Program (PDSP) and explored their role in the
observed anti-prion effects through CRISPR/Cas9 mediated gene disruption. In a seperate
line of investigation, we have identified a neurotoxic pathway downstream of prion
propagation that can be disrupted using inhibitors of p38 MAPK despite prion propagation
continuing unabated. We have tested compounds from each group, both alone and in combination,
for in vivo efficacy against RML prions in C57BL/6 J mice by administration through
a liquid diet.
Conclusions: Molecules that inhibit PrPScformation also protect dendritic spines from
collapse, suggesting that newly converted PrPScat the cell surface triggers prion
synaptotoxic effects. This inference is supported by the absence of spine retraction
following prion exposure of hippocampal neuronal cultures derived from Prnp0/0
mice or from transgenic mice expressing PrP lacking the positively charged N-terminal
region, which is known to play a role in PrPC-PrPSc conversion and as well as in certain
toxic activities of PrP. Despite well-defined efficacy in vitro and brain penetrance
in vivo, the administration of either molecule alone or in combination had no effect
upon incubation time or deposition pattern of PrPSc. Nevertheless, these and related
molecules may be useful tool compounds to understand basic mechanisms of prion propagation
and toxicity.
Funded by: National Institutes of Health (USA), Department of Defense (USA)
Grant number: R01 NS065244-11A1, W81XWH-21-1-0141
Cryo-EM reveals small-molecule binding to the paired helical fillament conformation
of tau prions from Alzheimer’s disease
Gregory E. Merza,b, Matthew J. Chalkleyc, Nick A. Parasa,b, Eric Tsea, Joanne Leea,
Stanley B. Prusinera,b,d, William F. DeGradoa,c, and Daniel R. Southwortha,d
aInstitute for Neurodegenerative Diseases, Weill Institute for Neurosciences, University
of California, San Francisco, CA, USA; bDepartment of Neurology, University of California,
San Francisco, CA, USA; cDepartment of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Cardiovascular Research
Institute, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA; dDepartment of Biochemistry
and Biophysics, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA
Aims: Recent remarkable efforts in structural biology have led to the determination
of numerous high-resolution structures of tau prion filaments purified from the tissues
of patients with different tauopathies. At the same time, newly developed small molecules
offer promise as positron emission tomography (PET) ligands for diagnosing specific
tauopathies. However, a high-resolution structure elucidating the location and mechanism
of binding of these small molecules to tau prion filaments has remained elusive.
Material and Methods: Tau filaments from an 88 year old male patient with a neuropathologically
confirmed Alzheimer’s disease (AD) diagnosis were purified from the frontal cortex
using established protocols. These AD filaments were incubated with PET ligand and
then plunge frozen on holey carbon grids and imaged on a Titan Krios cryo-electron
microscope. Images were analyzed using the helical reconstruction features in Relion
3.1.
Results: Here, we present a high-resolution (2.7 Å) structure of a known PET probe
in complex with paired helical filaments (PHFs) purified from the brain tissue of
a patient with Alzheimer’s disease. Incredibly, the ligand shows a clear stacking
arrangement along the filament axis, with a ~ 40° tilt relative to the beta-sheet
arrangement. This tilt results in each molecule making extensive contacts, spanning
3 beta sheets of the filament. To further understand the molecular interactions of
the stacked arrangement, we used density functional theory (DFT) and Hartree-Fock
London Dispersion (HFLD) calculations to generate and evaluate several conformer stacks
of ligand molecules and assessed their binding to the protein backbone. These methods
reveal the origin of the tilt relative to the backbone and allow us to decompose the
binding and stacking energies. Furthermore, while binding of a single ligand is energetically
unfavorable, binding of subsequent adjacent ligands (i.e., in a stacked arrangement)
is energetically favorable overall.
Conclusions: This stacked arrangement of ligands represents a new motif of small-molecule-protein
binding. Understanding the energetics of this binding mode holds promise for rapidly
advancing the computational development of disease-specific small molecule PET probes
and therapeutics for diagnosing and treating neurodegenerative diseases.
Funded by: NIH
Grant number: AG002132
Appearance of new scrapie prion strain by the conformational rearrangement of parental
scrapie prion strain through serial transmission in wild-type mice
Kohtaro Miyazawaa, Yuichi Matsuurab, Morikazu Imamurac, and Yoshifumi Iwamarub
aDivision of Zoonosis Research, National Institute of Animal Health (NIAH), National
Agriculture and Food Research Organization (NARO), Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan; bDivision
of Infectious Animal Disease Research, NIAH, NARO, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan; cDivision
of Microbiology, Department of Infectious Diseases, Faculty of Medicine, University
of Miyazaki, Miyazaki, Miyazaki, Japan
Aims: Scrapie is a prion disease in sheep and goat. Many biologically different scrapie
prion strains have been reported based on the results of wild-type mouse bioassays.
However, it remains unclear whether some prion strains are produced by real mutation
processes in mice, or if all of them had preexisted in the original scrapie-affected
sheep. Thus, we investigate whether new prion strain is generated by conformational
mutation of the parental prion strain during serial transmission in mice or not.
Material and Methods: Two biologically different prion strains (designated as FuL
and FuS, respectively) were isolated from a single natural sheep classical scrapie
isolate by CD-1 mouse bioassays. Cloned FuL prion, which meant at least FuS prion-free,
was obtained by limiting dilution method through GT1-7 cell culture systems. Then,
we demonstrated that FuS prion newly appeared during serial transmission of the cloned
FuL prion in CD-1 mice.
Results: FuS prion-affected mice showed short incubation time (~150 days), emaciation,
marked vacuolation and widespread PrPScdistribution in hippocampus. In contrast, FuL
prion-affected mice were characterized by long incubation time (~300 days), polyuria
and relatively little vacuolation and limited PrPScdistribution in hippocampus. When
GT1-7 cells were exposed to 10−5brain homogenate (BH) prepared from a mouse that developed
the FuL disease phenotype (termed as GT/FuL), they accumulated PrPScat passage #30
(P30). However, PrPScwas not detected in GT1-7 cells at P30, which exposed to 10−5BH
prepared from a tertiary passaged mouse that developed FuS disease phenotype (termed
as GT/FuS). Moreover, CD-1 mice inoculated with GT/FuS cell homogenate did not develop
any clinical signs of the disease and did not accumulate PrPScuntil death (survival
range 390–732 days). These results indicate that only FuL prions were amplified and
FuS prion is absent in GT1-7 cells exposed to 10−5BH prepared from a mouse that developed
the FuL disease phenotype. De novo generation of FuS prion was confirmed at the tertiary
passage of the cloned FuL prion (GT/FuL cell homogenate) in CD-1 mice based on their
clinical signs, brain pathology and conformational change of PrPScdetected by seprion-ligand
assay using ME7-like prion specific antibody.
Conclusions: These results indicate de novo generation of FuS prion from FuL prion,
due to conformational mutations of PrPScduring serial transmission processes in wild-type
mice. Our study may provide an answer to the long-term question of whether some prion
strains surfaced by conformational mutations of PrPScin mice or not.
Funded by: Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare
Grant number: 20KA1003
Acknowledgement: We appreciate Naoko Tabeta, Naomi Furuya, and Hiroyuki Okada for
their technical assistance and constructive comments.
Fighting prion diseases with released PrP (fragments): transgenic overexpression of
N1(Fc) prolongs incubation time in RML-infected mice
B. Mohammadia F. Songa, M. Shafiqa, A. Matamoros-Anglesa, S.Brennab, B.Puigb, G. Galliciottia,
M. Glatzela, and H. C. Altmeppena
aInstitute of Neuropathology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf (UKE), Hamburg,
Germany; bDepartment of Neurology, Experimental Research in Stroke and Inflammation
(ERSI), UKE, Hamburg, Germany
Aims: While protective functions of PrP`s main soluble cleavage fragment (N1) have
been described against toxic amyloid-beta conformers, little is known on N1`s role
in prion diseases. We here investigated neuroprotective effects of an Fc-tagged N1
fragment in murine prion disease.
Material and Methods: Since the disordered N1 fragment alone, when transgenically
expressed, cannot be secreted due to impaired shuttling into the ER through the translocon,
we generated and characterized new transgenic mice overexpressing N1Fc on wild-type
background. These mice (TgN1Fc) and their WT littermate controls were intracerebrally
inoculated with RML prions. Animals were sacrificed either at matched time points
(i.e., 60 and 100 days post-inoculation (dpi)) or at terminal disease stage. Brains
were collected and analyzed biochemically and histologically.
Results: Overexpression of Fc-tagged N1 does not cause overt immunological or other
adverse effects. In contrast, heterozygous TgN1Fc mice showed a moderately, yet significantly,
prolonged survival time upon prion inoculation compared to WT controls. PrPSclevels
in brain were similar between TgN1Fc and WT mice at terminal disease stage. However,
at the preclinical matched time point (100 dpi), lower PrPSclevels were detected in
TgN1Fc compared to matched WT mice, and this difference was even more pronounced at
60 dpi, suggesting that transgenic N1(Fc) impairs prion conversion. Detailed histological
and biochemical workup (signaling cascades, etc.) is currently under way to further
investigate the underlying protective effect(s).
Conclusions: Fusion of (unstructured) N1 to an Fc tag (of murine IgG) serving as a
structural domain necessary for ER translocation enables secretion (overcoming the
previously encountered problem of cytosolic retention of transgenically overexpressed
N1 alone) and may improve biostability. Despite a rather mild overexpression of the
N1Fc fusion protein, disease progression is slowed down as judged by survival time.
Detection of lower PrPSclevels in TgN1Fc mice (compared to matched controls) at preclinical
time-points supports a beneficial role of extracellular N1(Fc). Further in vivo studies
are ongoing to assess a protective role of N1 in different neurodegenerative diseases
as well as in other pathological conditions in the brain, such as ischemic stroke.
Funded by: Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD) Foundation, Inc.; Alzheimer Forschung Initiative
(AFI e.V.); Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) Collaborative Research Center 877
(SFB877)
Acknowledgement: We thank all generous donors enabling the support of this work by
the CJD Foundation and AFI e.V.. We thank Dr. Irm Hermans Borgmeyer for her great
contribution in generating the transgenic N1Fc mice, and Kristin Hartmann (UKE Mouse
Pathology Core Unit) for her help with the immunohistochemistry.
Defining the onset of prion infection and neurodegeneration in healthy individuals
at risk of prion disease
TH Moka,g, A Nihata,g, D Sequeiraa,g, T Coysha,g, L Holm-Mercera,g, L Darwenta, M
Batchelora, J Bieschkea, G Jacksona, I Swiftb, J Rohrerb,d, A Keshavanb,d, J Schottb,d,
R Patersonb,d, E Velevab, R Labanb, A Heslegraveb, M Chapmanf, MP Lunnf, H Zetterbergb,c,
C Orruh, B Grovemanh, A Hughson, B Caugheyh, P Rudgea,g, J Collingea,g, and S Meada,g
aMedical Research Council Prion Unit at University College London, London, UK; bUnited
Kingdom Dementia Research Institute at University College London, London, cDepartment
of Psychiatry and Neurochemistry, Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg,
Mölndal, Sweden; dDementia Research Centre, Department of Neurodegenerative Disease,
University College London Queen Square Institute of Neurology, London, UK; eInstitute
of Neurology, University College London, London, UK; fNeuroimmunology and CSF laboratory,
University College London Hospitals NHS Trust National Hospital of Neurology and Neurosurgery,
London, UK; gNHS National Prion Clinic, University College London Hospitals NHS Trust
National Hospital of Neurology and Neurosurgery, London, UK; hLaboratory of Persistent
Viral Diseases, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute for Allergy and Infectious
Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Hamilton, Montana, USA
Aims: The feasibility of preventive strategies in individuals at risk of inherited
prion disease and iatrogenic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is hampered by the unpredictability
of knowing when, or even if, the disease will start. We describe the systematic accrual
of a longitudinal biofluid resource, optimisation and detection of cerebrospinal fluid
(CSF) prion seeding activity, and measurement of candidate proximity biomarkers in
at-risk and symptomatic prion disease cohorts.
Material and Methods: We assembled a longitudinal biofluid sample archive from those
at-risk of IPD (plasma 217; CSF 67; unique individuals E200K 22, P102L 33 and others
15 (D178N-129 M, D178N-129 V, A117V, 5-OPRI & 6-OPRI)) and iCJD (3;5), symptomatic
IPD (62;22), and CJD (40;17) individuals recruited to the National Prion Monitoring
Cohort (NPMC). Non-prion (70) and normal CSF controls (24), and normal plasma controls
(94) were sourced from NPMC internally and collaborators. IPD CSF (E200K, P102L, P105S,
D178N-129 M, Y163X, 6-OPRI) were tested with standard IQ-CSF RT-QuIC, before altering
key assay components to optimise for specific mutations before finally, the entire
CSF collection was screened with the most sensitive assay. Glial fibrillary acidic
protein (GFAP), neurofilament light (NfL), Tau and ubiquitin carboxy-terminal hydrolase
L1 (UCH-L1) levels were measured in plasma and CSF using N4PB digital immunoassay
platform. Values were log10 transformed, and age-normalised for GFAP, NfL and Tau.
Results: The IQ-CSF RT-QuIC was 100% sensitive and specific for sCJD, iCJD and familial
CJD (E200K + 6-OPRI-CJD); a bespoke Hu P102L RT-QuIC showed partial sensitivity for
P102L disease (sensitivity 44.4%; specificity 98.2%). Presymptomatic seeding activity
was present in E200K (4) and P102L (1) at-risk samples, between 0.1–7.1 years before
estimated/actual disease onset. Of these, an E200K carrier converted, while 2 other
E200K carriers (3 samples) remain asymptomatic; the sole positive P102L sample is
from an asymptomatic untested individual. No compatible RT-QuIC assay conditions were
found for A117V, D178N-129 M, classical 6-OPRI. N4PB analysis revealed statistically
significant differences in mean plasma GFAP and NfL, and CSF NfL levels with an increasing
trend between normal controls, IPD<2 yrs to onset, sIPD, and CJD cohorts (p < 0.01).
Conclusions: Development and application of bespoke RT-QuIC assays compatible with
PRNP mutation/phenotype, complemented by serial plasma (GFAP & NfL) and CSF (NfL)
biomarker measurements, show promise in identifying converting at-risk individuals,
which may be useful for therapeutic preventative trial patient selection. Our low
conversion numbers however highlight the need to establish longitudinal biofluid archive
and protocol standardisation to enable multicentre collaborations.
Funded by: Alzheimer’s Society UK and Medical Research Council Core Support for MRC
Prion Unit at UCL
Grant number: 341
Acknowledgement: We wish to thank all the NPMC participants, patients and relatives,
and volunteers who have contributed tremendously to this research work over 13 years,
a lot of whom did so under very difficult conditions. We wish to also thank the CJD
Support Network for a research grant towards purchase of a BMG Labtech FLUOstar Omega
Lite microplate reader.
Detection of misfolded proteins and other biomarkers in the blood and cerebral spinal
fluid of the naturally occuring syndrom canine cognitive decline
Julie A. Morenoa, Amelia Hinesa, Breonna Kusickb, Amanda Lathama, McKenzie Richardsa,
Savannah Rochac, Brittney MacQuiddyb, Ronald B. Tjalkens, and Stephanie McGrathb
aDepartment of Environmental and Radiological Health Sciences, Colorado State University,
Fort Collins, CO, USA; bClinical Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins,
CO, USA; cMicrobiology, Pathology and Immunology, College of Veterinary Medicine and
Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA
Aims: Aged canines develop many features of human aging including cognitive decline
and neuropathologies including neuroinflammation and accumulation of misfolded proteins.
The only current antemortem diagnostic assay available for veterinarians to diagnose
canine cognitive dysfunction (CCD) using clinical signs and magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI), mostly to rule out any other causes including brain infections and cancer.
The development of antemortem diagnostics using both blood and cerebral spinal fluid
(CSF) samples is vital to the early diagnosis of these aged dogs. However, this is
challenging due to low concentrations of the common cognitive decline biomarkers found
in samples such as misfolded protein amyloid-beta (Aβ), hyperphosphorylation of tau,
the inflammatory marker, glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), and neurofilament
light chain (NfL).
Material and Methods: We have been able to concentrate our samples by extracting the
extracellular vesicles to detect Ab, hyperphosphorylation of tau (P-tau), and GFAP
in aged dogs and dogs with CCD.
Results: We have been able to correlate these changes with pathological brain changes
on some of our aged canine tissue, detecting a change in pathologies and blood from
the same dog.
Conclusions: These sensitive and specific diagnostic assays would improve the ability
of veterinarians to accurately diagnose CCD early. Critically, CCD has also been shown
by others to be a fantastic translational animal model for Alzheimer’s disease and
other dementias in humans.
Strain Profiles of Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease in Canada
Jennifer L. Myskiwa,b, Lise Lamoureuxa, Michael Coulthartc, Valerie Simd,and Stephanie
Bootha,b
aOne Health, Public Health Agency of Canada, Winnipeg, Canada; bMedical Microbiology
and Infectious Diseases, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada; cCanadian CJD Surveillance
System, Public Health Agency of Canada, Ottawa; dDivision of Neurology, Department
of Medicine Centre for Prions and Protein Folding Diseases, University of Alberta,
Edmonton
Aims: Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) is the most widespread human prion
disease with an annual prevalence of 1–2 cases per million individuals. sCJD is heterogenous;
presenting with diverse clinical signs, neuropathological profiles and molecular subtypes.
It is believed this variability is attributed to host genetics and strain properties
of the pathogenic prion protein (PrPSc). While the molecular basis of strain diversity
is not fully understood, research indicates strain-specific properties are driven
by conformational/structural states of PrPSc. In the Canadian population, sCJD strain
diversity is poorly understood and remains to be explored experimentally. For these
reasons, we are undertaking a systematic analysis of the molecular diversity of CJD
cases in Canada. We aim to develop and validate novel methodologies in CJD surveillance
research that exploit strain-specific properties of PrPSc. Additionally, by applying
these methodologies to analyse PrPScin a Canadian cohort, we intend to enhance our
current understand of the strains affecting the Canadian population.
Material and Methods: Firstly, MRIs are being reviewed and pathology information from
over 40 cases of CJD are analyzed to select clinically affected areas for investigation.
Biochemical analysis will include assessment of the levels of protease sensitive and
resistant prion protein, glycoform-ratio analysis, temperature and detergent denaturation
profiles, and PrPScseeding profiles using real-time quaking-induced conversion assays.
Results: From the cohort of over 40 Canadian CJD cases, we have identified three atypical
CJD cases as well as two cases of variably protease-sensitive prionopathies. One of
the atypical CJD cases presented with increased resistance to temperature denaturation
as well as a slow seeding pattern. The second atypical CJD case presented with a fast
seeding pattern. Finally, the third atypical case presented with an unusual 20kDa
protease-resistant core. The two variably protease-sensitive prionopathies identified
in this cohort presented with slow seeding profiles as well as a low molecular-weight
protease resistant fragment visualized with capillary-based electrophoresis.
Conclusions: Throughout this study, we have developed assays that detect and characterize
atypical PrPScprofiles. We believe these atypical cases may represent novel strains
of CJD, future work involves passaging the atypical isolates into an animal model
to further characterize these prion proteins. A deeper knowledge of prion strains
within a population has implications for the design and development of future anti-prion
therapeutic strategies.
Funded by: Public Health Agency of Canada
An undiagnosed case of prion disease found in donated bodies for anatomical practice
of medical students
Takehiro Nakagakia, Miho Kanekoa, Akio Akagib, Yasushi Iwasakib, Katsuya Satohc,and
Noriyuki Nishidaa
aDepartment of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, Nagasaki University Institute
of Biomedical Sciences, Nagasaki, Japan; bDepartment of Neuropathology, Institute
for Medical Science of Aging, Aichi Medical University, Nagakute, Japan; cHealth Sciences,
Unit of Medical and Dental Sciences, Nagasaki University Institute of Biomedical Sciences,
Nagasaki, Japan
Aims: Human prion diseases comprise infectious, genetic and sporadic disorders characterized
by the accumulation of abnormal prion protein (PrPSc) in the central nervous system.
The transmission of prions to patients is known to have occurred by transplantation
of infected cadaveric dura mater grafts and corneas, and from exposure to contaminated
instruments during neurosurgery. In medical, forensic, and surgical training procedures
too, the potential for exposure to prions through accidental contact with tissues
from prion-infected cadavers is of concern as prions are not inactivated by formalin
fixation. For this reason, we started screening for undiagnosed case of prion disease
in the donated bodies received by our institution for anatomical practice from 2020.
Material and Methods: The frontal cortex of cadavers were collected and tested by
Real Time Quaking Induced Conversion (RT-QuIC) method.
Results: In 2020, frontal cortex specimens from 36 cadavers were tested and all were
negative. In 2021, a further 44 brains were tested and one was found to be positive.
We repeated the test on four additional frontal lobe specimens and all were positive.
Samples from the temporal, parietal, and occipital lobes, and these homogenates were
also positive wheras samples from the basal ganglia, thalamus, and medulla oblongata
were negative. By the hisotopathological analysis, extensive spongiform changes in
the neocortex were observed. For these reasons, we concluded that this cadaver is
an undiagnosed case of prion diseases.
Conclusions: Although our sample size was small, we were able to identify a previously
undiagnosed case of prion disease after examination of the brains from only 80 donated
cadavers, suggesting that prion carriers could potentially be more common, particularly
among the elderly, than would be suggested by the prevalence of prion diseases. Thus,
for the safety of surgeons and recipients of transplants, as well as medical personnel
and students working with donated cadavers, a systematic prion-screening system for
donated bodies and body parts is needed.
Funded by:aGrant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C) from Japan Society for the Promotion
of Science (JSPS), bGrant-in-Aid of the Research Committee of Prion Disease and Slow
Virus Infection from the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan
Grant number:aJP21K07276, bH29-036
Acknowledgement: We thank Prof. Tetsuyuki Kitamoto for giving the advices and discussion.
Robust hematogenous prion detection in CWD-infected deer throughout disease course
Amy V. Nalls, Erin E. McNulty, Nathaniel D. Denkers, Edward A. Hoover, and Candace
K. Mathiason
Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Pathology, Colorado State University,
Fort Collins, CO USA
Aims: There is evidence that infectious prions circulate in the bloodstream of animals
infected with prion disease, including cervids (chronic wasting disease), sheep (scrapie),
cattle (bovine spongiform encephalopathy), and humans (Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease).
The development of rapid, sensitive, and specific assays to detect blood-borne prions
has been challenging due to presumed low concentrations of prions in the blood as
well as assay inhibitors. Our laboratory has performed extensive chronic wasting disease
studies in the native white-tailed deer host, providing a unique repository of serially
collected samples from the asymptomatic stage through clinical disease. This repository,
in addition to ongoing CWD studies in deer, has permitted us the opportunity to evaluate
hematogenous prion load in samples collected minutes, days, weeks and months post
exposure using enhanced amplification techniques.
Material and Methods: White-tailed deer were orally inoculated with CWD+ or negative
deer brain homogenate and blood was collected at 15, 30, and 60 minutes post inoculation,
then at 2–4 weeks, and every 3 months until termination in clinical disease. Buffy
coat cells were isolated from these samples, counted with a hemacytometer, and assessed
for prion seeding activity in an optimized RT-QuIC assay using lipase iron-oxide bead
extraction (LIQ). The PMCA/RT-QuIC assay was used for confirmation.
Results: Low cell numbers were sufficient to initiate prion seeding activity in LIQ
and PMCA/RT-QuIC assays. We detected seeding activity in buffy coat cell fractions
harvested as early as 15 minutes post inoculation, throughout asymptomatic disease,
peaking at clinical disease.
Conclusions: Detection of prion seeding activity within the first hour after inoculation
suggests the immediate detection of inoculum after crossing mucosal surfaces and entering
the bloodstream. Ongoing detection in serial collections throughout the disease course
suggests blood-borne prionemia. These findings allow further assessment of the role
hematogenous prions play in the pathogenesis of CWD and provide the tools for examining
prionemia in naturally-infected cervid populations.
Funded by: HHS-NIH-NIAID
Grant number: 2R01AI112956-06
Acknowledgement: We thank our undergraduate researchers for their help with sample
processing and organization.
Chronic wasting disease prions in mule deer interdigital glands
Ness, Anthonya,b, Zeng, Dorisc, d, Kuznetsova, Alsub,e, Otero, Aliciaa,b,f, Kim, Chiyea,b,
Saboraki, Kelseyg, Lingle, Susang, Pybus, Margoa,h, Aiken, Juddb,e, Gilch, Sabinec,d,
and McKenzie, Debbiea,b
aDepartment of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada;
bCentre for Prions and Protein Folding Diseases, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada; cDepartment
of Comparative Biology and Experimental Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary,
Alberta, Canada; dHotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada;
eDepartment of Agricultural, Food and Nutritional Sciences, University of Alberta,
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada f
Present Address: Centro de Encefalopatías y Enfermedades Transmisibles Emergentes,
Universidad de Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain; gDepartment of Biology, University of Winnipeg,
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, hAlberta Environment and Parks, Alberta, Canada
Aims: We sought to examine deer skin scent glands for CWD prions. We hypothesized
that these glands could contribute to CWD transmission.
Material and Methods: Hunter-harvested deer tissues were examined by immunohistochemistry
for CWD prions. Interdigital gland homogenates were assayed for prions by real-time
quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC). Interdigital gland homogenates and soil and
was assayed for prions by serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification (sPMCA).
Results: We identified CWD prions within the interdigital glands of mule deer, sac-like
exocrine structures found between digits of the hooves. Immunohistochemical analysis
of interdigital glands from a CWD-infected female mule deer identified disease-associated
PrPCWDwithin clusters of infiltrating leukocytes adjacent to sudoriferous and sebaceous
glands, and within the acrosyringeal epidermis of a sudoriferous gland tubule. Soil
retrieved from between the digits of a clinically affected mule deer amplified proteinase
K-resistant PrP material by sPMCA – possibly originating from the interdigital glands.
Analysis (blinded) of interdigital glands from 11 mule deer by RT-QuIC accurately
identified CWD-infected animals.
Conclusions: These data suggest that interdigital glands may play a role in the dissemination
of CWD prions into the environment; warranting future investigation.
Funded by: Alberta Prion Research Institute (APRI); Genome Canada; NSERC
Grant number: PEX19011
Acknowledgement: We thank Dr. Nick Nation for assisting with identification of the
acrosyringeal histological structures. We thank Nathalie Daude and Trang Nguyen from
the University of Alberta CPPFD histological core services for their work.
A dividing cell model for stable propagation and curing of bona fide human sporadic
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease prions
Akin Nihata,b, Parineeta Aroraa, Melissa Raynera, Christian Schmidta, Jacqueline Linehana,
Sebastian Brandnera,c, Simon Meada,b, John Collingea,b, Parmjit Jata
aMRC Prion Unit at UCL, UCL Institute of Prion Diseases, London, UK; bNational Prion
Clinic, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, University College London
Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK; cDivision of Neuropathology, National
Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, London, UK
Aims: Establishing cell-based models of human prion infection and propagation has
been an important, yet elusive, goal of the prion field for decades. The repeated
failure of therapeutics identified by screening with non-human species has renewed
the search for cell models that allow interrogation of native human prions, in a robust
and high-throughput system that propagates bona fide infectivity. Here, we present
the first reported dividing cell model capable of persistent infection and clearance
of human sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (sCJD) prions.
Material and Methods: We used a short hairpin RNA and anti-PrP FACS to knockdown murine
Prnp in CAD5 cells. CAD5-PrP−/− cells were reconstituted with human PrP expressing
valine at codon 129, via a pLNCX2 retroviral vector. Subclones were screened for sCJD
prion susceptibility using infected human brain homogenate. Pooled lysates from two
CAD5-PrP−/−(HuPrP) cell clones exposed to sCJD-infected brain homogenate were inoculated
into Tg(HuPrP129V+/+
Prnp0/0
)-152 (Tg152) mice, which were monitored for clinical signs of prion disease. Promising
cell clones were iteratively subcloned and screened for prion susceptibility at increasing
dilutions. Susceptible cells were used to establish chronic infection, and treated
with anti-prion therapeutic agents to demonstrate PrPScclearance.
Results: CAD5-PrP−/−(HuPrP) cell subclones were identified with reproducible susceptibility
to infection with prions from sporadic CJD patients with PRNP codon 129 VV/MV genotypes
(types 2/3, London classification; Parchi classification types 1/2). A CAD5-PrP−/−(HuPrP)
cell subclone was exposed to 0.03% frontal cortex homogenate containing T3MV (MV2)
sCJD strain prions, and serially passaged to dilute the inoculum. Pooled cell lysate
was inoculated into Tg152 mice, resulting in a 100% clinical attack rate (18/18 mice,
mean incubation period 251 ± 4 days post-inoculation). 9/9 of mice inoculated with
1% frontal cortex from the same patient were clinically affected, mean incubation
235 ± 15 DPI. Histopathological examination and immunoblot analysis for PrPScwere
identical between both groups. Sequential subcloning resulted in a cell line reliably
susceptible to sCJD prion infection using frontal cortex homogenates diluted to approximately
10−5– 10−6. The most susceptible subclone was used to establish a pilot semi-automated
robotic assay, persistently-infected cells that allow cryopreservation, and to demonstrate
PrPScclearance with anti-prion therapeutic agents.
Conclusions: We have engineered the first immortalised cell line that can reproducibly
propagate infective human sCJD prions, maintain and be cured of persistent infection,
and is amenable to high-throughput assay. We believe these cells will be of considerable
value in investigating putative prion therapeutics, factors associated with human
prion cell and strain tropism, and infectivity.
Funded by: Akin Nihat is supported by a MRC Clinical Research Training Fellowship
(grant number MR/P019862/1)
Grant number: MR/P019862/1
Acknowledgement: We thank all the affected individuals who kindly donated the tissue
that supported this work.
Amyloidogenesis of SARS-COV-2 Spike protein cause impaired fibrinolysis in vitro
Sofie Nyström, and Per Hammarström
IFM-Chemistry, Linköping Univeristy, Linköping, Sweden
Aims: SARS-CoV-2 infection is associated with a number of symptoms with striking similarities
to blood coagulation and fibrinolytic disturbances as well as neurologic and cardiac
problems associated with amyloid disease. This led us to perform in vitro investigation
of SARS-CoV-2 spike protein (S-protein) amyloidogenicity. The leucocyte subclass Neutrophils
are highly abundant at site of infection in COVID-19 patients. A major mode of action
for Neutrophils is the release of Neutrophil elastase (NE). This protease will digest
intruding pathogens as a first response to infection. The enzyme is often entrapped
in Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) to keep the proteolytic activity near the
infected site rather than floating away in the blood stream. We therefore also investigated
if Spike amyloid fibrils influences the fibrin(ogen)-fibrinolysis system in vitro.
Material and Methods: Seven amyloidogenic amino acid sequences in the SARS-COV-2 S-protein
(Wuhan strain) were identified using the WALTZ algorithm. Peptides were synthesized
based on the prediction and were subjected to amyloid formation conditions in vitro.
To verify their amyloidogenicity, the fibrillation kinetics was monitored by ThT and
the endpoint samples were analyzed using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and
Congo red birefringence (CR). Recombinant expressed full-length S-protein was subjected
to cleavage by neutrophil elastase in vitro. An in vitro fibrin(ogen)-fibrinolysis
assay in absence and presence of Spike amyloids was performed and monitored by sample
turbidity by absorption at 350 nm. Mass spectrometry was also performed at endpoint
of elastase cleavage to determine which peptides were abundant after intermediate
and complete cleavage of S-protein.
Results: Three 20-amino acid long synthetic spike peptides fulfilled our three amyloid
fibril criteria: nucleation dependent polymerization kinetics by ThT, Congo red positivity,
and ultrastructural fibrillar morphology. All seven peptides fulfilled at least one
of the three criteria. Full-length folded S-protein by itself did not form amyloid
fibrils. However, amyloid-like fibrils with evident branching were formed during 24
h of S-protein coincubation NE in vitro. Prescence of spike amyloid during fibrin
formation from fibrinogen resulted in impairment of fibrinolysis.
Conclusions: Our data propose a molecular mechanism for potential amyloidogenesis
of SARS-CoV-2 S-protein in humans facilitated by endoproteolysis. S-protein amyloid
fibrils cause fractions of fibrin to be plasmin-resistant in vitro suggestively associated
with pathogenic microclotting in vivo. The prospective of S-protein amyloidogenesis
in COVID-19 disease associated pathogenesis can be important in understanding the
disease and long COVID-19 in relation to diverse SARS-CoV-2 strains.
References: https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c03925
Funded by: Swedish research council
Grant number: 2019–04405
Chronic wasting disease risk assessment in Portugal: analysis of variability and genetic
structure of the Portuguese roe deer population
Nuno Gonçalves-Anjoa,b, Jorge C. Pereirac, Ana Machadoa, Mafalda Saiandaa, Estela
Bastosa,b, Ana C. Matosd, Adelina Gamac, Anabela Alvesc, Alexandra Estevesc, Sara
Rochaa, Luís Figueirad, Carla Limae, Filipe Silvac, Fernanda Seixasc, Isabel Piresc,
João Silvae, Madalena Vieira-Pintoc, Maria L. Pintoc, Paula Mendonçae, Paulo Carvalhoe,
Paula Tavarese, Roberto Sargoc, Leonor Orgec,e, and Maria A. Piresc
aDepartment of Genetics and Biotechnology, University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro
(UTAD), Vila Real, Portugal; bCentre for the Research and Technology of Agro-Environmental
and Biological Sciences (CITAB), UTAD, Vila Real, Portugal; cVeterinary and Animal
Science Research Center (CECAV), AL4AnimalS, UTAD, Vila Real, Portugal; dPolytechnic
Institute of Castelo Branco (IPCB), Castelo Branco, Portugal; ePathology Laboratory,
UEISPSA, National Institute for Agricultural and Veterinary Research (INIAV), I.P.,
Oeiras and Vairão, Portugal
Aims: Among the Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies, Chronic Wasting Disease
(CWD) in cervids is now the rising concern in wildlife within Europe after the first
case detected in Norway in 2016. CWD shows a notable horizontal transmission, affecting
both free-ranging and captive cervids. Furthermore, several genetic variants in the
Prion Protein (PRNP) gene coding sequence of the cervid were identified, which increase
the susceptibility to the disease.
Roe deer has a widespread geographical distribution which extends from the Iberian
Peninsula to the north of Scandinavia, being found as well in Turkey, Israel, and
Jordan. In recent centuries, a significant number of fluctuations have occurred in
these deer populations, leading to a decline in deer population and distribution.
These alterations combined with translocations of animals of the same species, can
drive to meaningful consequences on the genetic structure, diversity, and fitness
of populations.
Material and Methods: In this study we aimed to outline the genetic diversity and
structure of Western Iberian roe deer populations using mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)
molecular analysis and link to sequence diversity of PRNP gene performed to evaluate
the susceptibility to CWD of this population.
Results: The preliminary results from the analysis of 60 roe deer samples from different
Western Iberian areas (wild and fenced populations) allowed the confirmation of the
consensus PRNP gene CDS sequence and revealed the presence of 13 haplotypes by mtDNA
molecular analysis.
Conclusions: These studies are of great importance to obtain information about the
phylogeography, which can be used to design appropriate strategies for the conservation
and management of populations, but as well to maintain the genetic heritage of roe
deer in Europe. Moreover, the establishment of risk assessment projects, even in countries
with no cases of CWD is very important to predict the effects of possible contamination
in the future.
Funded by: This work was supported by the project WastingPrionRisk [POCI-01-0145-FEDER-029,947/PTDC/CVT-CVT/29947/2017]
funded by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT). FCT PhD grant
[SFRH/BD/146961/2019] financed by FCT through FSE (Fundo Social Europeu). This work
was also supported by national funds [UIDB/CVT/00772/2020], [LA/P/0059/2020] and [UIDB/04033/2020]
by FCT.
Grant number: [POCI-01-0145-FEDER-029,947], [PTDC/CVT-CVT/29947/2017], [UIDB/CVT/00772/2020],
[LA/P/0059/2020], [UIDB/04033/2020] and [SFRH/BD/146961/2019].
DTI Abnormalities in Healthy E200K Carriers May Serve as an Early Biomarker for Genetic
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (gCJD)
Omer Nurita,b,e, Silbak Rawanc, Trabulus Noaa, Shiner Tamaraa,b,c, Moore Ornaa, Gana-Weisz
Malid, Goldstein Orlyd, Glinka Tald, Orr-Urterger Avib,d, Giladi Nira,b,c, Droby Amgada,c,e,
and Bregman Noaa,b
aCognitive Neurology Unit, Neurological Institute, Tel-Aviv Medical Center; bSackler
School of Medicine, Tel-Aviv University; cSagol School of Neuroscience, Tel-Aviv University;
dGenomic Research Laboratory for Neurodegeneration, Tel-Aviv Medical Center; eLaboratory
of Early Markers of Neurodegeneration, Neurological Institute, Tel-Aviv Medical Center,
Tel-Aviv, Israel
Aims: To investigate microstructural changes in healthy E200K carriers using diffusion
tensor imaging (DTI).
Material and Methods: Seven symptomatic gCJD patients and N = 60 healthy relatives
of gCJD patients were included. Participants underwent genetic testing for the E200K
mutation, MRI scans at 3T, and a lumbar puncture (LP) for total Tau protein levels
(t-Tau). Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) metrics including; fractional anisotropy (FA),
mean diffusivity (MD), radial diffusivity (RD) and axonal diffusivity (AD) were calculated
along 45 WM tracts.
Results: N = 30 participants were found to be E200K carriers (mean age 56.73±7.27,
18 F). Of those; N = 23 underwent an LP, and 8 showed above normal t-Tau values (>
290 pg/ml). Higher MD, RD as well as lower FA values were observed in symptomatic
CJD patients compared to healthy relatives in several WM tracts (Two-samples t-test;
p < 0.05). No significant differences in FA, MD, AD and RD were detected between healthy
carriers and healthy non-carriers within the WM tracts. Finally, significantly higher
FA and lower MD, RD, and AD were found in carriers with high level of t-Tau compared
to carriers with normal levels of t-Tau along several WM tracts (Two-samples t-test;
p < 0.05).
Conclusions: DTI abnormalities along WM tracts were found in gCJD patients and in
healthy E200K carriers with elevated t-Tau in CSF. These findings suggest a possible
role for DTI imaging as a non-invasive biomarker for prodromal gCJD. Ongoing work
is focused on establishing the sensitivity of further DTI-derived measures and additional
MRI markers prior to phenoconversion.
Funded by: IONIS pharmaceuticals
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and Plasma Biomarkers in patients with genetic Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease (gCJD) and healthy relatives, carriers of the E200K mutation: Results from
an ongoing longitudinal study
Omer Na,b, Shiner Ta,b, Trablus Na, Silbak Rb, Bar-David Aa, Kave Ga,b, Alcalay Ya,
Gana-Weiss Ma,b, Goldstein Oa,b, Orr-Urteger Aa,b, Glinka Ta, Giladi Na,b, Moore Oa,
and Bregman Na,b
aThe Neurological Institution, Tel-Aviv Medical Center, Tel-Aviv, Israel; bTel-Aviv
University, Tel-Aviv, Israel
Aims: The genetic form of CJD caused by an E200K mutation on the PRNP gene is relatively
prevalent among Jews from North African origin. Carriers of the E200K mutation are
prone to develop CJD, however age of onset is variable and unpredictable, and the
prodromal stage of disease is still not well characterized. A longitudinal study following
healthy relatives of gCJD patients, carriers of the E200K mutation, was established
aiming to characterize the prodromal stage and identify people at risk for phenoconversion.
Here we present the cross-sectional (first year) results of plasma and CSF biomarkers
for neurodegeneration in this population.
Material and Methods: Clinical data, genetics, plasma and CSF were collected from
CJD patients and from healthy first degree relatives of gCJD patients, as part of
a longitudinal study conducted in the Tel-Aviv Medical Center. All participants were
tested for the E200K mutation on the PRNP gene. CSF and plasma were tested for total
Tau (t-Tau), Neurofilaments Light (NfL), GFAP, and UCHL1 levels. Real-time quaking-induced
conversion (RT-QuIC) was performed on CSF to detect the presence of the misfolded
pathological form of prion protein (PrPSc).
Results: All gCJD patients (N = 7) and 42/84 healthy relatives were positive for the
E200K mutation. No significant differences were found in age (mean age of carriers
was 57.5 ± 7.5), gender, clinical and cognitive measures when comparing patients,
healthy carriers, and non-carriers. Total-Tau, NfL, and GFAP were significantly higher
in CSF and plasma of patients compared to healthy relatives (p < 0.0001). UCHL1 was
significantly higher in CSF (p < 0.0001) but not in plasma when comparing patients
to healthy relatives (p = 0.3). No significant differences were found in these biomarkers
when comparing healthy carriers to non-carriers (p > 0.38). RT-QuIC was positive for
the presence of PrPSc
in all patients, and in 1/42 E200K carriers. In this individual, t-Tau levels in CSF,
and levels of GFAP and UCHL1 in plasma were significantly elevated compared to all
other healthy relatives. Two months later, she phenoconverted.
Conclusions: RT-QuIC for PrPScand other CSF and plasma biomarkers may serve as a useful
tool for the detection of prodromal gCJD in at-risk individuals. The data presented
here requires further validation in an ongoing longitudinal follow-up.
Funded by: Ionis Pharmaceuticals
Acknowledgement: Ionis Pharmaceuticals
Performance of α-synuclein RT-QuIC in relation to neuropathological staging of Lewy
body disease
Christina D. Orrù, PhDa*, Sara Hall, MD, PhDb,c*, Geidy E. Serrano, PhDd, Douglas
Galasko, MD, PhDe,f, Andrew G. Hughson, MSca, Bradley R. Groveman, PhDa, Charles H.
Adler, MD, PhDg, Thomas G. Beach, MD, PhDd, Oskar Hansson, MD, PhDb,c**, and Byron
Caughey PhDa**
*Both contributing equally as first authors. **Both contributing equally as senior
authors. aLPVD, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, NIAID, NIH, Hamilton, MT, USA; bClinical
Memory Research Unit, Department of Clinical Sciences Malmö, Lund University, Sweden;
cMemory Clinic, Skåne University Hospital, Malmö, Sweden; 4Banner Sun Health Research
Institute, Sun City, Arizona, USA; 5Department of Neurosciences, University of California
San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA; 6Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego,
CA, USA; 7Department of Neurology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Mayo Clinic Arizona,
Scottsdale, AZ, USA
Aims: α-synuclein (αSyn) RT-QuIC is a promising new assay thate addreses the need
for a sensitive and specific diagnostic test for Lewy body disorders (LBD). By detecting
misfolded αSyn in biological samples, such as CSF, LBD can be detected in clinically
or neuropathologically established patients with various synucleinopathies. In this
study, we analyzed and compared lumbar CSF in a clinical cohort (Swedish BioFINDER)
and postmortem ventricular CSF in a neuropathological cohort [Arizona Study of Aging
and Neurodegenerative Disorders/Brain and Body Donation Program (AZSAND/BBDP)] using
the αSyn RT-QuIC assay.
Material and Methods: The clinical cohort from BioFINDER included 64 PD/PDD, 15 MSA,
15 PSP, 47 controls and two controls who later converted to PD/DLB. The neuropathological
cohort from AZSAND/BBDP included 101 cases including LBD and controls, as well as
other brain disorders. CSFs from these cohorts were blinded with respect to clinical
status, neuropathological status, and diagnosis of the patient and analyzed by αSyn
RT-QuIC.
Results: αSyn RT-QuIC discriminated LBD (i.e. PD, PDD and converters) from controls
with a sensitivity of 95% and a specificity of 83% in the clinical BioFINDER cohort.
There were two controls that were αSyn RT-QuIC positive who later converted to LBD.
αSyn RT-QuIC analysis of the neuropathological cohort from AZSAND/BBDP, distinguished
neuropathologically verified ‘standard LBD’ cases (i.e. PD, PD with AD and DLB; n
= 25) from those lacking LB pathology (n = 53) with high sensitivity (100%) and specificity
(94%). In the subgroup with ‘non-standard’ LBD (i.e., AD with Lewy bodies not meeting
criteria for DLB or PD, and incidental LBD, n = 23) only 57% were αSyn RT-QuIC positive.
Interestingly, αSyn RT-QuIC was effective in discriminating cases with LB pathology
in the cortex (97% sensitivity) from cases with no LBs or LBs present only in the
olfactory bulb (93% specificity). In cases with LB pathology restricted to the brainstem
or amygdala, and not the allocortex or neocortex, the sensitivity was 50%.
Conclusions: Testing of CSF specimens with αSyn RT-QuIC is highly sensitive and specific
for detecting cases with clinicopathologically-defined Lewy body disorders. While
the sensitivity is lower for non-standard LBD, asymptomatic LBD, or in cases with
modest LB pathology not affecting the cortex, the CSF αSyn RT-QuIC assay remains a
robust and valuable tool for LBD diagnosis.
Funded by:/Grant number: The Swedish Research Council (2016–00906), the Knut and Alice
Wallenberg foundation (2017–0383), the Marianne and Marcus Wallenberg foundation (2015.0125),
the Strategic Research Area MultiPark (Multidisciplinary Research in Parkinson’s disease)
at Lund University, the Swedish Alzheimer Foundation (AF-939932), the Swedish Brain
Foundation (FO2021-0293), The Parkinson foundation of Sweden (1280/20), the Konung
Gustaf V:s och Drottning Victorias Frimurarestiftelse, the Skåne University Hospital
Foundation (2020-O000028), Regionalt Forskningsstöd (2020–0314) and the Swedish federal
government under the ALF agreement (2018-Projekt0279). This work was supported in
part by the Intramural Research Program of the NIAID, NIH.
We are grateful to the Banner Sun Health Research Institute Brain and Body Donation
Program of Sun City, Arizona for the provision of human biological materials. The
Brain and Body Donation Program has been supported by the National Institute of Neurological
Disorders and Stroke (U24 NS072026 National Brain and Tissue Resource for Parkinson’s
Disease and Related Disorders), the National Institute on Aging (P30 AG19610 and P30AG072980,
Arizona Alzheimer’s Disease Core Center), the Arizona Department of Health Services
(contract 211,002, Arizona Alzheimer’s Research Center), the Arizona Biomedical Research
Commission (contracts 4001, 0011, 05–901 and 1001 to the Arizona Parkinson’s Disease
Consortium) and the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research .
Acknowledgement: The authors thank the study participants and their families. Without
their invaluable contribution, this study would not have been possible.
Innate immune tolerance in microglia does not impact on CNS prion disease
Reiss Pal, Barry M. Bradford, and Neil A. Mabbott
The Roslin Institute & R(D)SVS, The University of Edinburgh. Edinburgh, UK
Aims: The microglia provide neuroprotection during prion disease, but their pro-inflammatory
activation may exacerbate the development of the neuropathology. Innate immune tolerance
to consecutive bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) treatment can induce epigenetic
changes in the microglia that can dampen their responsiveness to subsequent LPS-treatment
and several months later impede the development of neuritic damage in a transgenic
mouse model of Alzheimer’s like pathology. We therefore reasoned that innate immune
tolerance in microglia might similarly impede the development of prion disease.
Material and Methods: Mice were injected with LPS intraperitoneally once or 4x every
24hrs to induce immune training and tolerance, respectively. Brains and peripheral
blood were collected 3 h after the final treatment. Cytokines were analysed by ELISA
and RT-qPCR. Glial activation was assessed by RT-qPCR and immunohistochemistry. Mice
were infected with ME7 by intracerebral injection, and 35 days later given 4xLPS.
Prion protein load was measured by immunohistochemistry and western blot.
Results: Pro-inflammatory cytokines Interleukin-1β (IL-1β), IL-6 and tumour necrosis
factor-α (TNF-α) were detected in the serum after 1x LPS. However, the levels of IL-6
and TNF-α in 4xLPS-treated mice were undetectable which coincided with increased amount
of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 in the serum. In the brain, Il1β, Il6 and
Tnf were induced after 1xLPS treatment. In contrast, expression of Il1b, Tnf and Il6
were reduced after 4xLPS when compared to mice given 1xLPS, and this was accompanied
by an increase in Il10 in the brains of 4xLPS-treated mice. Consistent with these
changes, the expression of the microglial homeostatic related genes Cx3cr1 and Tmem119
were also significantly increased in the brains of 4xLPS-treated mice. However our
data also shows that consecutive systemic LPS treatment did not affect the subsequent
development of prion disease. Innate immune tolerance induced after 4x LPS did not
affect the expression level of these cytokines at the terminal stage of prion disease
when compared to prions+4xPBS controls. However, microglia training in response to
1xLPS treatment coincided with an increase in Il1β expression compared to prions+4xPBS
controls, and this increase was ablated in the brains of prions+4xLPS treated mice.
The level of Tnf expression in the brains of prions+4xLPS treated mice was also reduced
compared to prions+1xLPS treated mice.
Conclusions: Innate immune tolerance in microglia does not influence the subsequent
onset of prion disease-induced neuropathology in mice, despite previously published
evidence of this effect in an Alzheimer’s disease mouse model.
Funded by: This work was supported by project (BB/S005471/1) and Institute Strategic
Programme Grant funding from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
(grant numbers BBS/E/D/20002173 & BBS/E/D/10002074). RP was supported by a PhD studentship
from the Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies (University of Edinburgh, UK).
Acknowledgement: We thank Aileen Boyle, Bob Fleming, Graeme Robertson, Lee McManus,
the Biological and Veterinary Services, Bioimaging and Pathology Services groups,
and the Roslin Institute Histopathology Suite (University of Edinburgh, UK) for helpful
advice and technical support.
Evaluation of the therapeutic action of poly(propylene Imine) glycodendrimers in prion
disease mouse model
Dimitra Paschaloudia, Nikolaos Mpekasb, Sotiria Solomoua, Eirini Kanataa, Dimitra
Dafoub, Konstantinos Xanthopoulosa, Inga Zerrc, Matthias Schmitzc, D. Appelhansd,
and Theodoros Sklaviadisa
aSchool of Pharmacy, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece; bSchool
of Biology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece; School of
Pharmacy, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece; cDepartment
of Neurology University Medical School Göttingen, Germany; dLeibniz-Institut für Polymerforschung
Dresden e.V., Dresden, Germany
Aims: Prion Diseases are transmissible proteinopathies that affect the nervous system
through the accumulation of the misfolded prion protein. Despite fervent research,
an efficient therapeutic approach has not been developed and the diseases remain lethal.
A series of poly(propylene imine) (PPI) Glycodendrimers has been generated and their
anti-prion efficiency was previously tested on scrapie-infected neuroblastoma cell
models (ScN2a) and a cell-free prion amplification assay (RT-QuIC). A dense shell
4thgeneration PPI glycodendrimer (G4-Mal) displayed promising results in these assays
was further tested in a murine prion model.
Material and Methods: 27 mice (C57Bl/6, female, aged 12 weeks) were housed in a biosafety
level 3 facility with controlled temperature, humidity, and photoperiod and ad libitum
access to water and feed. Mice were challenged i.p. with the RML strain and divided
into three groups. The PPI Glycodendrimer was dissolved in drinking water and administered
to the first group since day 10 post inoculation (prophylaxis group). The second group
received the same treatment since the 90thday (treatment group), while the third group
did not receive any treatment (control group). Mice were examined for the appearance
of symptoms including loss of motor coordination and strength, reduced self-grooming,
etc. The progression of the disease was evaluated using a clinical scoring system,
in which the presence of each symptom was assigned a score of 0.5 or 1, depending
on its severity. The sum of scores characterized the clinical condition of each mouse
throughout disease progression.
Results: The control group reached an average clinical score above 1.5 in 157 ± 20 days,
while the treated groups showed a delay in the onset of symptoms. This delay was significant
(p = 0.0048) for the treatment group, (reached average score 1.5 176.3 ± 20 days after
inoculation). However, all mice reached a clinical score between 4 and 6 in the later
stages of the disease and eventually succumbed without statistically significant differences
in the survival time (204 ± 4, 202 ± 3, and 202 ± 6 days after the induction, for
the prophylaxis, treatment, and control group respectively). To further characterize
the disease progression, the AUC for the clinical scores vs time plots was calculated
and found significantly reduced (p = 0,0225) for the treatment group.
Conclusions: Our results indicate that although the glycodendrimer did not prolong
the survival interval in the animal model used, it led to a delay in disease onset
and disease burden. Further studies on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of
the compound are underway.
Determining prion protein gene (PRNP) genetic variability in portuguese cervidae population.
An important task in chronic wasting disease (CWD) risk assessment projet in Portugal
Jorge C. Pereiraa, Nuno Gonçalves-Anjob,e, Estela Bastosb,e, Leonor Orgea,c, Ana C.
Matosd, Adelina Gamaa, Anabela Alvesa, Alexandra Estevesa, Sara Rochab,e, Luís Figueirad,
Carla Limac, Filipe Silvac, Fernanda Seixasa, Isabel Piresa, João Silvac, Madalena
Vieira-Pintoa, Maria L. Pintoa, Paula Mendonçac, Paulo Carvalhoc, Paula Tavaresc,
Roberto Sargoa, and Maria A. Piresa
aAnimal and Veterinary Research Centre (CECAV), AL4AnimalS – Associate Laboratory
for Animal and Veterinary Sciences, University of Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro (UTAD),
Vila Real, Portugal; bCentre for the Research and Technology of Agro-Environmental
and Biological Sciences (CITAB), UTAD, Vila Real, Portugal; cPathology Laboratory,
UEISPSA, National Institute for Agricultural and Veterinary Research, I.P.(INIAV)
Oeiras and Vairão, Portugal; dPolytechnic Institute of Castelo Branco (IPCB), Castelo
Branco, Portugal; eDepartment of Genetics and Biotechnology, University of Trás-os-Montes
and Alto Douro (UTAD), Vila Real, Portugal
Aims: The chronic wasting disease (CWD) in cervids is now a rising concern in wildlife
within Europe, since the first case detected in Norway in 2016, 40 more appear until
May of 2022, in Norway, Sweden and Finland. The unclear origin of these new European
cases and the risk that CWD poses to cohabiting animals or more importantly to humans
is largely unknown, is very important for the establishment of risk assessment projects,
even in countries with no cases of CWD to forecast possible infections. In this way,
a synergistic collaborative project was established between the UTAD, INIAV and IPCB
to evaluate the risk of a potential occurrence of CWD in cervid Portuguese populations.
The study of prion protein gene, PRNP, has been proved to be a valuable tool for determining
the relative susceptibility to TSEs since this is influenced by polymorphisms in this
gene. The aim of this work is the screening for PrPresand determination of the PRNP
genotyping profile on Portuguese cervids, as the survey and georeferencing of these
animals will contribute to delineating the risk of dissemination of CWD in Portugal.
Material and Methods: This study includes 200 animals of three different cervid species:
red deer (Cervus elaphus), fallow deer (Dama dama) and roe deer (Capreolus capreolus).
Masseter muscle and lymph node of each animal were collected for genomic DNA extraction
and genetic analysis of prion protein gene, PRNP. The full exon 3 of PRNP gene (771
bp) was amplified by PCR using the primers F223-ACACCCTCTTTATTTTGCAG and R224-AGAAGATAATGAAAACAGGAAG.
PCR products were purified, sequenced, and analyzed using SnapGene Viewer v. 5.1.5,
Unipro UGENE v. 40.0 and Jalview 2.11.1.4.
Results: The comparison of the coding region of PRNP gene and protein sequence – PrPC(256
aa) in red deer, fallow deer, and roe deer, showed high conservation. In red deer,
three polymorphisms were identified: one synonymous, codon A136A and two non-synonymous
codons T98A and Q226E. The synonymous mutation at codon 136 showed to be linked to
the non-synonymous mutations at codon 226. Three haplotypes were identified based
on the sequence variations: T98-Q226 (TQ), T98-E226 (TE) and A98-Q226 (AQ). In fallow
deer and roe deer, no intra variation was found.
Conclusions: The multi-disciplinary approaches including genotyping, PrPresdetection,
identification of risk factors, clinical and pathology evaluations, are of great importance
to evaluate the risk of occurrence of CWD in Europe and more specifically in Iberian
Peninsula. We did not find any positive cases of CWD in the animals under study and
the genetic variations do not allow to conclude about its resistance to this disease.
Funded by: This work was supported by the project WastingPrionRisk [POCI-01-0145-
FEDER-029,947/PTDC/CVT-CVT/29947/2017] funded by the Portuguese Foundation for
Science and Technology (FCT). FCT PhD grant [SFRH/BD/146961/2019] financed by FCT
through FSE (Fundo Social Europeu). This work was also supported by national funds
[UIDB/CVT/00772/2020], [LA/P/0059/2020] and [UIDB/04033/2020] by FCT.
Grant number: [POCI-01-0145-FEDER-029,947], [PTDC/CVT-CVT/29947/2017],
[UIDB/CVT/00772/2020], [LA/P/0059/2020], [UIDB/04033/2020] and
[SFRH/BD/146961/2019].
Blood microRNA sequencing in prion diseases
Sonia Pérez Lázaroa, Inmaculada Martín-Burrielb, Luca Cozzutoc, Julia Ponomarenkoc,
Juan J. Badiolaa, Janne M. Toivonenb, and Rosa Boleaa
aCentro de Encefalopatías y Enfermedades Transmisibles Emergentes, Facultad de Veterinaria,
Universidad de Zaragoza – IA2, Zaragoza, Spain; bLaboratorio de Genética bioquímica
(LAGENBIO), Facultad de Veterinaria, Universidad de Zaragoza – IA2, Zaragoza, Spain;
cBioinformatics Unit, Centre de Regulació Genòmica (CRG), Barcelona, Spain
Aims: MicroRNAs, non-coding small RNA molecules that regulate post-transcriptional
gene expression, play a key role in neuronal survival and function, as well as in
neuroinflammation. Since more than a half of the protein-coding genes are regulated
by microRNAs, alterations in their expression have been associated with neurodegenerative
diseases. We have studied microRNAs alterations in scrapie as a model of prion disease.
Due to the fatality of these diseases and the lack of in vivo definitive diagnosis,
next generation sequencing techniques have become relevant for searching potential
biomarkers. Because of their marked stability in body fluids, microRNAs can be considered
as potential minimally invasive biomarkers of these diseases, and we have selected
blood as an easily accessible body fluid.
Material and Methods: In this study, smallRNA sequencing was performed in blood samples
from sheep naturally infected with classical scrapie in different stages of the pathogenesis
of scrapie infection: 5 sheep in preclinical stage, 10 clinical sheep and 10 negative
healthy controls. Afterwards, a bioinformatic analysis was performed. For the validation
of results, we used quantitative real-time PCR selecting those with less changes as
housekeeping microRNAs and validating the ones with the most significantly altered
expression.
Results: We identified 136 microRNAs significantly dysregulated in blood from clinical
sheep compared to that from negative controls. Specifically, 69 microRNAs were downregulated
whereas 67 microRNAs were upregulated. However, only 1 microRNA was found to be significantly
dysregulated in preclinical sheep.
Conclusions: Our results suggest that most changes in microRNAs are not detected until
the onset of clinical symptoms. The alterations shown in the clinical stage may reflect
the potential usefulness of microRNAs as biomarkers of prion diseases. In fact, one
microRNA was significantly altered in blood in the preclinical stage of the disease
suggesting its potential use as a diagnostic tool. To make progress in this field,
we will conduct further studies to investigate the microRNAs that were altered and
the metabolic pathways that may be involved.
Funded by, grant number: RTI2018-098711-B-I00, EFA 148/16
Application of PMCA to understand CWD prion strains, species barrier and zoonotic
potential
Sandra Pritzkowa, Damian Gorskia, Frank Ramireza, Fei Wanga, Glenn C. Tellingb, Justin
J. Greenleec, Sylvie L. Benestadd, and Claudio Sotoa
aDepartment of Neurology, University of Texas Medical School at Houston, Houston,
Texas, USA; bDepartment of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology, Colorado State
University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA; cVirus and Prion Research Unit, United States
Department of Agriculture, Ames, Iowa, USA; dNorwegian Veterinary Institute, OIE Reference
Laboratory for CWD, Ås, Norway
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a prion disease affecting various species of
cervids that continues to spread uncontrollably across North America and has recently
been detected in Scandinavia (Norway, Sweden and Finland). The mechanisms responsible
for the natural transmission of CWD are largely unknown. Furthermore, the risk of
CWD transmission to other species, including humans, is also unknown and remains a
dangerous enigma. In this study, we investigated the potential of CWD prions to infect
several other animal species (sheep, cattle, pig, hamster, and mouse) including humans,
by examining their capacity to convert the normal prion protein of distinct species
in a PMCA reaction. Moreover, we also investigated whether the in vivo passage of
CWD through intermediate species alters their capacity for zoonotic transmission,
which may represent a major hazard to human health.
Material and Methods: For these studies, we used brain material from CWD-infected
white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), elk (Cervus canadensis), and mule deer
(Odocoileus hemionus) as species native to North America. We also used CWD-infected
Moose (Alces alces), reindeer (Rangifer tarandus) and red deer (Cervus elaphus) as
Norwegian cervids. We also used brains from cattle, sheep and pigs experimentally
infected by CWD. To study interspecies-transmission and zoonotic potential, samples
were tested via PMCA for the conversion of PrPCinto PrPScusing different combinations
of inoculum and host species. Based on these analyses we estimated the spillover and
zoonotic potential for different CWD isolates. We define and quantify spillover and
zoonotic potential indices as the efficiency by which CWD prions sustain prion generation
in vitro at the expense of normal prion proteins from various mammals and human, respectively.
Results: Our results show that prions from some cervid species, especially those found
in Northern Europe, have a higher potential to transmit disease characteristics to
other animals. Conversely, CWD-infected cervids originated in North America appear
to have a greater potential to generate human PrPSc. We also found that in vivo transmission
of CWD to cattle, but not to sheep or pigs substantially increases the ability of
these prions to convert human PrPCby PMCA.
Conclusions: Our findings support the existence of different CWD prion strains with
distinct spillover and zoonotic potentials. We also conclude that transmission of
CWD to other animal species may increase the risk for CWD transmission to humans.
Our studies may provide a tool to predict the array of animal species that a given
CWD prion could affect and may contribute to understanding the risk of CWD for human
health.
Funded by: National Institute of Health
Grant number: P01 AI077774
A role for PrPCin the cellular uptake of extracellular vesicles
B. Puiga, S. Brennaa, B. Mohammadib, M. Glatzelb, H. C. Altmeppenb, and T. Magnusa
aDepartment of Neurology, Experimental Research in Stroke and Inflammation (ERSI),
UKE, Hamburg, Germany; bInstitute of Neuropathology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf
(UKE), Hamburg, Germany
Aims: Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are nanoparticles released into the extracellular
space by probably all types of cells and are currently considered as an important
mechanism of information transfer in cell-to-cell communication. They carry and deliver
a myriad of biologically active molecules critically involved in physiological but
also pathological processes. While much knowledge has recently been acquired about
their biogenesis, their uptake and processing by recipient cells is still not fully
understood. The prion protein and its proteolytically generated C1 fragment are particularly
enriched on EVs and we postulate a role for PrP in EV uptake, fusion, and cargo delivery
on the recipient cell.
Material and Methods: EVs are directly isolated from brains of WT, Prnp-/- (Zh3/Zh3),
and Tga20 mice, subsequently labeled with different dyes (mCling, R18, and ExoGlow
RNA), incubated with murine primary astrocytes as recipient cells, and fixed at different
time points. Employing confocal and super-resolution microscopy, the localization
of the EVs presenting different amounts of surface PrP (or lacking PrP) is monitored
inside the recipient cells.
Results: Already at 1 h after incubation with the recipient cells, EVs isolated from
Prnp-/- mice are rapidly endocytosed and delivered to the late endosomal compartment
(thus colocalizing with LAMP1, a marker of late endosomes/lysosomes), whereas EVs
from WT mice, containing PrP and its C1 fragment, are found in close contact with
the plasma membrane, but are mostly not endocytosed at that time point. However, at
later time points (3 and 6 h) WT EVs also colocalize with LAMP1. Mechanistic proof-of-concept
experiments are currently being performed in suitable cell lines with depletion or
overexpression of PrP or C1 alone.
Conclusions: Our preliminary results indicate a role for PrP in affecting EV´s uptake.
Although further experiments are needed and are currently being setted up, we postulate
that, due to the characteristics of the C1 fragment with its hydrophobic domain being
exposed towards the extracellular space, it may act as a tethering protein supporting
interaction with the recipient cell`s plasma membrane in close resemblance to certain
viral surface/fusion proteins. As EVs are envisioned as potential carriers for drug
delivery, manipulation of PrP levels on the EV surface could be important to increase
the efficiency of therapeutic cargo delivery.
Funded by: Hermann and Lilly Schilling Stiftung (to TM), Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease
Foundation, Inc. (to HCA)
High transmissibility of splenic prions in cervidized transgenic mice as a diagnostic
marker for CWD infection in human
Xu Qi, Liuting Qing, Manuel Camacho, Ignazio Cali, and Qingzhong Kong
Department of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, USA
Aims: Whether CWD prion can infect humans in real life remains controversial. Multiple
in vitro CWD-seeded human PrP conversion experiments and some animal model studies
indicate that the species barrier for CWD to human transmission can be overcome. One
of the challenges of CWD zoonosis studies is the lack of a reliable marker for identification
of acquired human CWD cases, should they occur. We aim to stablish a reliable diagnostic
marker for CWD infections in humans.
Material and Methods: A couple of prion-positive spleens were identified from humanized
transgenic mice inoculated with either CWD or sCJDMM1. Prions in these spleens were
compared by bioassays in cervidized or humanized transgenic mice.
Results: We have detected a couple of prion-positive spleens in a group of humanized
transgenic mice (Tg40h) inoculated with certain CWD isolates. Such experimentally
generated splenic humanized CWD prions (termed eHuCWDsp) appear indistinguishable
from prions in the brain of sCJDMM1 patients on Western blot. Significantly, we found
that eHuCWDspcan efficiently infect not only the humanized Tg40h mice but also cervidized
transgenic mice (Tg12). Tg12 mice infected by eHuCWDspproduced prions and brain pathology
that are practically identical to those of CWD-infected Tg12 mice. In contrast, prions
from the spleen of Tg40h mice inoculated with sCJDMM1 (termed sCJDsp), similar to
prions from sCJDMM1 patient brains, is poorly transmissible in the Tg12 mice.
Conclusions: Our data demonstrate that high transmissibility with CWD features of
splenic prions in cervidized transgenic mice is unique to acquired human CWD prions,
and it may serve as a reliable marker to identify the first acquired human CWD cases.
Funded by: NIH
Grant number: R01NS052319, R01NS088604, R01NS109532
Acknowledgement: We want to thank the National Prion Disease Pathology Surveillance
Center and Drs. Allen Jenny and Katherine O’Rourke for providing the sCJD samples
and the CWD samples, respectively.
Transmission properites of North American sheep scrapie prions in transgenic mouse
models
EmmaKate Raisleya,b, Julianna Suna,c, Nick Heyera, Jifeng Biana, Sehun Kima, Jenna
Crowella, Jason Bartzd, Tracy Nichole, Terry Sprakerf, Juergen Richtg and Glenn Tellinga,c
aPrion Research Center and the Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Pathology,
Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA; bWalter Scott Jr. College
of Engineering, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA; cProgram in
Cell and Molecular Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA;
dDepartment of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Creighton University, Omaha, Nebraska,
United States; eUnited States Department of Agriculture, Animal Plant Health Inspection
Service, Veterinary Services, Washington DC, United States; fCollege of Veterinary
Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, Colorado State
University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA; gCenter of Excellence for Emerging and Zoonotic
Animal Diseases, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas, US
Aims: Validate the use of transgenic mice for modeling North American scrapie. Characterize
the transmission properties of North American scrapie field isolates and their responses
to variation at residue 136 of sheep PrP. Analyze the plausibility of a species crossover
from sheep scrapie to manifest as chronic wasting disease in cervids.
Material and Methods: Four lines of transgenic mice were intracerebrally inoculated
with brain homogenates from scrapie positive sheep found in Idaho and Colorado. We
used our previously described lines expressing ARQ and VRQ sheep PrP variants to assess
their responses to infection with North American scrapie prions. Transgenic mice expressing
cervid PrP with either Q or E at residue 226 representing North American deer and
elk respectively were also challenged. Brain materials from clinically diseased and
asymptomatic mice were analyzed by western blotting for PrPScdetection, histoblotting,
and immunohistochemistry to identify infectious prions.
Results: Positive transmissions were produced in the ARQ and VRQ sheep Tg mice. TgARQ
mice were more readily infected with field scrapie isolates compared to the TgVRQ
mice for most field isolates. TgQ and TgE mouse lines had evidence of very weak transmission
from the sheep scrapie inoculums.
Conclusions: Varying efficiency of scrapie transmission into ARQ and VRQ mice support
the predicted dependence of scrapie susceptibility on the natural A/V 136 variance.
The weak transmission from sheep scrapie isolates into TgE and TgQ lines may support
the species crossover from sheep scrapie into cervids as chronic wasting disease.
Funded by: National Institutes of Health
Grant number: 1R01NS121682, 1R01NS109376, and PO1-0011877A
Acknowledgement: Many thanks to the members of the Telling Lab and the Prion Research
Center. This work was supported by the NIH.
Specific labeling of native PrPSc in RML-infected CAD5 cells using a single-chain
fluobody
Vineet Rathoda,b, Hailey Pineaub,c, Grant Normanb,c, Valerie Simb,c,d, Holger Willea,b,d
aDepartment of Biochemistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada; bCentre
for Prions and Protein Folding Diseases, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta,
Canada; cDepartment of Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada;
dNeuroscience and Mental Health Institute, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta,
Canada.
Aims: The goal of this study was to engineer a recombinant, PrPSc-specific “fluobody”
based on the PrPSc-specific monoclonal antibody YEG mAb Sc-G1. A fluobody is a genetically
encoded antibody probe, consisting of an enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP)
linked to a single chain variable region fragment (scFv). This PrPSc-specific fluobody
proved to be a unique tool for visualizing the spatiotemporal dynamics of PrPSc in
RML-infected CAD5 cells.
Material and Methods: We previously generated the PrPSc-specific monoclonal antibody
YEG mAb Sc-G1 that recognizes native PrPSc only using a PrPSc-specific prion vaccine
(Fang et al. unpublished data). IgG-expressing hybridoma cell clones were characterized
using total RNA isolation. cDNA of the IgG2b monoclonal antibody was obtained by reverse
transcription PCR and amplified using IgG-specific primers. The rodent CDR sequences
were grafted into an scFv human antibody framework, whereby the antibody variable
(V) region fragments were conjugated with a C-terminal eGFP domain. The PrPSc-specific
fluobody was expressed in E. coli and purified via metal-ion affinity chromatography.
The fluobody activity was tested using immunocytochemistry assays with RML-infected
and uninfected CAD5 cells.
Results: YEG mAb Sc-G1 recognizes PrPSc under native conditions and does not react
with PrPC or denatured PrP. Additionally, it reacts with all strains of PrPSc tested
(12 strains). Characterization of the YEG mAb Sc-G1 epitope revealed a discontinuous
epitope that recognizes PrPSc in its putative ß-solenoid configuration. Specifically,
discontinuous residues H110 and D146 appear to play a pivotal role for the antigen-antibody
recognition. Results from a first confocal microscopy study using the fluobody revealed
widespread surface labelling of PrPSc on RML-infected cells, while uninfected control
cells remained completely unlabelled. PrPSc was seen in small, diffuse punctae and
larger foci, suggesting different stages of replication or aggregation. Additional
studies with the fluobody in organotypic slice cultures infected with different prion
strains are on-going.
Conclusions: scFv antibodies have the advantage of being able to penetrate deep into
antigen complexes in cells and tissues due to their small size. Conjugation of the
scFv probe with eGFP is a powerful strategy for imaging protein aggregates in living
cells or lightly fixed tissues without the need for secondary detection systems. The
PrPSc-specific fluobody promises to be a highly beneficial tool versus regular, linear
epitope antibodies due to its strict specificity, selectivity, and affinity for native
PrPSc. Hence, this tool may allow new insights into important physiological phenomena
of prion-infections in living cells, tissues, and organisms.
Development of a cell-based bioassay to propagate human variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease prions
MLD Rayner, P Arora, A Nihat, C Schmidt, JM Ribes, P Klöhn, J Collinge and P Jat
MRC Prion Unit at UCL, London W1W 7FF, UK
Aims: The aim of this project is to develop a specific and highly sensitive cell-based
bioassay which can detect pre-clinical levels of vCJD infection in human tissues and
biofluids, particularly an assay that directly measures infectious prions. There are
two main objectives: 1) develop a CAD5 cell derivative susceptible to 10^7 dilutions
of vCJD infected human homogenates and 2) develop an automated scrapie cell assay
for high throughout screens.
Material and Methods: Murine CAD5 cells were silenced for the endogenous mouse prion
protein by gene editing using CRISPR /Cas9 and reconstituted with the human prion
protein containing methionine at amino acid 129. These cells were challenged with
vCJD inocula in scrapie cell assay (SCA), to identify a clone that was reproducibly
susceptible and readily quantifiable. The optimal cell clone, was taken forward and
serially single cell cloned to increase susceptibility.
Results: Seven rounds of single cell cloning were conducted resulting in 2–5 fold
increases in susceptibility at each round. This has led us to identify a CAD5 cell
clone (10E3) that is susceptible to 10^7 dilutions of vCJD infected brain homogenates.
These cells are also susceptible to MV heterozygous vCJD infected brain inocula as
well as multiple MM homozygous vCJD inocula. Chronically vCJD infected cell lines
have also been produced from three brain homogenates to create a tool to explore the
factors required for susceptibilty and screening of therapeutic. These chronically
infected cells can be cured by treatment with the mouse anti-PrP antibody, ICSM-18.
The cells have also been used to devlop an automated SCA to enable high-throughput
screening of human homogenates. This has the potential to be scaled up to process
large numbers of samples per year, as has already been done for the mouse prion bioassay.
Conclusions: We have successfully produced a cell line that is susceptible to 10^7
dilutions of human vCJD brain homogenates. Amouse bioassay is underway to confirm
that the vCJD prions produced in these cells are analogous to the original human innoculum.
Funded by: Department of Health and the MRC Prion Unit core funding.
Grant number: PR-R17- 0916- 23,004
Titanium dioxide and carbon black nanoparticles disrupt neuronal homeostasis via excessive
activation of PrPcsignaling
Luiz W. Ribeiroa,b, Mathéa Pietria,b, Hector Ardila-Osorioa,b, Anne Baudrya,b, Chloé
Bizingrea,b, Zaira E. Arellano-Anayaa,b, Anne-Marie Haeberléc, Nicolas Gadotc, Sonja
Bolandd, Stéphanie Devineaue, Yannick Baillyc, Odile Kellermanna,b, Anna Bencsikf,
and Benoit Schneidera,b
aINSERM UMR-S 1124, F-75006 Paris, France; bUniversité Paris Cité, UMR-S 1124, F-75006
Paris, France; cCNRS UPR 3212, Université de Strasbourg, Institut des Neurosciences
Cellulaires et Intégratives, F-67084 Strasbourg, France; dPlateforme anatomopathologie
recherche, Université de Lyon, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, INSERM 1052, CNRS
5286, Centre Léon Bérard, Centre de recherche en cancérologie de Lyon (CRCL), Lyon,
69,373, France; eUniversité Paris Cité, Unité de Biologie Fonctionnelle et Adaptative,
CNRS UMR 8251, F-75013 Paris, France; fFrench Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational
Health & Safety (ANSES) Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, ANSES Laboratoire de Lyon,
F-69364 Lyon, France
Aims: Cellular prion protein (PrPC) binds oligomers of unrelated misfolded proteins
(PrPSc, Aβ, α-synuclein), suggesting that PrPCrecognizes protein assemblies based
on a defined shape, surface properties, or steric hindrance, rather than the protein
sequence of the amyloid. We aimed to assess (i) whether PrPCalso displays the capacity
to attract aggregates of nanoparticles (NPs) whose hydrodynamic diameter is comparable
to that of amyloid oligomers, and (ii) whether nanoparticles cause adverse effects
evocative of amyloid-based neurodegenerative diseases through PrPCinteraction.
Material and Methods: To this purpose, we exploited (i) the 1C11 cell line, a neuronal
stem cell endowed with the capacity to differentiate into serotonergic neurons, that
was exposed to two different NPs, titanium dioxide (TiO2) and carbon black (CB) nanoparticles,
and (ii) C57Bl/6 J mice that were intracerebrally injected with TiO2-NPs.
Results: We provide prime evidence that TiO2- and CB-NPs bind PrPCat the surface of
1C11 neuronal cells and corrupt the PrPCsignaling function. The NPs – PrPCinteraction
triggers PrPC-dependent activation of NADPH oxidase and subsequent production of reactive
oxygen species (ROS) that alters redox equilibrium. Through PrPCinteraction, NPs also
promote the activation of 3-phosphoinositide-dependent kinase 1 (PDK1), which in turn
provokes the internalization of the neuroprotective TACE α-secretase (ADAM17). This
diverts TACE cleavage activity away from (i) TNFα receptors (TNFR), whose accumulation
at the plasma membrane augments the vulnerability of NP-exposed neurons to TNFα-associated
inflammation, and (ii) the amyloid precursor protein APP, leading to overproduction
of neurotoxic amyloid Aβ40/42 peptides. The silencing of PrPCor the pharmacological
inhibition of PDK1 protects neurons from TiO2- and CB-NPs effects regarding ROS production,
TNFα hypersensitivity, and Aβ rise. Finally, we show that dysregulation of the PrPC-PDK1-TACE
pathway likely occurs in the brain of mice injected with TiO2-NPs by the intracerebral
route as we monitor a rise of TNFR at the cell surface of several groups of neurons
located in distinct brain areas.
Conclusions: Our study posits for the first time normal PrPCas being a neuronal receptor
of TiO2- and CB-NPs and identifies PrPC-coupled signaling pathways by which those
nanoparticles alter redox equilibrium, augment the intrinsic sensitivity of neurons
to neuroinflammation, and provoke a rise of Aβ peptides. By showing that TiO2- and
CB-NPs trigger molecular signs of Alzheimer’s disease via PrPC, our data shed light
on how human exposure to some NPs present in the environment would contribute to the
onset and/or progression of Alzheimer’s disease.
Funded by: INSERM and French Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR).
Grant number: ANR-14-JPCD-0003-01.
Acknowledgement: Imaging experiments, mRNA/protein studies, and DLS analyses were
performed at the SCM, Cyto2BM, and AMS core facilities, respectively, of BioMedTech
Facilities INSERM US36/CNRS UMS2009/Université Paris Cité. We acknowledge the ImagoSeine
core facility of the Institut Jacques Monod. The authors thank the members of the
‘Plateforme anatomopathologie recherche, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Centre
Léon Bérard, Centre de recherche en cancérologie de Lyon (CRCL)’, for their excellent
histotechnical assistance.
Prion protein converts at two distinct cellular sites and precedes fibril formation
Juan Manuel Ribesa, Mitali P. Patela, Hazim A. Halima, Sharon A. Toozeb, and Peter-Christian
Kloehna
aMedical Research Council Prion Unit at UCL, Institute of Prion Diseases, University
College London, London W1W 7FF, United UK; bMolecular Cell Biology of Autophagy Laboratory,
the Francis Crick Institute, London NW1 1BF, UK
Aims: The cellular site of prion propagation and the kinetics of PrP conversion remain
a matter of ongoing debate. A major roadblock for molecular studies of prion replication
is the lack of research tools to discriminate cellular from abnormal conformers of
the prion protein. We here describe a two-pronged approach to overcome this problem.
We used highly discriminatory anti-PrP antibodies and conversion-tolerant PrP chimera
to investigate the cellular and molecular mechanism of PrP conversion, amyloid formation
and trafficking of abnormal PrP, here termed disease-associated PrP (PrPd).
Material and Methods: We use correlative imaging and prion titer output methodology
to examine aggregation phenomena in freshly and persistently prion-infected neuronal
cells.
Results: We provide evidence of phenotypically distinct PrPdspecies which differ in
their cellular localization, proteolytic processing and aggregation state in neuronal
cells. A full-length PrPdtype (FL-PrPd) is formed exclusively at the plasma membrane
and is associated with fibril formation and elongation. A truncated PrPdtype (TR-PrPd)
at the perinuclear region segregates into synaptic and large-dense core vesicles of
the regulated exocytosis pathway to reach the plasma membrane. The infectious state
of cells is dependent on functional dynamins and Cdc42, but is refractory to receptor-mediated
endocytosis, suggesting that prion steady state levels are maintained by clathrin-independent
endocytosis. We further show that the mechanism of de novo PrP conversion and formation
of fibril-like PrP aggregates following prion infection is distinct in mechanistic
and kinetic terms. While de novo PrP conversion occurs within minutes at two subcellular
locations after infection, the perinuclear region and the plasma membrane, fibril-like
FL-PrPd aggregates at the plasma membrane are formed with a delay of about 24 hours
after infection.
Conclusions: We present first evidence of a spatial separation between seed and amyloid-forming
aggregates and their molecular link by vesicular transport. Our data suggest that
inhibition of seed trafficking may lead to a cessation of amyloid formation and fibrillization.
We further show that de novo PrP conversion leads to the formation of N-terminally
truncated PrP aggregates while fibrillar full-length aggregates lag behind the fast
initial PrP conversion, thus seem energetically less favorable.
Funded by: UK Medical Research Council (MC_UU_00024/4) and UK Biotechnology and Biological
Sciences Research Council (BBSRC, BB/V001310/1); S. A. T. was supported by The Francis
Crick Institute which receives its core funding from Cancer Research UK (FC001187),
the UK Medical Research Council (FC001187). This research was funded in whole, or
in part, by the Wellcome Trust (FC001187).
Acknowledgement: We thank Christian Schmidt, Parvin Ahmed and George Thirlway for
technical assistance with Automated Scrapie Cell Assays.
Clustering of human prion protein and α-synuclein oligomers requires the prion protein
N-terminus
Nadine S. Rösenera,b, Lothar Gremera,b, Michael M. Wördehoffa, Tatsiana Kupreichyka,b,
Manuel Etzkorna,b, Philipp Neudeckera,b, and Wolfgang Hoyera,b
aInstitut für Physikalische Biologie, Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf,
Germany; bInstitute of Biological Information Processing (IBI-7) and JuStruct: Jülich
Center for Structural Biology, Forschungszentrum Jülich, Jülich, Germany
Aims: The interaction of human prion protein (huPrP) and α-synuclein oligomers (αSynO)
causes synaptic impairment that might trigger Parkinson’s disease and other synucleinopathies.
Here, we investigated the interaction of huPrP and αSynO. In particular, we tested
for higher order heteroassociation, motivated by previous observations of large complexes
of amyloid-β oligomers (AβO) and huPrP that are suggested to be involved in neurotoxic
signaling.
Material and Methods: HuPrP-αSynO heteroassemblies were investigated by density gradient
centrifugation, dynamic light scattering, atomic force microscopy, TIRF microscopy,
biolayer interferometry, CD spectroscopy and NMR spectroscopy. HuPrP-αSynO heteroassembly
was compared to heteroassembly of huPrP with AβO and other amyloid oligomers.
Results: αSynO cluster with huPrP into micron-sized condensates. Multivalency of αSyn
within oligomers is required for condensation, since clustering with huPrP is not
observed for monomeric αSyn. The stoichiometry of the heteroassemblies is well-defined
with an αSyn:huPrP molar ratio of about 1:1. The αSynO-huPrP interaction is of high
affinity, signified by slow dissociation. The huPrP region responsible for condensation
of αSynO, residues 95–111 in the intrinsically disordered N-terminus, corresponds
to the region required for αSynO-mediated cognitive impairment. HuPrP moreover achieves
co-clustering of αSynO and Alzheimer’s disease-associated amyloid-β oligomers, providing
a case of a cross-interaction of two amyloidogenic proteins through an interlinking
intrinsically disordered protein region.
Conclusions: The multivalency of αSyn within αSynO leads to efficient condensation
with huPrP, mediated by residues 95–111 in the intrinsically disordered huPrP N-terminus.
The results suggest that αSynO-mediated condensation of huPrP is involved in the pathogenesis
of synucleinopathies.
Funded by: European Research Council
Grant number: 726,368
The Expression and Purification of GPI Anchored and Glycosylated PrPC for Use in Structural
Studies
Graham P. Roseman, and Stephen M. Strittmatter
Cellular Neuroscience, Neurodegeneration, Repair, Departments of Neurology and of
Neuroscience, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, USA
Aims: The cellular prion protein (PrPC) not only causes transmissible spongiform encephalopathies
(TSE’s), but also facilitates the toxic signaling cascade in Alzheimer’s disease.
PrPCis ubiquitously expressed throughout the body, however it can be found at high
concentrations in the brain. PrPCis found on the extracellular side of cellular membranes
where it is both glycophosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchored and variably glycosylated.
To understand the relationship between structure and function, PrPCis typically overexpressed
using E.coli. This leads to PrPCthat is devoid of posttranslational modifications
as it is found in the native cellular context. The aim of this study is to express
PrPCin a system that retains its GPI anchor and glycosylation state.
Material and Methods: PrPCis first overexpressed in suspension cell culture using
Expi293F. After lysis and detergent solubilization of the membrane pellet, the sample
is passed over resin covalently attached to an anti-PrPC antibody. After elution,
PrPCis mostly pure, but contains a major contaminant, the heat shock protein 60 kDa
(HSP60), a previously described binding protein to PrPC. To remove this contaminant
and to simultaneously concentrate PrPCwithout concentrating the detergent, the sample
if further purified over immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) resin charged
with Ni2+.
Results: After the full purification and dialysis, PrPCis purified to greater than
90% and is fully GPI anchored and glycosylated. With this full purification scheme,
PrPCcan be purified in milligram quantities from 1L of Expi293F cells.
Conclusions: PrPCpurified in this manner is amenable to biophysical techniques that
require higher concentrations of protein such as biolayer interferometry (BLI) and
electron microscopy. Furthermore, PrPCis known to bind to several transmembrane proteins
implicated in different toxic signaling cascades. These complexes can now be studied
in vitro using this highly purified preparations of GPI anchored and glycosylated
PrPC.
Funded by:
Grant number: R01AG034924
Towards an improved ‘quantitative’ α-synuclein Real-Time Quaking-Induced Conversion
assay to assess Lewy body pathology in vivo
Marcello Rossia, Simone Baiardib, Corinne Quadaltia, Sofia Dellavallea, Angela Mammanaa,
Sabina Capellaria,c Kathrin Brockmannd, Piero Parchia,b
aIRCCS, Istituto delle Scienze Neurologiche di Bologna, Bologna, Italy; bDepartment
of Experimental, Diagnostic and Specialty Medicine, University of Bologna, Bologna,
Italy; cDepartment of Biomedical and Neuromotor Sciences, University of Bologna, Bologna,
Italy; dCenter of Neurology, Department of Neurodegeneration and Hertie-Institute
for Clinical Brain Research, University of Tuebingen, Germany
Aims: The α-synuclein Real-Time Quaking Induced Conversion (α-syn RT-QuIC) assay is
a promising diagnostic test for the Lewy body (LB) pathology. Several studies highlighted
the outstanding ability of the assay to detect α-syn seeding activity with high sensitivity
and specificity across the LB disease (LBD) spectrum. Although the robust ‘qualitative,’
dichotomized (positive vs. negative) output of the assay is by now consolidated, whether
and to what extent RT-QuIC also provides ‘quantitative’ data remains largely unexplored.
To investigate the latter informative value of the assay, we aim to compare the α-syn
seeding activity in the patient groups affected, on average, by LBD pathology at different
stages. They included dementia with Lewy body (DLB), mild cognitive impairment due
to probable LB (MCI-LB), and other disorders in which LB manifests as co-pathology.
Material and Methods: We analyzed with α-syn RT-QuIC CSF samples from well-characterized
patients with DLB (n = 33), MCI-LB (n = 45), Alzheimer’s disease (AD) (n = 249) and
idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus (iNPH) (n = 127). Moreover, we had the opportunity
to study a patient with an SNCA gene triplication and early-onset Parkinson’s disease
with dementia (PDD). We run each sample in quadruplicates. We then compared the distribution
of the positive α-syn RT-QuIC replicates and the values of kinetic parameters (Lag
phase and Imax) of the fluorescence curves of positive replicates to investigate potential
differences in the α-syn seeding activity between groups.
Results: Across the analyzed cohorts we observed a positive outcome in 32 (97.0%)
DLB, 44 (97.8%) MCI-LB, 41 (16.5%) AD, and 28 (22.0%) iNPH patients. There were statistically
significant differences in the median number of RT-QuIC positive replicates between
the DLB and AD/iNPH (p < 0.001) cohorts. Moreover, DLB patients showed a statistically
significant lower lag phase and a higher Imax when compared with the MCI-LB group
(lag phase p = 0.003; Imax p < 0.001) and even more with AD/iNPH groups (lag phase
p < 0.001; Imax p < 0.001). We detected the highest kinetic parameters in the early-onset
patient carrying the SNCA triplication. The case was positive in all four replicates
and showed a significantly shorter Lag phase than the DLB group (12.2 h vs. 15.8 h,
p = 0.018).
Conclusions: Our work demonstrates that the α-syn RT-QuIC assay detects differences
in α-syn seeding activity across the analyzed study groups, likely reflecting the
amount and spread of LB pathology. Further steps are needed to fully develop a ‘quantitative’
RT-QuIC delivering reliable and reproducible quantitative data on α-syn seeding activity
in individual patients.
Funded by: Grants from the Italian Ministry of Health (‘Ricerca corrente’)
Standardization of Data Analysis for RT-QuIC-based detection of Chronic Wasting Disease
Gage R. Rowdena,b, Catalina Picasso-Rissob,c, Manci Lia,b, Marc D. Schwabenlandera,b,
Tiffany Wolfb,c,and Peter A. Larsena,b
aDepartment of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences, University of Minnesota, St. Paul,
MN; bMinnesota Center for Prion Research and Outreach, University of Minnesota, St.
Paul, MN; cDepartment of Veterinary Population Medicine, University of Minnesota,
St. Paul, MN
Aims: Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) is a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy affecting
cervids caused by prions accumulating as amyloid fibrils in lymphoid and CNS tissues.
Real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC), which quantifies amyloid formation
as relative fluorescent units (RFU), has rapidly become a strong candidate for CWD
diagnosis. However, there is little consensus on the best approach to interpret RT-QuIC
data for diagnostic purposes. Data are typically assessed by a predetermined number
of replicates crossing a threshold defined as some number of standard deviations above
the average RFU of the entire plate at time zero, and replicates are given a rate
of amyloid formation (RAF) based on the time-to-threshold. Rather, by using a ratio
based on each replicate’s independent background fluorescence, reactions can be normalized
between runs and plate readers, and any fluctuations between plates can be eliminated.
Given the potential use of RT-QuIC for CWD regulatory testing, we propose a more rigorous
method of data analysis using a ‘maxpoint ratio’ (MPR) which is the maximum RFU obtained
by a replicate during the run divided by its background RFU.
Material and Methods: A total of 535 white-tailed deer were sampled from CWD endemic
areas in Minnesota, and individual lymph node samples were tested with RT-QuIC. All
RT-QuIC data was interpreted using RAF and MPR. MPR values were plotted in histograms,
and their distributions were used to determine an empirical threshold for discerning
positivity. MPRs and RAFs were also compared between plate readers and substrate batches
to establish any variability. Test results were compared against ELISA results when
available.
Results: Our results reveal a distinct MPR threshold of two (i.e. twice the background
RFU) for dichotomizing RT-QuIC runs. Differences in MPRs in control samples were observed
between plate readers (P-value < 0.001) while none were observed between substrate
batches (P-value > 0.4). RAF vs. MPR values showed little correlation (r: 0.5449,
95%CI: 0.494–0.592). MPR results showed excellent concordance (К: 0.957, 95%CI: 0.875–1.000)
with ELISA results.
Conclusions: Our findings suggest that MPR is a viable option for future diagnostic
purposes for RT-QuIC without the need for multiple comparisons analysis. Using a combination
of MPR and RAF allows for a more statistically robust method for analyzing RT-QuIC
data.
Funded by: Minnesota Department of Natural Resources; the Minnesota State Legislature
through the Minnesota Legislative-Citizen Commission on Minnesota Resources (LCCMR);
Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station Rapid Agricultural Response Fund; Minnesota
Agricultural, Research, Education, Extension and Technology Transfer (AGREETT) program
Acknowledgement: We thank F. Schendel, T. Douville, and staff of the University of
Minnesota Biotechnology Resource Center for providing the large scale production of
recombinant substrate necessary for RT-QuIC reactions. We thank B. Caughey, C. Orru,
and A. Hughson of NIH Rocky Mountain Laboratories for providing training on RT-QuIC
methods and for providing the recombinant PrP clone. We thank the Minnesota Department
of Natural Resources, especially M. Carstensen, L. Cornicelli, E. Hildebrand, P. Hagen,
and K. LaSharr, for providing the tissues used in our analyses. K. Wilson of the Colorado
State University Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory conducted ELISA and IHC testing
of samples reported herein. S. Stone managed laboratory logistics and finance. This
study was executed under the Minnesota Center for Prion Research and Outreach (MNPRO)
at the University of Minnesota.
AMYSEEDS: Targeting amyloid beta seeds at the initial stage of Alzheimer’s disease
Alejandro Ruiz Riquelme
University of Santiago de Compostela, Santiago de Compostela, Spain
Aims: This project builds on recent findings that pathogenic Aβ seeds might be present
in AD patients before the start of Aβ-associated pathology (early seeds). Those seeds
conformation and/or biochemical nature might be different from Aβ seeds isolated from
brains of late-stage AD patients. Thus, this project intends to isolate and characterize
these early Aβ seeds from human brain tissue and, based on their structural features,
find new therapeutic agents with potential to delay AD when applied early enough.
Aim 1 – Identification and isolation of early Aβ seeds from human brain tissue.
Aim 2 – Characterization of isolated early Aβ seeds.
Aim 3 – Screening of structure-based therapeutic compounds.
Material and Methods:
Identification of healthy human brains containing Aβ seeds. Brain samples from patients
with no AD diagnostic will be assessed for the presence of Aβ seeds using a recently
developed cellular assay.
Isolation of early Aβ seeds. A phase transition-based method will be used to isolate
and concentrate Aβ assemblies under native conditions from human tissue.
Biochemical and structural analysis. The composition and aggregation state of the
Aβ seeds will be assessed by different methods (e.g., mass spectrometry) and the structure
by cryo-electron microcopy.
Virtual and high-throughput screening (HTS). Based on the structural and conformational
features of the Aβ seeds, a variety of compounds will be selected, and Aβ seeds/compounds
interaction will be assessed by HTS.
In vitro and in vivo validation. The capacity of the selected compounds to block the
seeding capacity of the Aβ seeds will be in vitro (cellular assay) and in vivo (APP
Tg mice) tested.
Results: To date, the presence of early Aβ seeds in human brains before the start
of deposition has not been confirmed. This project will probe their existence for
the first time. The identification and validation of structure-based compounds against
early Aβ seeds will establish the grounds for a future AD therapy. Remarkably, this
same approach of blocking the early seeds could be adapted to other proteins involved
in neurodegenerative diseases such as synuclein and tau, which also form pathogenic
protein assemblies that propagate in a prion-like fashion.
Conclusions: The successful completion of the AMYSEEDS project will then suppose a
great step forward for the understanding of the start of AD and hopefully will lead
to the discovery of a disease-modifying therapy.
Funded by: Alzheimer Forschung Initiative e.V.
Grant number: #19079p
Acknowledgement: Biobank IIS Galicia Sur, Mathias Jucker (Hertie Institute for Clinical
Brain Research, Germany), Jesús R. Requena (University of Santiago de Compostela,
Spain), Stephen Strittmatter (Yale School of Medicine, USA).
Subclinical infection in sheep exposed to low doses of prions by blood transfusion.
MKF Salamata, P Stewarta, H Browna, KBC Tana, A Smitha, C de Wolfa, AR Alejo Blancoa,
M Turnerb, JC Mansona, S McCutcheona, and EF Houstona
aThe Roslin Institute, Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, University of Edinburgh,
Easter Bush, Midlothian, Edinburgh, UK; bScottish National Blood Transfusion Service
(SNBTS), The Jack Copland Centre, Edinburgh, UK
Aims: Although the incidence of confirmed cases of infectious prion diseases such
as bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), and the related variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease, has declined to very low levels, there is limited evidence that long term
infection of some individuals may occur without causing disease symptoms (subclinical
infection). The aim of this study was to look for evidence of subclinical prion infection
in sheep following exposure to low titres of BSE by blood transfusion, a clinically
relevant route. These sheep, many of which survived for significant periods (for more
than 10 years) after transfusion1,4, did not show any clinical signs of disease and
standard post mortem tests of immunohistochemistry and Western blot were unable to
detect PrPSc.
Material and Methods: We applied microplate-based, miniaturized bead serial PMCA (mb-PMCA)2–4,
a highly sensitive PrPScdetection assay to lymph nodes from a large cohort of sheep
9 (n = 61) which had been transfused with blood components from BSE-infected donors,
and a number of secondary recipients transfused with whole blood from primary recipients
(n = 10). Brain homogenate from TgShpXI transgenic mice overexpressing sheep ARQ PrP
was used as substrate. Negative control samples came from mock-infected donors (n = 5)
and recipients (n = 5).
Results: We found that in over half of primary recipients tested, PrPScwas detected
in a peripheral (subcutaneous) lymph node by mb-PMCA. Titration experiments revealed
the levels of PrPScin lymphoid and brain samples from these sheep were approximately
a million-fold lower than in clinically affected sheep, and no PrPScwas detected in
blood samples. Tissues from a small number of secondary recipients transfused with
blood from PMCA positive sheep also tested negative by mb-PMCA.
Conclusions: Our results demonstrate for the first time that subclinical infection
is a frequent outcome following exposure to low prion doses by clinically relevant
route, and can persist until close to the natural lifespan of sheep without progressing
to clinical disease. Individuals with subclinical prion infection are difficult to
detect, but could potentially transmit infection and/or allow persistence and evolution
of prions leading to future disease outbreaks, with obvious implications for disease
control.
aMcCutcheon, S. et al. (2011) PLoS one 6, e23169.
bMoudjou et al. (2013) MBio. 31;5(1):e00829-13.
cLacroux et al. (2014) PLoS Pathog 10:e1004202.
4Salamat el al. (2021) PLoS Pathog 17:e1009276.
Funded by: The study was funded by the Policy Research Programme of the Department
of Health and Social Care (‘The Effect of Leucodepletion on Transmission of BSE by
Transfusion of Sheep Blood Components’)
Grant number: 007/0162
Acknowledgement: The authors thank past and present members of large animal research
services at the Institute for Animal Health, Compton and the Roslin Institute for
excellent care of the sheep and technical assistance with experimental procedures.
We are grateful for the generous provision of TgShpXI transgenic mouse brains for
use as PMCA substrate by Olivier Andreoletti (INRAE-ENVT, Toulouse, France).
Revisiting phylogeny within the class Mammalia using the prion protein sequence from
hundreds of species
Cristina Sampedro-Torres-Quevedoa, Hasier Erañaa,b,c, Jorge M. Charcoa,b,c, Carlos
M. Díaz-Domíngueza, Leire FernándezVeigaa, Juan Tasis-Galarzaa, Ana R. Cortazara,
Roberto F. Nespolod,e,f, Julian F. Quintero-Galvisd, Africa Manero-Azuag, Diego Polanco-Alonsog,
Guiomar Perez de Nanclaresg, Ana M. Aransaya and Joaquín Castillaa,c,h
aCenter for Cooperative Research in Biosciences (CIC bioGUNE), Basque Research and
Technology Alliance (BRTA), Bizkaia Technology Park, Derio, Spain; bATLAS Molecular
Pharma S. L. Bizkaia Technology Park, 800, Derio, Spain; cCentro de Investigación
Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Infecciosas (CIBERINFEC), Carlos III National Health
Institute, Madrid, Spain; dInstituto de Ciencias Ambientales y Evolutivas, Universidad
Austral de Chile, Valdivia. Chile; eCenter of Applied Ecology and Sustainability (CAPES),
Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile; fMillenium
Institute for Integrative Biology (iBio), Santiago, Chile; gMolecular (Epi)Genetics
Laboratory, Bioaraba Health Research Institute, Araba University Hospital, Vitoria-Gasteiz,
Araba, Spain; hIKERBASQUE, Basque Foundation for Science, Prion Research Lab, Bilbao,
Spain
Aims: To generate a phylogenetic tree using the PrP sequence of what is to our knowledge
the largest collection of PrP sequences from mammalian origin and compare our results
to the classic phylogeny of species.
Material and Methods: Recombinant protein sequences from 655 different mammalian species
were aligned using CLUSTALW. After the alignment, identical sequences were merged
in order to reduce background noise, leaving 323 different sequences. Trees were generated
using the Bayesian Evolutionary by Sampling Trees package (BEAST) using the best fit
model identified by MEGA X. Analysis were run for 10,000,000 generations, sampling
every 5,000 chains under a relaxed log normal clock model and Yule model. Three independent
runs were combined in LogCombiner. Posterior result analysis was done grouping species
by orders.
Results: There is a strong tendency of the classical phylogenetic orders to maintain
their clusterization when using the PRNP gene as a readout of phylogenetic similarity.
Conclusions: Despite the fact that only one gene was used to generate the phylogenetic
tree, leading to an increase in uncertainty of the analysis performed by the bioinformatics
tools, the general topology of the phylogenetic tree was considerably well conserved
compared to the canonical mammalian phylogenetic tree. It is possible this is due
to the high number of sequences that have been included in the analysis to generate
the alignment and subsequent phylogenetic tree.
Moreover, looking at the resulting tree it may be possible to identify clusters of
‘prion resistance/susceptibility’ focusing on the species included in said clusters
and the tendency of those species’ PrP to misfold in vivo or in vitro, i.e. swine,
suggested to be more resistant are separated from other susceptible artiodactyls (sheep,
cattle, camels).
Funded by: Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation
Grant number: PID2021-122201OB-C21
In utero transmission of chronic wasting disease in free-ranging white-tailed deer
Audrey M. Sandovala, Amy V. Nallsa, Erin E. McNultya, Nathaniel D. Denkersa, Zoe Olmsteada,
Ethan Bartonb, James M. Crumc, Mark G. Ruderb, and Candace K. Mathiasona
a
aDepartment of Microbiology, Immunology, and Pathology, College of Veterinary Medicine
and Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA; bSoutheastern
Cooperation Wildlife Disease Study (SCWDS), University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia;
cWildlife Resources, West Virginia Division of Natural Resources, Elkins, WV, USA
Aims: Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) is a prion disease affecting cervid species in
North America, Korea, and Scandinavia. Historically, CWD has been attributed to horizontal
transmission i.e., direct contact between cervids, or indirect contact with infectivity
present in bodily secretions shed into the environment. However, previous studies
in captive Reeve’s muntjac deer and free-ranging elk have demonstrated the involvement
of vertical transmission, transmission from mother-to-baby during pregnancy, as another
likely source of infection. In this multi-state study, we were interested to determine
the potential role of in utero or vertical transmission, in free-ranging naturally
exposed white-tailed deer. CWD prion seeding activity was assessed in tissues and
fluids harvested from the pregnancy microenvironment of white-tailed dams from Arkansas,
Tennessee and West Virginia by conventional and prion amplification detection assays.
Material and Methods: Maternal and in utero-derived fetal tissues (n = 56) were harvested
from healthy appearing dams (n = 31) in three states with known CWD+ status (Arkansas,
Tennessee, West Virginia) and one state with no known CWD infections (Georgia). Maternal
tissues were assessed for amyloid seeding activity by real time quaking induced conversion
(RT-QuIC) in addition to immunohistochemistry (IHC). Amniotic fluid was assessed with
the additional step of iron- oxide magnetic extraction, while fetal tissues were subject
to protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA) before detection with RT-QuIC and
Western blotting.
Results: Prion seeding activity was detected in retropharyngeal lymph node, tonsil,
recto-anal mucosal associated lymphatic tissue (RAMALT) and/or obex of 18/28 pregnant
does. Further testing of maternal uterus (n = 29), placentomes (n = 200), or amniotic
fluid (n = 50) revealed detection in 8 of the 18 CWD+ dams. Detection was not found
in the negative dam controls from Georgia (n = 0/3).
Conclusions: Our findings indicate the presence of CWD prions in maternal tissues
and fluids of the reproductive tract, suggesting the likelihood of fetal exposure
prior to parturition. Ongoing testing in fetal tissues as well as mouse bioassays
on both maternal and fetal tissues will further shed light on the presence of infectivity,
and determine the role of vertical transmission in the efficient transmission of CWD.
Funded by: Multistate Conservation Grant Program, The Association of Fish and Wildlife
Agencies
Grant number: F20AP00172
Quantitative 14-3-3 protein and prion RT-QuIC concordance analysis of patients with
suspected prion diseases in Spain
Jordi Sartoa, Laura Naranjob, Carlos Nosc, Raquel Ruíz-Garcíab, and Raquel Sánchez-Vallea
aAlzheimer’s Disease and Other Cognitive Disorders Unit, Neurology Service, Hospital
Clínic de Barcelona, Institut d’Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS),
Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain; bImmunology Service, Biomedical Diagnostic
Center, Hospital Clínic de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain; cGeneral Subdirectorate of
Surveillance and Response to Emergencies in Public Health, Department of Public Health
in Catalonia, Barcelona, Spain
Aims: Prion diseases are rare fatal diseases typically characterized by a rapid cognitive
decline in addition to other neurological signs and symptoms. Updated diagnostic criteria
include the prion (PrPsc) identification by Real-Time Quaking-Induced Conversion (RT-QuIC)
as an additional biomarker. Recently, validation studies of a commercially available
14-3-3 ELISA showed similar diagnosis validity to the to the established Western blot
method (Schmitz, 2016). In this study, we aim to study the concordance of quantitative
14-3-3 and RT-QuIC results in CSF samples of patients with suspected prion diseases.
Material and Methods: Retrospective analysis of all CSF samples from patients with
suspected prion disease received in the Immunology Service of the Hospital Clínic
de Barcelona for 14-3-3 and RT-QuIC determination during 4 years (2018–2021). 14-3-3
was determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). 14-3-3 levels higher
than 20.000 AU/mL were considered positive for Creutzfeldt-Jakob diagnosis. RT-QuIC
assay for PrPsc detection was performed according to the established methodology (McKenzie,
2022) and the result was reported as positive or negative.
Results: 351 samples were received during the study period for 14-3-3 and RT-QuIC
determination. Two hundred thirty-seven (68%) tested negative for both 14-3-3 and
RT-QuIC (-/-), 50 (14%) tested positive for both biomarkers (+/+), and 64 showed conflicting
results: 45 (13%) had a positive 14-3-3 results and negative RT-QuIC result (±) and
19 (5%) had a negative 14-3-3 and positive RT-QuIC (-/+). Mean (standard deviation)
14-3-3 levels were 6,405 (4,238), 56,669 (23,063), 50,011 (24,866) and 12,238 (4,799)
for the -/-, +/+, ± and -/+ groups, respectively. 14-3-3 levels were lower in the
-/- group compared to -/+ patients, p < 0.001. 14-3-3 levels were also lower when
RT-QuIC was negative (mean 13,364 [SD 19,179] vs 44,434 [28,091]), p < 0.001. CSF
14-3-3 levels had a diagnostic accuracy to predict the RT-QuIC result, as assessed
by the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC), of 0.87 (95%
confidence interval: 0.83–0.91). The 20.000 AU/mL cut-off had 73% sensitivity, 84%
specificity and an accuracy of 82% to classify the RT-QuIC results. Out of 52 participants
also referred for PRNP gene analysis, six carried a pathogenic mutation: 2 D178N,
1 E200K and 1 P102L were -/-, 1 E200K was -/+ and 1 E200K was +/+.
Conclusions: Using the established 14-3-3 levels cut-off, 82% of patients presented
concordant 14-3-3 and RT-QuIC results. 14-3-3 levels in patients with both tests negative
were lower than in patients 14-3-3 negative but with positive RT-QuIC.
Funded by: Dr Josep Baselga funds for research in prion diseases.
Targeting sodium-potassium pumps for the treatment of prion diseases
Gerold Schmitt-Ulmsa, Shehab Eida, Declan Williamsa, Mohadeseh Mehrabiana, Thomas
Zerbesa, Xinxhu Wanga, Hamza Arshadb, Joel Wattsb, Wenda Zhaoa, and Chris Sackmanna
aDepartment of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, University of Toronto, Toronto,
Canada; bDepartment of Biochemistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
Aims: A wide range of observations in humans and animals indicate that a reduction
in steady-state levels of the cellular prion protein (PrPC) is both safe and may extend
survival of prion diseases. We recently discovered that PrPCbinds to sodium-potassium
ATPases (NKAs), which led us to hypothesize that targeting NKAs with their natural
inhibitors, cardiac glycosides (CGs), may cause cells to internalize and degrade NKAs
and PrPC. We tested this hypothesis and sought to identify a novel CG that exhibits
lower toxicity and improved blood brain barrier (BBB) penetrance, relative to oleandrin,
widely considered the best CG for brain applications.
Material and Methods: Atomic structures of NKAs helped us predict the binding poses
of candidate CGs within human NKAs. A subsequent in silico screen identified a small
number of CGs expected to exhibit favorably characteristics for semi-synthesis, NKA
binding, and BBB penetrance. Next, we undertook extensive toxicological, pharmacological
and biochemical comparisons of oleandrin and a CG, termed KDC203, that was shortlisted
based on its predicted features.
Results: We will present data, which establish that CG exposure of human neural cell
models causes the anticipated reductions in steady-state levels of PrPC. Moreover,
we have validated that low nanomolar concentrations of KDC203 reduce PrPClevels by
85% in cultured human neural cell lines, thereby establishing this compound to be
10- to 1000-fold more potent than other small-molecule compounds reported to date
for this application. KDC203 also possesses promising pharmacological characteristics
and tenfold lower toxicity than oleandrin. Consistent with these data, KDC203 reached
twofold higher brain concentrations than oleandrin in pilot in vivo work, making it
a promising compound for further pre-clinical evaluations.
Conclusions: This work identified a novel modality for the treatment of prion diseases
that makes use of low nanomolar concentrations of a small molecule from a compound
class that is pharmacologically well-understood and exhibits excellent in vitro potency
for reducing PrPClevels.
Funded by: This work received generous grant support from the Krembil Foundation.
Grant number: Krembil Foundation fund 507,571
Acknowledgement: We gratefully acknowledge philanthropic support by the Irwin family.
Investigate the genetic and molecular landscape of the hnRNP K cellular essentiality
by performing unbiased CRISPR screens
Stefano Sellitto, Davide Caredio, Lukas Frick, Emina Lames, Dalila L. Vena, Sandesh
Neupane, and Adriano Aguzzi
Institute of Neuropathology, University of Zurich, CH-8091Zurich, Switzerland
Aims: Recently, our lab described a role of the heterogenous nuclear ribonucleoprotein
K (hnRNP K) in prion diseases. hnRNP K is an essential gene encoding an RNA Binding
Protein and it was identified as a target in several malignancies. More recently,
hnRNP K also emerged as an interesting protein in neurophysiology and neuropathology.
A better understanding of these functions, with particular focus on prion diseases,
will be of remarkable importance. In addition, a deeper characterization of the two
faces of hnRNP K in cancer and neuropathology could be seminal to elucidate shared
mechanisms of genetic and molecular abnormalities.
According to this, genome-wide screens offer a great opportunity to dissect the different
cellular roles of hnRNP K by identifying synthetic genetic interactions and functional
essential domains of this protein.
Material and Methods: The project is organized in two experimental screens: 1) a whole
genome screen to identify genes whose perturbation suppresses the low cellular fitness
induced by the hnRNP K loss-of-function; 2) a domain-dependency screen to assess the
functional essentiality of single hnRNP K’s domains. For the first goal, we used the
Brunello library to perform a whole genome pooled CRISPR knockout screen. Two human
glioblastoma cell lines (LN-229 and U251-MG), knockout for the hnRNP K gene and expressing
the Cas9 endonuclease, were used as cellular models.
For the second screen, we combined the exogenous expression of seven different hnRNP
K’s delated variants with a set of intronic sgRNAs to knock out only the endogenous
hnRNP K gene in Cas9-expressing LN-229 and U-251 MG cell lines.
Results: In the first screen, we identified 763 and 37 significantly enriched and
depleted genes respectively. The enriched genes were selected based on the FDR, the
fold change, the number of guides enriched and the cellular fitness resulting from
their individual knockout. The hits were further clustered for functional interactions
using the STRING database and a final list of 41 candidates was generated.
In the second screen, we identified 3 indispensable and 4 dispensable hnRNPK’s domains
in the LN-229 and U-251 MG cell lines.
Conclusions: Investigating the genetic and molecular landscape of hnRNP K essentiality
in an unbiased and comprehensive way will highlight the mechanistical underpinnings
of its cellular indispensability. Moreover, the biological understanding of how hnRNP
K exerts its fundamental role inside the cell may provide insights into the complex
biology of this protein and it could potentially track unknown pathways at the intersections
between cancer, neurodevelopment and neurodegeneration.
Acknowledgement: Daniel Heinzer, Merve Avar, Kathi Gin
Stabilization of monomeric α-synuclein by all-D-enantiomeric peptide ligands as therapeutic
strategy for Parkinson’s disease and other synucleinopathies
Marc Sevenicha,c, Ian Geringa, Madita Vollmera, Selma Aghabashlou Saisana,b, Markus
Tusche1, Tatsiana Kupreichyka,b, Thomas Paulyb, Matthias Stoldta, Wolfgang Hoyera,b,
Antje Willuweitc,d, Janine Kutzschea, Nils-Alexander Lakomeka,b, Luitgard Nagel-Stegerb,
Lothar Gremera,b, Gültekin Tamgüneya,b, Jeannine Mohrlüdera and Dieter Willbolda,b,e
aInstitute of Biological Information Processing (IBI-7), Forschungszentrum Jülich,
Jülich, Germany; bInstitut für Physikalische Biologie, Heinrich-Heine-Universitêt
Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany; cPriavoid GmbH, Düsseldorf, Germany; dInstitute of
Neuroscience and Medicine (INM-4), Forschungszentrum Jülich, Jülich, Germany; eJuStruct,
Forschungszentrum Jülich, Jülich, Germany
Aims: Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the most common neurodegenerative movement disorder
worldwide. One of its central features is the neurodegeneration that starts in the
substantia nigra and progressively tends to involve other brain regions. α-synuclein
(α-syn) and its aggregation during pathogenesis have been drawn into the center of
attention, where especially soluble oligomeric structures are thought to play a key
role in prion-like cell-to-cell transmission and induction of toxic effects. Here,
we report the development of all-D-enantiomeric peptide ligands that bind monomeric
α-syn with high affinity, thereby stabilizing the physiological intrinsically disordered
structure and preventing initiation of aggregation as well as eliminating already
existing aggregates.
Material and Methods: Mirror-image phage display, next generation sequencing (NGS),
surface plasmon resonance (SPR), microscale thermophoresis (MST), atomic forced microscopy
(AFM), dynamic light scattering (DLS), size exclusion chromatography (SEC), paramagnetic
relaxation enhancement (PRE), nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR), Thioflavin-T
(ThT) aggregation assay, cell-viability assay (MTT-assay).
Results: Based on mirror-image phage display on the D-enantiomeric full-length α syn
target, we identified two lead compounds, SVD-1 and SVD-1a, by NGS, ThT screens and
rational design. The compounds were analyzed with regard to their anti-aggregation
potential and both compounds showed aggregation delaying as well as seed capacity
reducing effects in de novo and seeded environments, respectively. By SPR and MST,
a high affinity for the monomeric α-syn was found in the nano- to picomolar KD range.
2D-aH-15N NMR of isotope labeled α-syn monomer and SVD-1a revealed shift changes in
ppb scale in presence of SVD-1a for most of the side resonances with an emphasis on
the C-terminal part. This was confirmed by PRE-NMR measurement with paramagnetic spin
labeled SVD-1a, where again, interaction over the whole α-syn monomer with an emphasis
on the C-terminus was identified.
Finally, SVD-1a reduced toxic effects as well as intracellular seeding capacity of
preformed fibril (PFF) oligomers in cell culture and was able to specifically disassemble
α-syn PFF oligomers into monomers as identified by AFM, time dependent DLS and SEC
analysis.
Conclusions: The present work provides promising results for the development of lead
compounds with an anti-prionic mode of action for the future treatment of Parkinson’s
disease and other synucleinopathies. It also gives insights into how to characterize
the interaction of a therapeutic peptide with an intrinsically disordered target protein,
providing the basis for future optimizations.
Funded by: Michael J. Fox Research Foundation
Grant number: MJFF-000934
Compilation of Research on Prion therapeutics
Niti Sharma, Kyu Hwan Shim, and Seong Soo A. An
Department of Bionano Technology, Gachon University, Sujeong-Gu, Seongnam, South Korea
Prion diseases are a group of incurable neurodegenerative diseases caused by the prions,
affecting both humans and animals. The atypical folding and aggregation of the soluble
cellular prion proteins (PrPC) into scrapie isoform (PrPSc) in the CNS, results in
brain damage and other symptoms associated with it. Different therapeutic approaches
ranging from organic compounds to antibodies have been proposed, including stalling
PrPCto PrPScconversion, increasing PrPScremoval, and/or PrPCstabilization using different
research methodologies like cell-therapy, immunotherapy, pharmacotherapy and compounds
ranging from chemicals to proteins have been studied to target the disease with special
attention to PrPScaggregation inhibition. Compounds destabilizing PrPScand reducing
infection have also been identified. A few important chemical compounds (Sulfated
polyanions, diazo dyes, Phenothiazine derivative, Cyclic Tetrapyrroles, Diphenylmethane
derivatives, Diphenylpyrazole derivatives, Indole-3-Glyoxylamides, 2-Aminothiazoles,
Carbazole derivatives, Benzoxazole derivative, Ethanolamine, Dimethyl sulfoxide);
repurposed drugs (Quinacrine, Chlorpromazine, Celecoxib, Flupirtine, Imatinib, Efavirenz,
Simvastatin, Glimepiride, Doxycycline); natural products (Polydatin, Curcumin, Resveratrol,
Epigallocatechin gallate, Cannabidiol, Baicalein, Hinokitiol, Ginsenoside, Bile acids)
and anti-prion antibodies (6H4, D13, D18, 8B4, 8H4, ICSM18, ICSM35, POM1-2, 4H11,
44B1). All these compounds have displayed anti-prion activity in vitro, but only a
few were effective in vivo. Recently, encouraging results of a prion protein monoclonal
antibody (an IgG4κ isotype; PNR100) in a clinical trial study on CJD patients have
been announced which stabilized PrPCand increased the survival in infected mice. After
such promising results, PRN100 will be evaluated for Phase-II trials. The success
story doesn’t end here as another promising molecule MC and GN8 are ready for human
clinical trials on prion-diseases while Anle138b is in Phase 1b for PD patients. The
ineffectiveness of most of the molecules tested was either due to inability to cross
BBB, toxicity or transitory accumulation of drug resistant prions. Hence, it is incredibly
important to learn from the backstory. By understanding what all has already been
done, what is the mechanism of drug action, why the clinical trials failed, we can
comprehend prion diseases better and chalk out the right direction leading to more
effective treatment. Also, targeting more than one pathway involved in prion diseases
may provide synergistic benefits.
Funded by: This research was funded by the National Research Foundation of Korea and
by the Korean Government (2020R1A2B5B01002463 and 2021R1A6A1A03038996).
Characterization of a novel prion protein mutation of serine to proline at residue
245 linked to VPSPr-like phenotype in vivo and in vitro
Pingping Shena,b, Johnny Danga, Mark Cohena,c, Jue Yuana, Zerui Wanga, Yue Langa,b,
Tricia Gillilanda, Jessica Ludwigc, Maria Gerasimenkoa, Michelle Tanga, Sarada Rajamanickama,
Anika Yadatia, Jiri Safara,d, Lawrence B. Schonbergere, Shulin Zhanga, Brian S. Applebya,c,d,
Robert B. Petersena,f,and Wen-Quan Zoua,c,d
aDepartment of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, 2085
Adelbert Road, Cleveland, OH, USA;bDepartment of Neurology, First Hospital of Jilin
University, Changchun, Jilin Province, China; cNational Prion Disease Pathology Surveillance
Center, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA; dDepartment of Neurology,
Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, OH, USA; eDivision
of High-Consequence Pathogens and Pathology, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
1600 Clifton Rd, Atlanta, GA, USA; fFoundation Sciences, Central Michigan University
College of Medicine, Mount Pleasant, MI, USA
Aims: More than 50 deleterious mutations in the prion protein (PrP) have been linked
to genetic human prion diseases to date, including Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD),
Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker (GSS) disease. All but two of the mutations localize
within the mature PrP between residues 23 and 231. The aim of this study is to characterize
the pathological PrP (PrPSc) in a case with prion disease linked to a novel PrP mutation
and the effect of this mutation on PrP trafficking, misfolding and aggregation in
a cell model.
Material and Methods: Autopsy brain tissues from a cadaver with an atypical prion
disease carrying a novel mutation of serine (S) to proline (P) in the C-terminal signal
peptide region of PrP at residue 245 (PrPS245P) were examined by western blotting
and neurohistology. As controls, autopsy brain tissues from cases with GSS, sporadic
sCJD, variably protease-sensitive prionopathy (VPSPr), and a normal subject were also
examined, respectively. Human neuroblastoma cells (M17) were transfected with either
human wild-type PrP or PrPS245Pand the transfected cells were characterized for comparison
of the mutant and wild-type PrP.
Results: Through US national prion disease surveillance, we identified a clinically
atypical prion disease that had a novel mutation of serine (S) to proline (P) in the
C-terminal signal peptide region of PrP at residue 245 (PrPS245P). Neuropathologically,
spongiform degeneration and PrPScstaining were observed in frontal, temporal and occipital
cortex as well as basal ganglia and thalamus. Biochemically, this mutation exhibited
the electrophoretic gel profile of proteinase K (PK)-resistant pathogenic PrP (PrPSc),
reminiscent of that seen in VPSPr, a sporadic human prion disease with glycoform-selective
PrPSc. PrPScwas observed to form multiple ladder-like protein bands after treatment
with PK. These PrP bands exhibited a higher affinity for the 1E4 antibody and lower
affinity for the 3F4 antibody. As PrPScin VPSPr, two sets of N- and C-terminally truncated
PrPreswere identified by 1E4 and Anti-C antibodies. PrPS245Pand wild-type PrP in the
transfected M17 cells were compared for trafficking, misfolding, and aggregation of
PrP.
Conclusions: Our study revealed that the novel PrPS245Pmutation confers atypical clinical
and pathological changes and a PrPScgel profile similar to that seen in VPSPr, suggesting
that it represents the second genetic form of VPSPr, following the first genetic VPSPr
with PrPV180Imutation.
Funded by: CJD Foundation and NIH.
Multi-centric plaques in kuru: a fingerprint of its origin
Beata Sikorska, and Pawel P. Liberski
Department of Molecular Pathology and Neuropathology, Medical University of Lodz,
Lodz, Poland
Aims: Kuru, brought to medical attention by D. Carleton Gajdusek and Vincent Zigas,
was the first human prion disease proved to be transmissible. Spread by ritual endocannibalism
among the Fore linguistic group of Papua New Guinea, kuru was a uniformly fatal cerebellar
ataxia syndrome. The most striking neuropathological feature of kuru was the presence
of numerous amyloid plaques; hence, the name ‘kuru plaques’ was coined. Here, we present
a detailed study of amyloid plaques in archived brain from a well-documented kuru
case, using electron microscopy, immunohistochemistry and confocal laser microscopy.
Material and Methods: We employed modern neuropathological techniques to re-evaluate
archival formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded brain specimens, including cerebellum,
several cortical areas, hippocampus, and basal ganglia, of a 16-year-old male who
died of kuru. Immunohistochemical stainings with antibodies against PrP, βAPP, pTau,
alpha-synuclein, TDP43 and p62 were performed. Double and triple immunofluorescent
stainings were used for confocal laser microscopy. 3D image analysis software with
volume rendering was used to study the structure of the amyloid plaques, their spatial
organization and association with cells.
Results: The immunohistochemical reaction against PrPScrevealed diffuse synaptic deposits
in all areas examined. The typical uni-centric kuru plaques were numerous in the granular
layer of the cerebellar cortex but were also present in the striatum and hippocampal
formation. Apart from these classic changes, we observed a few florid plaques similar
to those described in vCJD and most interestingly, multi-centric plaques unique to
GSS. The multi-centric plaques, reconstructed into 3D-structural images, using confocal
laser microscopy, showed several neurites crossing the amyloid plaques. The 3D images
confirmed structural similarity of the multicentric plaques of kuru to those observed
in GSS.
Conclusions: The multi-centric neuritic plaques found in the hippocampus of this kuru-affected
brain are typical only of GSS, and to our knowledge have never been reported in any
other disease. Taking into consideration that iatrogenic cases of prion disease and
vCJD cases transmitted by blood transfusion showed that prion transmission from human
to human does not significantly change the neuropathological and biochemical phenotype
and that the unique type of plaques was observed only in GSS and kuru, it may be hypothesized
that kuru originated from a GSS case cannibalized incidentally, resulting in subsequent
epidemics.
Funded by: Statutory funds of Medical University of Lodz
In silico study of drugs docking against cellular, mutated and scrapie forms of prion
protein
Christopher Situa, Lyudmyla Doroshb, Sara Amidianc, Maria Stepanovab, and Holger Willec
aOld Scona Academic, Edmonton, Canada; bElectrical & Computer Engineering Department,
University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada; cCentre for Prions and Protein Folding Diseases,
University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada; Department of Biochemistry, University of
Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
Aims: Conversion of the prion protein from the cellular form (PrPC) to the infectious
scrapie prion (PrPSc) and further aggregation of misfolded isoforms is believed to
cause transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs), a group of fatal neurodegenerative
conditions that is currently lacking effective treatment options. Finding chemotherapeutic
agents capable of inhibiting the conversion of PrPCinto PrPScwithout interfering with
the normal functions of the protein, as well as identifying drugs capable of preventing
further conversion and aggregation are critical for the development of disease-modifying
and preventive treatments of TSEs.
Material and Methods: We performed in-silico docking of 125 drug candidates to various
isoforms of the human prion protein including wild type (WT) PrPC, mutants P102L and
E200K, as well as two different PrPScconformations, the in-register cryo-EM based
PIRIBS structure [Kraus et al., 2021] and the β-solenoidal theoretically predicted
model [Spagnolli et al., 2019]. Importantly, docking of drug candidates against the
PrPScmodels allowed for a direct identification of binding sites at the surface of
misfolded fibrillary seeds.
Results: Out of 125 drug candidates, ten structurally diverse compounds with the strongest
binding scores were identified. Effects of electrostatic and sterical compatibility
with cavities at the surface of PrP were analyzed. The identified compounds were separated
in groups that may target different stages of misfolding and aggregation of the prion
protein.
Conclusions: suramin, Fe(III)TMPyP, amphotericin B, methyl blue, tegobuvir, tariquidar,
diosgenin, rapamycin, and elacridar are the most promising drugs that may bind to
PrPSc. However, some of them also exhibit a strong binding propensity to PrPC, which
might interfere with its functions. Drug candidates that strongly bind exclusively
to PrPScinclude amphotericin B, diosgenin, tariquidar, filipin, cmp10, NPR-015, doxycycline,
cmpd12, and tetracycline.
Funded by: Alberta Innovates
Grant number: 20,170,016
Acknowledgement: Access to drug data offered by the DrugBank is gratefully acknowledged.
RNA Editing in Neurodegenerative Disorders
Theodoros Sklaviadis
Laboratory of Pharmacology, School of Pharmacy, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,
Thessaloniki, Greece
Aims: We aimed to address how RNA editing patterns of different tissue/cell populations
contribute to the pathologies of protein aggregation and subsequent neurodegeneration
(sCJD, PD, AD, ALS & MS). RNA editing is a prevalent type of RNA modification where
the RNA sequences are altered through insertion, deletion or substitution of nucleotides.
RNA editing may modify the structure, stability, and processing of a transcript with
subsequent translation deregulation. Although the brain is an immune-privileged organ,
cross-talks between peripheral and central inflammation have been reported. Therefore,
it is obligatory to study in parallel RNA editing in distinct tissue (tissue/cell
populations, in each of the above pathologies, in order to understand if editing contribute
to pathogenesis as a potential origin of an initial epitranscriptomic error.
Material and Methods: We utilized a combination of several disease patient in vitro
and in vivo transcriptomes, that faithfully recapitulate the molecular and pathological
alterations of the abovementioned neurodegenerative diseases. RNA sequencing data
were subjected to an advanced ‘in house’ QC pipeline, followed by gene expression
and RNA editing analyses based on the DESeq and REDItools/SPRINT algorithms. Integrative
and comparative editome analyses followed by Gene Ontology and pathway gene enrichment
has identified common RNA editing alterations in the context of each disease-protein
aggregation.
Results: Remarkably, we find distinct changes in RNA editing profiles with specifically
altered RNA edited pathways (eg., ER stress, lysosome, splicing) with a common pattern
presented in total brain tissue as well as in distinct cellular subtypes (neuronal
and immune) in the context of neurodegenerative disease progression. It seems that
RNA editing has a protective role for preclinical and clinical disease stages. Furthermore,
differentially edited sites were preferentially predicted to disrupt miRNA binding
and induce coding changes in genes previously associated with disease phenotypes.
These findings suggest that RNA editing has an important post-transcriptional regulatory
role in all neurodegenerative pathogenesis.
Conclusions: Our results highlight a great need for the inclusion of epitranscriptomic
mechanisms in the study of neurodegeneration. We hope our work will pave the way for
the discovery of more effective therapies to treat patients suffering from neurodegenerative
diseases.
Funded by: This research has been co‐financed by the European Regional Development
Fund of the European Union and Greek national funds through the Operational Program
Competitiveness, Entrepreneurship and Innovation, under the call RESEARCH – CREATE
– INNOVATE (project code: T1EDK-03884); Hellenic Foundation for Research and Innovation
(H.F.R.I) under the “2nd Call for H.F.R.I
Research Projects to support Post-Doctoral Researchers” (project number: 1146).
Single cell transcriptional profiling of the cortex and hippocampus from mice infected
with RML scrapie
Jessy Slotaa,b, Babu Sajesha, Kathy Frosta, Sarah Medina, and Stephanie Bootha,b
aOne Health Divsion, National Microbiology Laboratory, Public Health Agency of Canada,
Winnipeg, MB, Canada; bMedical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, University of
Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada
Aims: The precise molecular mechanisms that link PrPScaccumulation in the brain with
associated pathological changes have remained a mystery despite intense efforts to
characterize transcriptional changes within bulk brain tissues. This may be partly
attributed to the inherent complexity of numerous brain cell subtypes and the overwhelming
induction of inflammatory transcripts that possibly mask subtle changes occurring
within neurons. Thus, improved approaches could provide insights into mechanisms of
pathogenesis and/or clarify the response of cellular subpopulations to prion infection.
Here, we attempt to profile transcriptional changes in cortical and hippocampal tissues
from a well-established mouse model of RML scrapie using single-cell RNA sequencing
(scRNAseq).
Material and Methods: CD1 mice were intraperitoneally inoculated with either scrapie
(RML) or non-infectious (Mock) brain homogenate and sacrificed at onset of clinical
signs ranging from 150–173 days post infection (dpi). Cortical and hippocampal brain
tissues were dissected and dissociated with papain before clearing debris using Miltenyi
debris removal solution and myelin removal beads. The single-cell suspensions were
processed using the 10x genomics 3’ gene expression reagents according to manufacturer’s
instructions and the resulting libraries were sequenced on an Illumina Nextseq2000
instrument. Sequencing data was pre-processed using the cellranger pipeline and analyzed
further using the Seurat R package.
Results: We prepared scRNAseq libraries from the cortex and hippocampus taken from
5 Mock treated mice (collected at timepoints from 110 dpi to 180 dpi) and 7 RML treated
mice (collected at clinical endpoints from 150 to 173 dpi). Each library was prepared
from a target population of 10,000 cells and sequenced to a minimum depth of 30,000
reads/cell. Using graph based clustering and dimensionality reduction techniques,
we identified multiple populations of microglia, astrocytes, vascular cells and neurons.
This will enable us to track prion disease-associated markers across brain cell types
and compare how different cellular subpopulations respond to prion infection.
Conclusions: scRNAseq may represent a useful tool to dissect prion induced transcriptional
responses for specific subpopulations of microglia, astrocytes, vascular cells and
neurons.
Funded by: Public Health Agency of Canada
Acknowledgement: We wish to thank the staff of the veterinary technical services at
the NML for animal manipulations and the staff of DNA core services at the NML for
assistance with sequencing runs.
Distribution of PrPCWDin tissues of CWD affected sika deer using RT-QuIC following
experimental oral transmission
HJ Sohna, KJ Parka, YR Leea, HC Parka, and G Mitchellb
aForeign animal disease division (FADD), Animal and Plant Quarantine Agency (APQA),
Gimcheon, Korea; bNational & OIE Reference Laboratory for Scrapie and CWD, Canadian
Food Inspection Agency, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is the only prion disease affecting free-ranging
animals, reported in North America, South Korea and Scandinavia. Unlike in most other
prion diseases, CWD agents are shed in blood, saliva, urine and feces which most likely
contributes to the horizontal transmission between cervid species. Using NaPTA precipitation
and real-time quaking-induced conversion (NaPTA/RT-QuIC) or only RT-QuIC, we established
an ultrasensitive detection method for PrPCWDin the various tissues and body fluids
of CWD affected sika deer following experimental oral transmission.
Material and Methods: Two Sika deer were orally inoculated with a brain homogenate
(5 g) prepared from a farmed Canadian elk with clinical CWD. Deer were euthanized
due to intercurrent disease or following the development of signs consistent with
terminal CWD.
An array of tissues was collected and stored frozen, and were tested for the presence
of PrPCWDby RT-QuIC or NaPTA/RT-QuIC.
Results: Primary oral transmission of CWD from elk to sika deer occurred in all inoculated
animals, and was detected by RT-QuIC. Consistent with other cervids in the terminal
stages of CWD, pathological prions were distributed throughout the central nervous
system and lymphoid tissues including spleen. PrPCWDwas also detected in the urinary
system (kidney, urinary bladder, urine), salivary system (salivary glands and saliva),
heart and skin. Detection in the skin occurred after collagenase treatment, and PrPCWDin
the urinary system was associated with renal nerve plexus.
Conclusions: CWD transmits efficiently from elk to sika deer via the oral route. Widespread
detection of PrPCWDby RT-QuIC suggests that, similar to other cervid species, infectivity
is distributed throughout a wide range of tissues in sika deer with clinical CWD.
Funded by: Animal and Plant Quarantine Agency
Grant number: B-154085-2022-24-01
Detection of PrPCWDin ear skin from CWD affected cervid
HJ Sohn, KJ Park, HC Park, YR Lee, and HE Kang
Foreign animal disease division (FADD), Animal and Plant Quarantine Agency (APQA),
Gimcheon, Korea
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is the only prion disease affecting free-ranging
animals, reported in North America, South Korea and Scandinavia. Using real-time quaking-induced
conversion (RT-QuIC), we established an ultrasensitive detection method for PrPCWDto
determine the availability of using ear skin for preclinical diagnosis, here we report
RT-QuIC assays of ear skin samples from cervid. In addition, we confirmed infectivity
of four RT-QuIC positive skins thorough Tg Elk mouse bioassay.
Material and Methods: CWD-derived samples were obtained from animals at different
clinical stage in Korean cervid farm. This classification of clinical stage was assigned
based on post mortem diagnosis of PrPCWDdetection in RPLN, tonsil and obex.
An array of tissues was collected and prepared 10% ear homogenate of farmed Korean
cervid and then were tested for the presence of PrPCWDby RT-QuIC after incubated collagenase
(2 mg/ml) and phospholipase (1.6 umol) 37°C for 1 hr. To confirm ear skin infectivity,
we inoculated 4 RT-QuIC positive tissues into Tg elk mice (n = 6 per group) by intracranial
route.
Results: PrPCWDis not evenly distributes in cervid ear and detects in seven out of
eight cervid at late pre-symptomatic stage. The average ThT fluorescence unit in ear
skin gave rapid increase within 11 h in just two cervid of the last end-stage. All
inoculated groups showed 80 ~ 100% attack rates and developed the disease during survival
times.
Conclusions: Based on our data, we were confirmed in PrPCWDdetection and infectivity
from CWD infected cervid ear skin. And raising the possibility that simple ear-punch
biopsies might be used for CWD antemortem monitoring.
Funded by: Animal and Plant Quarantine Agency
Grant number: B-154085-2022-24-01
Carrot plants as potential vectors for CWD transmission
Paulina Sotoa,b, Francisca Bravo-Risia,b, Claudio Sotoa, and Rodrigo Moralesa,b
aDepartment of Neurology, McGovern Medical School, University of Texas Health Science
Center at Houston, Texas, USA; bUniversidad Bernardo O’Higgins, Santiago, Chile
Prion diseases are infectious neurodegenerative disorders afflicting humans and other
mammals. These diseases are generated by the misfolding of the cellular prion protein
into a disease-causing isoform. Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a prevalent prion
disease affecting cervids (captive and free-range). CWD is thought to be transmitted
through direct animal contact or by indirect exposure to contaminated environments.
Many studies have shown that infectious prions can enter the environment through saliva,
feces, or urine from infected animals and decaying carcasses. However, we do not fully
understand the specific contribution of each component to disease transmission events.
Plants are logical environmental components to be evaluated since they grow in environments
contaminated with CWD prions and are relevant for animal and human nutrition.
Aims: The main objective of this study is to study whether prions are transported
to the roots and leaves of carrots, an edible plant commonly used in the human diet
and as deer bait.
Methods: We have grown carrot plants in CWD-infected soils. After 90 days, we harvested
the carrots and separated them from the leaves. The experiment was controlled by growing
plants in soil samples treated with brain extracts from healthy animals. These materials
were interrogated for their prion seeding activity using the Protein Misfolding Cyclic
Amplification (PMCA) technique. Infectivity was evaluated in mouse bioassays (intracerebral
injections in Tg1536 mice). The animals were sacrificed when they showed established
signs of prion disease. Animals not displaying clinical signs were sacrificed at 600 days
post-inoculation.
Results: The PMCA analysis demonstrated CWD seeding activity in soils contaminated
with CWD prions, as well as in carrot plants (leaves and roots) grown on them. Bioassays
demonstrated that both leaves and roots contained CWD prions in sufficient quantities
to induce disease (92% attack rate). As expected, animals treated with prion-infected
soils developed prion disease at shorter incubation periods (and complete attack rates)
compared to plant components. Animals treated with soil and plant components exposed
with CWD-free brain extracts did not display prion-associated clinical signs or evidence
of sub-clinical prion infection.
Conclusions: We show that edible plant components can absorb prions from CWD contaminated
soils and transport them to their aerial parts. Our results indicate that plants could
participate as vectors of CWD transmission. Importantly, plants designated for human
consumption represent a risk of introducing CWD prions into the human food chain.
Funded by: NIH
Grant number: R01AI132695
Chronic wasting disease detection in environmental and biological samples from a taxidermy
site
Paulina Sotoa,b, J. Hunter Reedc, Mitch Lockwoodc, and Rodrigo Moralesa,b
aDepartment of Neurology, McGovern Medical School, University of Texas Health Science
Center at Houston, Texas, USA; bUniversidad Bernardo O’Higgins, Santiago, Chile; cTexas
Parks and Wildlife Department, Texas, USA
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy affecting
captive and free-ranging cervids (e.g., mule deer, white-tailed deer, elk, reindeer,
and moose). Nowadays, CWD is widely distributed in North America. It is suggested
that CWD spreads due to direct animal contact or through exposure to contaminated
environments previously inhabited by infected animals. CWD may also be spread through
the movement of infected animals and carcasses. Taxidermy practices involve processing
deer tissues (or whole animal carcasses). In many cases, the CWD status of processed
animals is unknown. This can generate risks of disease spread and transmission. Taxidermy
practices include different steps involving physical, chemical, and biological procedures.
Without proper tissue handling or disposal practices, taxidermist facilities may become
a focus of prion infectivity.
Aims: In this study, we evaluated the presence of infectious prions in a taxidermy
facility believed to be exposed to CWD. Detection was performed using the Protein
Misfolding Cyclic Amplification (PMCA) technique in biological and inert environmental
samples.
Methods: We collected biological and environmental samples (plants, soils, insects,
excreta, and others) from a taxidermy facility, and we tested these samples using
the PMCA technique. In addition, we swabbed different surfaces possibly exposed to
CWD-infected animals. For the PMCA reaction, we directly used a swab piece or 10 µL
of 20% w/v homogenized samples.
Results: The PMCA analysis demonstrated CWD seeding activity in some of the components
of this facility, including insects involved in head processing, soils, and a trash
dumpster.
Conclusions: Different areas of this property were used for various taxidermy procedures.
We were able to detect the presence of prions in i) soils that were in contact with
the heads of dead animals, ii) insects involved in the cleaning of skulls, and iii)
an empty dumpster where animal carcasses were previously placed. This is the first
report demonstrating that swabbing is a helpful method to screen for prion infectivity
on surfaces potentially contaminated with CWD. These findings are relevant as this
swabbing and amplification strategy may be used to evaluate the disease status of
other free-ranging and captive settings where there is a concern for CWD transmissions,
such as at feeders and water troughs with CWD-exposed properties. This approach could
have substantial implications for free-ranging cervid surveillance as well as in epidemiological
investigations of CWD.
Funded by: USDA
Grant number: AP20VSSPRS00C143
Nasal bot: an emerging vector for natural chronic wasting disease transmission
Paulina Sotoa,b, Francisca Bravo-Risia,b, Carlos Kramma, Nelson Pereza, Rebeca Benaventea,
J. Hunter Reedc, Mitch Lockwoodc, Tracy A. Nicholsd, and Rodrigo Moralesa,b
aDepartment of Neurology, McGovern Medical School, University of Texas Health Science
Center at Houston, Texas, USA; bUniversidad Bernardo O’Higgins, Santiago, Chile; cTexas
Park and Wildlife Department, Texas, USA; dVeterinary Services Cervid Health Program,
United States Department of Agriculture, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service,
Fort Collins, Colorado, USA
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease that affects farmed
and free-ranging cervids populations. The spread of CWD in cervids is thought to occur
through the direct contact between cervids or through the exposure of naïve animals
to contaminated environments. Parasites are known vectors of multiple diseases in
animals. However, the potential role of parasites in CWD transmission remains unclear.
Aims: The main objective of this study was to determine if CWD prions could be detected
in the larvae of deer nasal bot flies, a common deer parasite, taken from CWD-infected
white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus).
Methods: Bot fly larvae were collected from the nasal cavity of naturally infected
CWD- positive or CWD non-detect white-tailed deer. The CWD seeding activity of the
larvae was interrogated by PMCA. Prion infectivity was also evaluated in cervidized
transgenic mouse bioassay (intra-cerebral administration in Tg1536 mice). Mice inoculated
with bot larvae homogenate were sacrificed when they showed established signs of prion
disease, or at extended periods after treatment (600 days). All inoculated mouse brains
were evaluated for protease resistant prions to confirm clinical or sub-clinical infection.
Bot larvae from CWD non-detect deer were used as controls. To further mimic environmental
transmission, bot larvae homogenates were mixed with soils and plants were grown on
them. Both plants and soils were tested for prion seeding activity.
Results: PMCA analysis demonstrated CWD seeding activity in nasal bot larvae from
captive and free-ranging white-tailed deer. CWD-contaminated bots efficiently infected
transgenic mice, with attack rates and incubation periods suggesting high infectivity
titers. Further analyses of treated animals (biochemical characterization of protease
resistant prions and immunohistochemistry) confirmed prion infection. Analyses on
dissected parts of the bot larvae demonstrate that the infectivity is concentrated
in the larvae cuticle (outer part). Nasal bot larvae extracts mixed with soils showed
seeding activity by PMCA. Interestingly, plants grown in soil contaminated with the
nasal bot larvae extract were found to produce seeding activity by PMCA.
Conclusion: In this study we described for the first time that deer nasal bot larvae
from CWD-infected deer carry high CWD infectivity titers. We also demonstrate that
CWD prions in these parasites can interact with other environmental components relevant
for disease transmission. Considering this information, we propose that deer nasal
bot larvae could act as vectors for CWD transmission in wild and farming settings.
Funded by: NIH/NIAID and USDA/APHIS
Grant number: R01AI132695 and AP20VSSPRS00C143
Large and small extracellular vesicles differ in the level of prion associated infectivity
in cell culture
Jakub Soukupa,b, Sami Kereïchec, Tibor Moškoa, and Karel Holadaa
aInstitute of Immunology and Microbiology, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University,
Prague, Czech Republic; bDepartment of Genetics and Microbiology, Faculty of Science,
Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic; cInstitute of Biology and Medical Genetics,
First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic
Aims: Prion diseases are fatal neurodegenerative disorders connected to the accumulation
of misfolded isoform of prion protein (PrPTSE). PrPTSEspread in the organism is critical
for the disease manifestation and direct contact of PrPTSEwith cellular prion protein
(PrPC) is needed for cell infection. Three ways of PrPTSEintercellular transmission
were identified: cell-to-cell contact, tunnelling nanotubes and extracellular vesicles
(EVs). EVs are capable of long-distance transmission and crossing of blood-brain barrier.
EVs are divided by the mechanism of biogenesis and size to exosomes, microvesicles
and apoptotic bodies. Yet, they cannot be isolated in clean fractions, they are referred
as small EVs (sEVs, mostly exosomes) and large EVs (lEVs, mostly microvesicles). The
aim of our study was to compare the ability of sEVs and lEVs to spread prions in cell
culture.
Material and Methods: EVs were isolated from medium of RML chronically infected mouse
CAD5 and PK1 cells. lEVs were isolated by centrifugation at 14,000 × g. sEVs were
isolated by 110,000 × g using sucrose cushion. Isolated EVs were characterized by
cryo-TEM and western blot utilizing calnexin, β-1 integrin, HSP70, TSG-101 and Alix
markers. Isolated lEVs and sEVs were used for infection of native CAD5 and PK1 cells
in two ways: 1) infection by the fractions containing relative amount of sEVs or lEVs
present in the conditioned medium; 2) infection by sEVs and lEVs fractions standardized
to contain the same amount of protein. The effectiveness of prion infection was analysed
by cell blot, western blot and cell scrapie assay. Prion converting activity was measured
by RT-QuIC.
Results: The isolated CAD5 lEVs contained ~2× less total protein and had different
protein profile then sEVs fractions. Both fractions were enriched in PrPCand PrPTSEcompared
to the cell lysate. The lEVs fraction demonstrated ~10× higher prion converting activity
measured by RT-QuIC. In the infectious experiments, lEVs infected native CAD5 4× more
effectively than sEVs even though they contained less total protein. The infection
of PK1 cell by lEVs was also (1.5×) more effective. To confirm the higher presence
of prions in lEVs, we standardized amount of protein in the fractions and repeated
the experiments. Again, all employed methods showed stronger infection by lEVs in
both studied cell lines.
Conclusions: Our data revealed that lEVs fraction contains more infectious prions
and has higher prion converting activity than more abundant sEVs. Our study suggests
that microvesicles may contribute to the spread of PrPTSEmore than widely investigated
exosomes.
Funded by: Charles University
Grant number: Cooperatio 207,032–3, SVV 260520
Acknowledgement: The authors thank Charles Weissmann and Dennis Burton from The Scripps
Research Institute for CAD 5 cells.
4R tau seeds are a prevalent co-pathology across neurodegenerative diseases
Heidi G. Standkea, Matteo Mancaa, Mikayla L. Huntlya, Olivia R. Thomasa, Yongya Kimb,
Annie Hinikerb, David G. Coughlinb, Douglas Galaskob, and Allison Krausa
aDepartment of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland,
OH, USA; bDepartment of Neurosciences, University of California San Diego, CA, USA
Aims: Tauopathies are neurodegenerative diseases defined by the accumulation of misfolded
tau, with 3 R/4R tau deposits being characteristic of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), 3 R
tau of Pick’s disease (PiD), and 4R tau of progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) and
corticobasal degeneration (CBD). Using ultrasensitive real-time quaking induced conversion
(RT-QuIC) assays selective for different tau strains, we identified 3 R/4R tau seeds
are a prominent co-pathology across neurodegenerative diseases, including synucleinopathies
and 4R tauopathies. Here, we explore the prevalence of 4R tau seeds as a co-pathology
in non-4R tauopathies using 4R RT-QuIC for the detection of 4R tau seeds in brain
tissue of neuropathologically well-defined neurodegenerative cases. We also exploit
the ability of the RT-QuIC assay to discriminate disease specific 4R tau amyloid core
structures characteristic of PSP and CBD (Shi et al., 2021).
Material and Methods: We used 4R RT-QuIC (Saijo et al., 2020) to evaluate 63 neuropathologically
well-characterized brain tissue samples including cases with AD (n = 15), Parkinson’s
disease (PD) (n = 8), multiple system atrophy (MSA) (n = 6), Lewy body dementia (LBD)
(n = 13), PSP (n = 6) CBD (n = 6) and age-comparable controls consisting of cases
<Braak III (n = 9). RT-QuIC readouts were further analyzed for differences in ThT
amplitude, and we used electron microscopy (EM) to examine ultrastructural characteristics
of the seeded amyloids.
Results: 4R RT-QuIC identified all 4R tauopathy cases, with 4R tau seeds being on
average ~ 1,000-fold higher than age-comparable controls. However, 4R tau seeds were
also detected, albeit in predominantly low quantities, in non-4R tauopathy diseases
including select AD (11/15), PD (7/8), MSA (4/6), and LBD (9/13) cases. While a previous
study showed low 4R seeding activity in brain tissue of some AD and PiD cases (Saijo
et al., 2020), here we evaluate additional disease diagnoses and cases than previously
reported, including in primary synucleinopathies. PSP and CBD seeds could be distinguished
by differences in resulting RT-QuIC ThT amplitude readouts.
Conclusions: 4R RT-QuIC assay was highly specific in the detection of 4R tau seeds
in 4R tauopathies including PSP and CBD, and further distinguished PSP and CBD strains
via ThT amplitudes of the RT-QuIC readouts, Thus, with use of selective RT-QuIC assays
for 3 R/4R and 4R tau seeds, we can detect and discriminate tau strains even when
they co- occur. Our results further indicate 4R tau seeds can occur across other neurodegenerative
disorders, however to a lesser extent when compared to 3 R/4R tau seeds.
References: Saijo, E., Metrick, M. A., Koga, S., Parchi, P., Litvan, I., Spina, S.,
Boxer, A., Rojas, J. C., Galasko, D., Kraus, A., Rossi, M., Newell, K., Zanusso, G.,
Grinberg, L. T., Seeley, W. W., Ghetti, B., Dickson, D. W., & Caughey, B. (2020).
4-Repeat tau seeds and templating subtypes as brain and CSF biomarkers of frontotemporal
lobar degeneration. Acta Neuropathologica, 139(1), 63–77. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00401-
019-02080-2
Shi, Y., Zhang, W., Yang, Y., Murzin, A. G., Falcon, B., Kotecha, A., van Beers, M.,
Tarutani, A., Kametani, F., Garringer, H. J., Vidal, R., Hallinan, G. I., Lashley,
T., Saito, Y., Murayama, S., Yoshida, M., Tanaka, H., Kakita, A., Ikeuchi, T., … Scheres,
S. H. W. (2021). Structure-based classification of tauopathies. Nature, 598(7880),
359–363. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03911-7
Funded by: Biomarkers Across Neurodegenerative Diseases (BAND) Grant number: R01NS118760
and R01AG067607
Mechanisms of prion-induced damage in retina: Roles of microglia and sites of PrPSc
deposition
James F. Striebela, Brent Racea, James A. Carrolla, Jacqueline Leunga, Cindi Schwartza,
Katie Williamsa, Chase Baunea, Mikael Klingebornb, and Bruce Chesebroa
aLaboratory of Persistent Viral Diseases, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute
of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Hamilton, Montana,
USA; bDepartment of Ophthalmology, Duke Eye Center, Duke University, Durham, NC, 27,710,
USA
Aims: In prion and prion-like disorders, such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases,
accumulation of misfolded host-proteins, reactive-gliosis and neuronal damage are
central to pathogenesis in brain, and retina. Retinal pathology is concurrent with
brain pathology, and can now be assessed with non-invasive imaging, allowing early
diagnosis. Yet, details of retinal pathology are needed. Previously, we found that
prion-induced retinal damage mainly occurred in photoreceptor cells and, that onset
of apoptosis and photoreceptor degeneration correlated with two key events: 1) invasion
of photoreceptor layers by activated microglia, and 2) accumulation of misfolded disease-associated
prion protein (PrPSc) in photoreceptor-associated layers. These correlations suggest
a causal role for microglia and/or PrPSc accumulation in retinal pathogenesis.
Material and Methods: To investigate the role of microglia in retinal degeneration,
we fed prion-infected mice a CSF-1 receptor-blocking drug(PLX5622) to eliminate microglia
in vivo, and effects on retinal degeneration were analyzed over time. In separate
experiments, to follow PrPSc deposition in retina, we used confocal, epifluorescent
and electron microscopy to track its association with damage to critical retinal structures,
after intracerebral prion-inoculation. The association of PrPSc with retinal-neuron
subtypes was also analyzed.
Results: PLX5622 was highly effective at ablating retinal microglia. However, lack
of microglia during prion infection did not prevent photoreceptor degeneration. Therefore,
microglia were not required for the photoreceptor damage process. In fact, mice lacking
microglia had faster onset of photoreceptor damage, suggesting microglia were protective.
The earliest PrPSc deposits were consistently found within inner segments of cone
neurons, which remarkably, compromise only 3% of photoreceptors in mice. Subsequently,
in both rods and cones, PrPSc was associated with the connecting-cilium, joining photoreceptor
inner and outer segments. This site of deposition may interfere with transport of
molecules critical to phototransduction and cell viability. Slightly later in disease,
PrPSc accumulations were detected on bipolar cell dendrites at their connections with
photoreceptor cells. These connections, called ribbon synapses, can be detected by
electron and/or immunofluorescent microscopy and their decrease was concomitant with
PrPSc accumulation and photoreceptor death.
Conclusions: Importantly, our data suggest microglia play a protective role in prion-induced
retinal degeneration, slowing the degenerative process. However, PrPSc accumulations,
near connecting-cilia and in ribbon synapses, were critical early events preceding
damage and death of photoreceptors. The preference of PrPSc for early accumulation
in cone photoreceptors and lack of PrPSc deposition and damage in other retinal-neurons,
such as horizontal cells, was intriguing and indicated high selectivity among neuron
types for injury by prions.
Funded by: National Institutes of Health, Department of Intramural Resources
Acknowledgement: National Institutes of Health, Department of Intramural Resources
Faithful propagation of vCJD prions from frozen and fixed central nervous system and
appendix tissues using highly sensitive Protein Misfolding Cyclic Amplification
Suzanne Suleimana, Lynne I. McGuireb, Angela Chonga, Diane L. RitchieaAileen Boyleb,
Lee McManusb, Fraser Brydona, Colin Smitha, Richard Knighta, Abigail B. Diackb, Alison
Greena, and Marcelo A. Barriaa
aNational CJD Research & Surveillance Unit, Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences, Deanery
of Clinical Medicine, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK; bThe Roslin Institute
and R(D)SVS, The University of Edinburgh, Easter Bush, UK
Aims: The Appendix Studies I, II & III aimed to estimate the UK prevalence of asymptomatic
variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD), following exposure of the population to
the bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) agent in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
These studies evaluated the presence of the abnormal prion protein aggregates, in
anonymised archived formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) appendectomy samples,
by immunohistochemistry. Although there was concordance in the estimated prevalence
of asymptomatic vCJD in these studies, the identification of positive specimens from
pre- and post-BSE-exposure periods in Appendix study III raised questions regarding
the nature and origin of the abnormal prion protein that was detected. We aimed to
develop a solid platform for investigating the in vitro and in vivo propagation properties
of the abnormal prion protein in the positive samples from Appendix studies II and
III.
Materials and Methods: We used post-mortem frozen and FFPE brain and appendix tissues
from a confirmed vCJD patient to optimise a procedure for extracting the disease-associated
prion protein. The recovered material was used to seed the highly sensitive Protein
Misfolding Cyclic Amplification assay (hsPMCA). We then tested whether the prion strain
features of the extracted and amplified material are conserved, by means of bioassay
using both wild-type (RIII) and gene-targeted mice expressing PRNP 129 MM (HuMM).
Results: The extracted abnormal prion protein from frozen brain and appendix specimens
from a single vCJD case, could be successfully propagated by hsPMCA. Crucially, the
in vitro amplified material was protease-resistant, and produced the characteristic
‘2B’ biochemical isotype observed in vCJD patients. Inoculation of serially-amplified
products resulted in successful transmission to both RIII and HuMM mice. The biochemical
and histopathological features observed for the two mouse lines are consistent with
that of the vCJD prion agent demonstrating they are maintained upon transmission of
the amplified material.
Conclusions: These initial observations prove that vCJD prions can be successfully
extracted and amplified from FFPE brain and appendix tissue specimens. The hsPMCA
can faithfully replicate the infectivity and strain properties of the vCJD prion agent.
This information will provide a solid and reliable platform to proceed with analysis
on the archived FFPE appendix tissue derived from the Appendix II and III surveys,
to further evaluate the nature of the abnormal prion protein detected in the positive
samples.
Funded by: The work presents in this abstract is based on independent research commissioned
and funded by the Policy Research Programme, Department of Health and Social Care
and the Scottish Government, grant number PR-R17-0916-23,001, and the National CJD
Research and Surveillance Unit (NCJDRSU), PR-ST-0614-00008_18. The views expressed
in this abstract are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS,
the NIHR, the Department of Health and Social Care, the Scottish Government, ‘arms’
length bodies or other government departments.
Grant number: PR-R17-0916-23,001
Acknowledgement: We are particularly thankful to the families of patients for their
cooperation.
Detailed investigation of the role played by residue 226 of PrP in chronic wasting
disease pathogenesis and strain selection
Julianna L. Sun, Sarah Jo Kane, Sehun Kim, Jenna Crowell, Bailey Webster, Emma Raisley,
and Glenn C. Telling
Prion Research Center, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, USA
Aims: Whereas North American deer or moose PrP encodes glutamine at residue 226 (Q226),
North American elk PrP encodes glutamate (E226). To precisely assess the effects of
this difference on CWD pathogenesis, we created gene targeted (Gt) mice in which the
murine PrP coding sequence was targeted and replaced with CerPrP-Q226 or CerPrP-E226,
referred to as GtQ and GtE mice. Previous studies showed that GtQ and GtE mice were
susceptible to North American CWD, and that time to disease onset was faster in GtE
mice. To fully understand the mechanism underlying this difference, we conducted a
longitudinal analysis of disease in GtE and GtQ.
Material and Methods: GtQ and GtE mice were intracerebrally inoculated with elk CWD
prions previously passaged in transgenic mice expressing CerPrPC-Q226 or CerPrPC-E226
respectively. Mice were collected every 15 days until terminal disease. Brain extracts
were analyzed for PrP27-30 and glycoform ratio profiling by western blotting, disease-associated
PrP by immunohistochemistry and histoblotting, titer determination by the cervid prion
cell assay (CPCA), and the appearance of PrPScusing mAb PRC7 in ELISA format.
Results: While GtE mice succumbed to clinical disease after 196 ± 4 days, disease
onset in GtQ mice was protracted by > 40 % (277 ± 7 days). PrPScwas detectable by
immunoblotting and ELISA ~ 100 days prior to the onset of clinical signs with levels
increasing steadily until mice became moribund. CerPrPSc-Q226 was more extensively
glycosylated than CerPrPSc-E226. CWD titers (assessed by CPCA) increased exponentially
during the early phases of disease in GtE and GtQ mice. PrPScwas detected in the CNS
of GtE and GtQ mice by immunohistochemistry and histoblotting as early as 15 to 30 days
after infection. At the end stage of disease in GtE mice, CNS PrPScdistribution was
diffuse and symmetrical, while the brains of GtQ mice contained dense, disordered,
asymmetrical PrPScdeposits. By contrast, at timepoints earlier than 60 days, PrPScdistribution
was identical in GtQ and GtE mice.
Conclusions: Primary structural differences at residue 226 of CerPrP have pronounced
effects on the outcomes of disease in Gt mice infected with North American CWD prions.
Since North American deer and moose express CerPrPC-Q226 and elk express CerPrPC-E226,
this study lends insight into the natural pathogenesis of CWD in these species.
Funded by: National Institutes of Health
Grant number: P01AI077774
Acknowledgement: Thank you to the members of the Telling lab who made this work possible.
A diverse spectrum of novel strains among Nordic cervids with chronic wasting disease
J. Suna, S. Kima, J. Crowella, J. Biana,S.-L Korpenfeltb, M. Nöremarkc, S. Benestadd,
and G. Tellinga
aPrion Research Center (PRC), Colorado State University, Fort Collins, USA; bFinnish
Food Authority, Helsinki, Finland; cDepartment of Disease Control and Epidemiology,
Uppsala, Sweden; dNorwegian Veterinary Institute, Oslo, Norway
Aims: Cervid PrP (CerPrP) coding sequences are generally invariant except at codon
226. Whereas deer, reindeer and moose PrP encode glutamine at residue 226 (Q226),
elk or red deer may encode glutamate (E226) at this position. In order to precisely
assess the effects of this primary structural difference on CWD strain selection we
created gene targeted (Gt) mice in which the murine PrP coding sequence was targeted
and replaced with that of CerPrP-Q226 or CerPrP-E226, referred to as GtQ and GtE mice.
Our recently published studies showed that prion diseases in Norwegian reindeer and
moose are caused by different CWD strains that are in turn different from those causing
North American CWD. Here we aimed to assess the responses of GtE and GtQ mice and
their overexpressing transgenic counterparts to additional emergent CWD prions with
a view to defining CWD strain prevalence in Nordic countries and to compare this strain
portfolio with that of North American CWD.
Material and Methods: We intracerebrally or intraperitoneally inoculated mice with
homogenates of frozen brain and lymphoid tissue materials from Norwegian, Swedish,
and Finnish CWD cases. We assessed conventional measures of prion strain properties
including differences in susceptibilities and disease kinetics, neuropathology, lymphotropism,
and various biochemical and cell biological assessments of the resultant prions. We
also assessed the properties of these prions after iterative transmissions in mice.
Results: Certain characteristics of additional emergent CWD cases from Norway, Finland
and Sweden are concordant with our previously published findings on differences between
Norwegian and North American CWD, including responses to variation at PrP residue
226; biochemical profiles in the central nervous system; and ability to replicate
in lymphoid tissues. However, additional differences between isolates, including pronounced
conformational and incubation time differences, reveal a wide diversity of novel strain
properties among Nordic CWD cases.
Conclusions: The differential responses of GtQ and GtE mice to CWD prions underscores
the importance of this key primary structural difference on pathogenesis at the level
of strain selection and, by extension, a rigorous and definitive means to identify
and characterize the properties of novel emergent prion strains. Our new findings
allow us to broaden our previous conclusion that the etiology of Nordic CWD is distinct
from North American CWD. However, the incompletely overlapping properties of newly
analyzed emergent CWD cases from Norway, Finland and Sweden reveals a surprising diversity
of strains among Nordic cervids which stands in contrast the relatively consistent
strain profile of established CWD in North America.
Funded by: The United States of America National Institutes of Health
Grant numbers: 1R01NS121682, 1R01NS109376, and PO1-0011877A
Direct Observation of Prion Protein Fibril Elongation Kinetics Reveals Competing Fibril
Populations with Distinct Strain-like Structural and Dynamic Properties
Yuanzi Sun, Kezia Jack, Mark Batchelor, Daljit Sangar, Tiziana Ercolani, Laszlo Hosszu,
John Collinge, and Jan Bieschke
UCL Institute of Prion Diseases/MRC Prion Unit, London, UK
Aims: In prion diseases, benign cellular prion protein (PrPC) is converted to PrPSc,
fibrillar assemblies of misfolded PrP. PrPScself-propagates by recruiting PrPCinto
the growing fibril. In vitro, PrPCis able to form amyloid fibrils that share structural
characteristics of PrPScand that can elongate and replicate by a nucleation-polymerisation
mechanism. The aim of our study was to analyse elongation kinetics of PrP fibrils
on a single-particle level to reveal polymorphic fibril populations featuring structural
and dynamic heterogeneity, which were previously hidden in ensemble measurements.
Material and Methods: PrP fibrils were seeded either from recombinant mouse PrP (90–230)
seeds or authentic prion rods. The incorporation of mPrP (90–230) monomers was imaged
in real time using total internal reflection microscopy and transient amyloid binding
(TAB) super-resolution microscopy. Fibril structures were further characterized by
electron microscopy, spectral profiling, and polarized TAB microscopy. Elongation
kinetics of single PrP fibrils were recorded at different monomer concentrations,
Temperatures, and Guanidine concentrations to analyse the mechanisms of fibril elongation.
Results: PrP fibrils elongated along a preferred direction by an intermittent ‘stop-and-go’
mechanism. Multiple competing fibril types with characteristic and distinct structures
elongated from the same seed population at distinct rates and with distinct mechanisms.
Fibrils fell into three main populations, type I, II, and III, whose formation was
favoured under different solution conditions, respectively, and which maintained their
structural and kinetic properties even under elongation conditions favouring a different
fibril type. Type I, II, and III fibrils elongated by distinct mechanisms through
the incorporation of unfolded (type III) or partially folded (type I, II) monomers.
The elongation kinetics of purified prion rods from two prion strains, RML and ME7,
likewise exhibited unique kinetic features. The different fibril types showed distinct
polarisation signals and spectral signatures differentiating helical and straight
fibrils.
Conclusions: Analysis of PrP fibril seeding by TIRF and TAB super-resolution microscopy
revealed polymorphic fibril populations featuring structural and dynamic heterogeneity
similar to prion strains, which were previously hidden in ensemble measurements. This
application demonstrates that single molecule measurements have the potential to differentiate
in situ polymorphic fibril populations of amyloid and prions growing in competition
and analyze their replication mechanisms.
Funded by: UKRI, MRC, NIH
Grant number: MRC MC_UU_00024/6, NIH, 1R21NS101588-01A1
Acknowledgement: The authors gratefully acknowledge the help of A. Wenborn and J.
Wadsworth, MRC Prion Unit at UCL, in prion rod preparations.
Mast Cells in Human Carotid Bodies Express PrPC
Sweetland, G.D., Eggleston, C.J. and Kincaid, A.E.
Department of Pharmacy Sciences, Creighton University, Omaha Nebraska, USA
Aims: The human carotid bodies are highly vascularized structures located in the walls
of the carotid arteries and contain chemosensitive cells that detect oxygen and carbon
dioxide levels in blood. They are surrounded by leaky capillaries and are innervated
by peripheral branches of the glossopharyngeal nerve; the central processes of this
nerve terminate in the nucleus of the solitary tract in the brainstem. Given that
the carotid bodies are exposed to blood and innervated by branches of a nerve that
terminates in a site of early prion neuroinvasion we sought to determine if the normal
isoform of the prion protein, PrPC, was expressed in cells in the carotid bodies.
Material and Methods: Segments of right and left arteries containing the bifurcation
of the common carotid artery into internal and external carotid arteries were collected
from human cadavers at the end of the medical school term. Nine artery segments from
5 donors were determined to be free of calcium deposits, embedded in paraffin, and
sectioned at 7 µm. Every 10th section was stained with hematoxylin and eosin and examined
using a light microscope for the presence of the carotid body. Sections containing
the carotid body were immunohistochemically processed for the presence of PrPCusing
several antibodies directed against the prion protein (8H4, 3F4, Bar 224).
Results: Neither of the predominant cell types of the human carotid body (type I or
type II) expressed the prion protein. A relatively small number of immunoreactive
cells were detected in all carotid body samples using the 8H4 antibody. The cells
were identified within the carotid body and surrounding connective tissue and the
morphology and distribution of these cells resembled mast cells. Subsequent staining
of sections using toluidine blue as a mast cell marker and 3 different antibodies
directed against mast cells supported this finding. When cells were stained using
the 8H4 antibody and lightly counterstained with toluidine blue the PrPCexpressing
cells were positively identified as mast cells.
Conclusions: This is the first report of mast cells in the human carotid body expressing
PrPC. Mast cells have previously been shown to express PrPCand release it upon activation.
The potential for PrPCconversion to PrPScand release via mast cells following exposure
to prion-infected blood in the carotid body could result in either trafficking of
infected mast cells to the brain, or transport of PrPScvia the glossopharyngeal nerve
to the nucleus of the solitary tract.
Funded by: National Institutes of Health
Grant number: NIH RO1 NS107246-01
Acknowledgement: We thank Carol Lomneth for her assistance with this project.
A new bioassay for the sensitive detection of blood-borne CWD prions
Alana M. Thackraya, Erin E. McNultyb, Amy V. Nallsb, Candace K. Mathiasonb, and Raymond
Bujdosoa
aDepartment of Veterinary Medicine, University of Cambridge, Madingley Road, Cambridge,
CB3 0ES, UK; bDepartment of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology, Colorado State
University, Fort Collins, CO, USA
Aims: Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) is a natural transmissible spongiform encephalopathy,
or prion disease, that affects free-ranging and captive cervids. Prion infectivity
has been detected in the blood of CWD-infected cervids by bioassay in an appropriate
indicator species, including the natural host. These present bioassays are cumbersome,
time-consuming and expensive. We have developed a novel system using the invertebrate
host Drosophila to establish a tractable bioassay to assess prions in the blood of
CWD-infected animals.
Material and Methods: We have generated white tailed deer PrP Drosophila by pUASTattB-mediated
transgenesis. Cervid PrP Drosophila were exposed to CWD-infected or prion-free white
tailed deer brain homogenate at the larval stage. After hatching, the locomotor ability
of Drosophila was assessed by a negative geotaxis climbing assay and their survival
monitored. At regular time points during their lifespan, head homogenate was prepared
from groups of euthanised flies and assessed for prion seeding activity by RT-QuIC.
Bona fide prion infectivity was assessed by passage of fly head homogenate in cervid
PrP transgenic mice.
Results: Cervid PrP Drosophila showed a neurotoxic phenotype in adulthood, evidenced
by an accelerated loss of locomotor ability and survival, after exposure to CWD prions
at the larval stage. The neurotoxic phenotype was coupled with the accumulation of
prion seeding activity and bona fide prions that were transmissible to cervid PrP
mice. Cervid PrP Drosophila showed a significant neurotoxic response to dilutions
of 10
–2
to 10
–14
of CWD-infected cervid brain homogenate, which was considered sufficiently sensitive
to detect prion infectivity in the blood of CWD-infected animals. We demonstrated
this was the case by exposure of cervid PrP Drosophila to blood fractions from CWD-infected
white tailed deer. Our experiments showed that cervid PrP Drosophila were capable
of the detection of CWD prion-infected blood fractions, including whole blood, plasma
and buffy coat cells, from cervids with experimental or natural CWD disease. In the
case of buffy coat, cervid PrP Drosophila detected ≤100 blood cells from CWD-infected
cervids.
Conclusions: These novel data show that cervid PrP Drosophila can efficiently bioassay
prion infectivity in blood from CWD-infected hosts in a reasonably rapid, efficient
and cost-effective manner.
Funded by: BBSRC (grant number PNAG/644), NIH (grant number NIAID 2R01AI112956-06).
Acknowledgement: We acknowledge the University of Cambridge Department of Genetics
Fly Facility.
Comparison of in vitro tests (PMCA and RT-QuIC) and bioassay for longitudinal prion
detection in preclinical blood samples from BSE infected sheep
Charlotte M. Thomasa, M. Khalid F. Salamata, Jillian K. Cooperb, Kaetan Ladhanib,
Florian Almelac, Olivier Andreolettid, Daisy Bougardc and E. Fiona Houstona
aThe Roslin Institute, R(D)SVS, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK; bThe National
Institute for Biological Standards and Controls (NIBSC), Medicines and Healthcare
products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), South Mimms, UK; cEtablissement Français du Sang,
Inserm, Université de Montpellier, Montpellier, France; dUMR INRA ENVT 1225- IHAP,
École Nationale Vétérinaire de Toulouse, Toulouse, France
Aims: A diagnostic test for prion diseases that can reliably detect preclinical infection
in easily accessible biological samples, such as blood, would be an invaluable tool
to protect against potential spread of disease in humans and animals. Yet the development
of such a test has remained challenging; partly due to the extremely low concentrations
of disease-associated prion protein (PrPSc) present in blood during preclinical stages
of infection.
To determine which existing technologies are best able to detect preclinical infection,
we have exploited an extensive archive of preclinical blood samples from sheep experimentally
infected with BSE (as a model of vCJD) to compare three in vitro tests for prion disease,
including two based on the ‘protein misfolding cyclic amplification’ assay (PMCA),
and one based on ‘real time quaking-induced conversion’ (RT-QuIC). By comparing the
outcome of these tests with infectivity titres (as determined by bioassay) we also
investigated whether in vitro seeding activity correlated with prion infectivity in
blood.
Material and Methods: Three blinded panels, comprising a longitudinal series of n
= 139 blood samples from BSE-infected sheep collected at regular time points throughout
the course of infection (alongside appropriate negative controls) were independently
tested using two previously established PMCA methods, ‘microplate-based PMCA’ (mb-PMCA)
[1] and ‘plasminogen bead-capture PMCA’ (capture-PMCA) [2], and a novel RT-QuIC assay
which incorporates capture of PrPScfrom whole blood on iron oxide beads. A subset
of blood samples represented in the panels was inoculated intracerebrally into transgenic
(tgBov) mice overexpressing bovine PrP, to allow estimation of BSE infectivity titres.
Results: By comparing assay performance on equivalent blinded panels, we demonstrated
that: (i) all three tests (mb-PMCA, capture-PMCA, RT-QuIC) showed 100% specificity,
(ii) both PMCA assays were significantly more sensitive than RT-QuIC in detecting
prion infected samples, (iii) the route of infection was a major factor influencing
test results, as a substantially higher proportion of samples from intravenously infected
sheep tested positive, compared to samples from orally infected animals. Furthermore,
by comparing these data with bioassay results, we showed that in vitro seeding activity
correlated with detectable prion infectivity in blood, and that infectivity titres
were positively correlated with PrPScconcentration.
Conclusions: The in vitro tests evaluated in this study represent accurate and sensitive
diagnostic tools for detection of preclinical prionemia. It is hoped that the outcome
of this study will improve methods for early detection of prion diseases and guide
policies to reduce the risk of prion transmission through blood donation.
References:
[1] Moudjou M., et al. mBio 2014; 5(1):e00829-13.
[2] Bougard D, et al., Sci Transl Med 2016; 8(370):370ra182.
Funded by: Department of Health, UK
Grant number: PR-R17-0916-23,006
Transmission of CH1641 in cattle
Jemma K. Thorne, Janet Hills, M. Carmen Garcia-Pelayo, Timm Konold, and John Spiropoulos
Pathology and Animal Sciences Department, Animal and Plant Health Agency, Addlestone,
UK
Aims: Classical BSE (C-BSE) was first identified in UK in the 1980s and is the only
TSE that has proven zoonotic potential. The emergence of C-BSE was associated with
a change in rendering practices implying that prions were able to escape inactivation.
However, the exact origin of C-BSE remains unknown to this date although several theories
have been proposed. CH1641 is a type of scrapie that biochemically is most akin to
BSE. In addition CH1641 is the only scrapie type that can transmit as efficiently
as C-BSE to bovinised mice (tg110) suggesting that the agent can propagate with ease
on a bovine PrP background in contrast to other scrapie strains. This study was designed
to investigate the transmissibility of CH1641 into cattle and characterise the resulting
phenotype.
Material and Methods: To examine the ability of CH1641 to transmit to cattle, 5 animals
were inoculated intracerebrally with an ovine CH1641 source. The clinical status of
the animals was monitored and when they developed neurological signs they were euthanised
on welfare grounds. Another 5 cattle were inoculated intracerebrally with saline solution
to serve as negative, age-matched controls. Disease status was confirmed postmortem
by statutory testing (Immunohistochemistry and Western blot).
Results: All CH1641 inoculated animals succumbed to clinical TSE with incubation periods
609–654 days post inoculation (dpi). One negative control died at 37 dpi and was excluded
from the analysis as an intercurrent death. The remaining negative controls were killed
at predetermined points to age match the CH1641 challenged cattle; they all were TSE
negative. Western blot analysis revealed that in some animals the agent retained a
CH1641 signature whilst in others the molecular profile acquired properties resembling
C-BSE. Immunohistochemical analysis showed a similar phenotypic spectrum.
Conclusions: These preliminary data suggest that transmission of CH1641 in cattle
is efficient and it results in a variable disease phenotype. Further studies are currently
ongoing and include inoculation of bovinised and ovinised mice to identify if the
CH1641 agent changed biological properties upon transmission to cattle. Secondary
passages in cattle to investigate if intraspecies transmission can alter further the
properties of the agent forcing it to converge towards C-BSE are also under consideration.
Funded by: Defra
Grant number: SE1962
Acknowledgement: Pathology and Animal Science Department staff members for technical
excellence
Chemical Synthesis of Prion Protein
Baotong Tian, and Qiang Zhang
Department of Chemistry, State University of New York, University at Albany, Albany,
USA
Protein misfolding and subsequent aggregation are the hallmarks of many neurogenerative
diseases. Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs, a.k.a. mad cow disease,
or prion disease), are a class of infectious and fatal neurodegenerative disorders
solely caused by the misfolding of prion protein. Structurally, prion protein is a
membrane glycoprotein with two native N-glycosylation sites (Asn158, Asn174). Cellular
prion protein (PrPC) is non-infectious, whereas misfolded cellular protein termed
PrP
Sc
, which is prone to forming aggregates and is resistant to enzyme degradation. While
significant attentions have been drawn to prion diseases research, many aspects of
the molecular mechanism of prion transmission remain unclear. In the case of prion
glycoprotein, one of the main obstacles is the inability to acquire high structurally
defined prion strains due to the impact of their oligosaccharides. Prion protein strains
exhibit not only different glycosylation patterns, but also differing in levels of
glycosylation. Obtaining structurally defined protein entities for conformational-change
interrogation is the foundation of reliable protein misfolding investigations. Abundant
literature re-ports suggest that N-glycans that are conjugated to prion proteins,
play critical roles in prion properties and pathogenic misfolding process. Furthermore,
prion research is heavily reliant on high fidelity of prion conformations due to different
strains exhibit distinct phenotypes. We engaged total chemical synthesis approach
to obtain non-glycosylated and glycosylated prion.
Material and Methods: Protocols such as Native Chemical Ligation (NCL), Expressed
Protein Ligation (EPL) and desulfurization approaches were applied towards the synthesis
of PrPC.
Results: We have successfully prepared full construct of non-glycosylated prion protein
via chemical methods. More specifically, β-thiolactone mediated sequential native
chemical ligation tactics were employed for the synthesis. Currently spectra data
has validated our results.
Conclusions: We present a novel chemistry method enabled prion preparation methods,
which will provide a repertoire of highly desired prion proteins congeners that were
previously inaccessible. The investigation of these synthetic agents will shift the
paradigm of prion disease investigation. We believe that our studies will not only
address the dire need for structurally well-defined substances needed for biological
evaluations but will also serve as a cornerstone to facilitate the establishment of
synergistic and collaborative research consortia across the chemical biology landscape,
for the advancement of prion disease research.
Grant number: NIH R35 GM138336
Acknowledgement: National Institute of Health
Arrayed CRISPR activation screen of the human transcription factors to identify modifiers
of prion protein PrPC
Trevisan C.a, Ging K. A.a, Frick L.a, Dhingra A.b, Avar M.a, Heinzer D.a, Heutink
P.b, and Aguzzi A.a
aInstitute of Neuropathology, University Hospital Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland; bGerman
Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases, Tübingen, Germany
Aims: The cellular prion protein (PrPC) is a cell-surface glycoprotein, responsible
for the pathogenesis of prion diseases, fatal neurodegenerative disorders that affect
humans and a large variety of animals.
The biosynthesis of PrPCis a prerequisite for PrPScformation, an abnormally folded
isoform of the cellular prion protein which lead to a severe and progressive neuronal
death through yet poorly defined pathways. Since the physiological role of PrPCis
still not completely clear, different effort were performed in our group to find regulators
of its expression through genome-wide screens. The following project aims to perform
a CRISPR arrayed screen on a human glioblastoma cell line, using in-house human activation
library. Such study will hopefully unravel new genes playing a role in PrPCactivity
and therefore it will contribute to broaden the spectrum of available pharmacological
targets which can be considered for therapies against prion.
Material and Methods: We performed an arrayed CRISPRa screens, in a 384 well plate
format, using the entire set of human transcription factors (1636 genes), packaged
in lentiviruses. The advantage of activating the expression of the TFs with CRISPRa
may exceed the limitation of previous study: indeed, through siRNAs and CRISPRi it
was not possible to identify any transcription factors specifically controlling PrPCexpression,
perhaps because transcriptional gene regulation relies on redundant factors. A stable
expressing dCas9-VPR human glioblastoma cell line (U251-MG) was used as a cellular
model. Time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer (TR-FRET) detected endogenous
PrPCexpression in cell lysate. We used Europium (EU)-conjugated-POM2 and allophycocyanin
(APC)-labelled- POM1, a pair of antibodies binding distinct domains of PrPC.
Results: The identification of transcription factors regulating PrPCexpression is
ongoing. Hit calling was based on an absolute log2 fold change of ≥1 and a p-value
of ≤ 0.05. Based on these cut- offs, 24 and 12 genes out of 1634 were found to upregulate
or downregulate PrPCexpression, respectively. The validation of the candidate genes,
to exclude cell-line specific hits, will be performed on a second cell line, possibly
on iPSC-derived neurons.
Conclusions: The only strong genetic risk factor for prion disease has remained PRNP,
the human gene encoding for the prion protein. Thanks to the recent generation of
the human CRISPRa arrayed libraries in our lab, it will be possible to search for
other novel genes driving PrPCexpression. This is the fundamental reason why the proposed
work focuses on a genetic screen: the founding of new modifiers could provide unexpected
regulatory pathway which involve PrPCexpression.
Funded by: Swiss Personalized Health Network (SPHN)
Grant number: 2017DRI17
Acknowledgement: Yin Jiang-An
Prion conformer-dependent Chaperone interactions in a chaperonopathy
Heather True, Ankan Bhadra, Kevin Stein, and Chris Weihl
Washington University, St. Louis, MO, USA
Aims: Protein chaperones are essential to maintain cellular protein homeostasis. Mutations
in the Hsp40 DNAJB6 cause a degenerative muscular disease (Limb-Girdle Muscular Dystrophy
(LGMDD1)), which exhibits an accumulation of protein aggregates and vacuoles in skeletal
muscle. We have now identified mutations in two domains of DNAJB6 that cause LGMDD1.
We aim to test our central hypothesis that LGMDD1 mutations alter the conformation
of DNAJB6 such that the interface between these two domains is disrupted, leading
to inefficient processing of certain conformers of misfolded proteins. This results
in protein aggregates, myofibril disorganization, and muscle dysfunction. Furthermore,
using our yeast prion system, we aim to identify viable therapeutic candidates to
treat this degenerative disease.
Material and Methods: In order to tackle this challenging problem, we will explore
DNAJB6 chaperone function and dysfunction utilizing multiple systems. We have investigated
DNAJB6 dysfunction using yeast, in vitro, and animal models. We will determine the
effect of LGMDD1 mutations on chaperone and co-chaperone function in vivo and in vitro.
Our yeast system has also provided key information from second-site suppressor screens
and the discovery of mutants that rescue prion propagation defects in cells expressing
LGMDD1 mutants.
Results: We found that homologous LGMDD1 mutations in Sis1 impair its function in
recognizing and modulating the aggregated state of select yeast prion strains. These
data suggest that mutations in DNAJB6 may abrogate its chaperone activity toward select
aggregate conformers of the same aggregated protein. We found that manipulating interactions
between DNAJB6 and HSP70 rescues LGMDD1 phenotypes in yeast, mouse models, and human
cells. We found that LGMDD1 mutants impair most aspects of Hsp40 function, and the
client conformer-specific effects were also evident in vitro. We also found that these
mutants alter the phenotypic distribution of prion protein conformers. Finally, by
using prion and non-prion substrates, we found that modulation of nucleotide exchange
factors rescues the client-conformer processing defects of LGMDD1 mutants.
Conclusions: Based on our results, we hypothesize that all LGMDD1 mutations in DNAJB6
can be rescued by perturbation of Hsp70 interaction or activity. Our data suggest
that we have identified additional therapeutic targets (NEFs) that may be better tolerated
in patients than global inhibitors of Hsp70. The overarching goal of this work is
to leverage our transdisciplinary success to develop therapeutic interventions for
patients with LGMDD1. Additionally, our results highlight the importance of assessing
multiple prion conformers when investigating putative interacting proteins.
Funded by: NIH
Grant number:R01 AR068797
Prion disease features in Japan according to the national surveillance from 1999 to
2022
Tadashi Tsukamotoa, Ryuusuke Aeb, Tsuyoshi Hamaguchic, Nobuo Sanjod, Yoshikazu Nakamurab,
Katsuya Satohe, Tetsuyuki Kitamotof, Masaki Takaog, Masahito Yamadac,h, and Hidehiro
Mizusawaa and Prion Diseases Surveillance Committee in Japan
aDepartment of Neurology, National Center Hospital, National Center of Neurology and
Psychiatry, Tokyo, Japan; bDepartment of Public Health, Jichi Medical University,
Shimotsuke, Japan; cDepartment of Neurology and Neurobiology of Aging, Kanazawa University
Graduate School of Medical Science, Kanazawa, Japan; dDepartment of Neurology and
Neurological Science, Graduate School, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Tokyo,
Japan;eDepartment of Locomotive Rehabilitation Sciences, Nagasaki University Graduate
School of Medicine, Nagasaki, Japan; fDepartment of Prion Protein Research, Division
of CJD Science and Technology, Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine, Sendai,
Japan; gDepartment of Clinical Laboratory, National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry,
National Center Hospital, Tokyo, Japan; hDivision of Neurology, Department of Internal
Medicine, Kudanzaka Hospital, Tokyo, Japan
Aims: The outbreak of variant CJD (vCJD) in UK since 1996 led to 2 urgent surveys
in Japan and the establishment of a national prion disease surveillance system in
1999. The aim of this report is to clarify characteristics of prion disease (PrD)
in Japan according to the surveillance from 1999 to 2022, which include dura mater-associated
CJD (dCJD) and genetic PrDs unique to Japan.
Material and Methods: We divided Japan into 10 districts and assigned a surveillance
committee member to each district. The surveillance committee composed of district
members and specialists of MRI, EEG, genetic analysis, CSF analysis, neuropathology,
neurosurgery and psychological counseling. The committee members review each suspected
PrD case twice a year based on information from the doctors in 10 districts as well
as the results of genetic and CSF analyses. Patient information is recorded in a database,
and the results of the analysis are published on the website (http://prion.umin.jp/survey/survey.html).
Results: We obtained information on 6094 patients who were suspected of having PrDs
up to Feb.2022. Among them, 4166 patients were confirmed as PrDs. The details of these
patients included 3167 cases of sporadic CJD, one case of variant CJD, 93 cases of
dCJD, and 888 cases of genetic PrD (726 cases of genetic CJD (gCJD), 158 cases of
Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker disease, and 4 cases of fatal familial insomnia). The
apparent annual incidence of PrDs has gradually increased from 0.7 per million in
1999 to 2.3 in 2015. Genetic analysis of the prion protein gene of all the PrD patients
agreed with the test showed that the ratio of codon 129 polymorphism methionine/methionine
to methionine/valine and valine/valine was very high (in sCJD, MM:MV:VV = 95:4.1;
in control, MM:MV:VV = 94:7:1,) in Japan as compared with those in Western countries.
This difference has not changed since we reported it in 2010. The number of dCJD was
a total of 156 cases from the first urgent survey before 1999. Among 757 genetic PrDs
in Japan, gCJD was found in 18%, GSS in 4%, and FFI in only 4 cases. Among gCJD, V180I
accounted for 64%, E200K for 15%, and M232R for 15%.
Conclusions: During the 20 years since 1999, the incidence of PrD in Japan has continued
to increase. This increase can be attributed to the improvement of PrD diagnostic
techniques and the spread of medical knowledge, in addition to the fact that Japan
has become a hyper-aged society.
Funded by: 1) The Research Committee of Surveillance and Infection Control of Prion
Disease, the Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare of Japan
2) The Research Committee of Prion Disease and Slow Virus Infection, Research on Policy
Planning and Evaluation for Rare and Intractable Diseases, Health and Labour Sciences
Research Grants,
Grant number: 1) 22FC2002; 2) 20FC1054
Acknowledgment: We are grateful to the prion disease specialists in the prefectures,
clinical physicians, the patients with prion disease and their families for providing
clinical information about the patients.
An optimized western blot method for the analysis of PrPCendoproteolytic cleavages
I. Vannia, F. Iacobonea, C. D’Agostinoa, M. Giovannellia, L. Pirisinua, H.C. Altmeppenb,
J. Castillac,d, J.M. Torrese, U. Agrimia, and R. Nonnoa
aDepartment of Food Safety, Nutrition and Veterinary Public Health, Istituto Superiore
di Sanità, Rome, Italy; bInstitute of Neuropathology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf,
Martinistraße 52, Hamburg, Germany; cPrion Research Lab, Basque Research and Technology
Alliance (BRTA), Center for Cooperative Research in Biosciences (CIC BioGUNE), Derio,
Spain; dCentro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades infecciosas (CIBERINFEC),
Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain; eCentro de Investigación en Sanidad
Animal (CISA-INIA), Valdeolmos, Madrid, Spain
Aims: PrPCand its endoproteolytic fragments are key in the pathology of prion and
other neurodegenerative diseases. Despite the number of studies on proteolytic processing
of PrPC, western blotting (WB) remains the most-widely used technique for the analysis
of PrPCconstitutive cleavages. However, WB methods allowing a reliable identification
and quantification of all PrP fragments are not available. We aimed at exploring the
potential of WB-based approaches to fill this gap.
Material and Methods: Brain tissues from bank voles, wild-type (wt) mice and transgenic
mice expressing sheep, bovine and human PrP were PNGase F-treated or left untreated,
subjected to WB and analysed by extensive epitope mapping. Antibodies were selected
so to have conserved epitopes among the models used and to cover the entire sequence
of PrP. Inhibitors of endogenous proteases were added to avoid the generation of non-specific
PrP-derived fragments and electrophoresis was conducted under strictly reduced conditions
to obtain a high discrimination of fragments with similar molecular mass.
Results: The optimized WB method allowed detecting all PrPCfragments derived from
alpha-, beta-, gamma-cleavages and shedding. Deglycosylation was key to identify and
reliably quantify full-length PrPC(FL-PrPC), its C-terminal fragments C1 and C2 as
well as their N-terminal counterparts and shed PrP isoforms, with shed FL-PrPC clearly
distinguishable from FL-PrPC independently from the antibody used. PrP fragments generated
by gamma-cleavage were detected but not amenable to quantification due to their low
amount. By assessing the relative quantity of the most represented PrPCfragments,
we found similar PrPCfragment patterns in wt and transgenic models, with C1 representing
the most abundant PrP fragment, followed by FL-PrPC, C2, shed PrP, N1 and N2. PrPCshedding
was a prominent proteolytic event in the brain of all the models analysed, accounting
for 7–10% of total PrPCand for up to 30% of total FL-PrPC. The relative quantity of
shed FL-PrPC over FL-PrPC was amenable to quantitative assessment, showing higher
scores in wt mice than in most other models.
Conclusions: We provide a reliable method for the analysis of PrPCand its endoproteolytic
cleavages. As far as we know, this is the first available WB tool that identifies,
differentiates from its GPI-anchored counterpart and reliably quantifies shed PrPCin
biological tissues using pan-PrP antibodies. Our results also show that PrPCprocessing
is not appreciably affected by the PrP expression level or the species genetic background
but can be impacted by the PrP sequence.
Funded by: Ministero della salute
Grant number: RF-2016-02364498
Bona fide spontaneous and atypical scrapie faithfully reproduced through the expression
of a polymorphic variant of ovine prion protein
Enric Vidala,b, Manuel A. Sanchez-Martínc, Hasier Erañaf, Sonia Pérez Lázarod,e,o,
Miguel A. Pérez-Castrod, Alicia Oterof, Jorge M. Charcod,e,o, Belén Marínf, Rafael
López-Morenod, Carlos M Díaz-Domínguezd, Mariví Geijog, Montserrat Ordóñeza,b, Michele
di Barih, Nuria L. Lorenzom, Laura Pirisinuh, Claudia D’Agostinoh, Juan María Torresi,
Vincent Béringuej, Juan J. Badiolaf, Glenn Tellingk, Martí Pumarolal, Rosa Boleaf,
Romolo Nonnoh, Jesús R. Requenam and Joaquín Castillad,e,n,o
aUnitat mixta d’Investigació IRTA-UAB en Sanitat Animal. Centre de Recerca en Sanitat
Animal (CReSA), Campus de la Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB), Bellaterra,
Catalonia; bIRTA. Programa de Sanitat Animal. Centre de Recerca en Sanitat Animal
(CReSA). Campus de la Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB), Bellaterra, Catalonia.cTransgenic
Facility. Department of Medicine. University of Salamanca, Salamanca, Spain; dCenter
for Cooperative Research in Biosciences (CIC BioGUNE), Basque Research and Technology
Alliance (BRTA), Prion Research Lab, Derio, Spain; eATLAS Molecular Pharma S. L. Derio
(Bizkaia), Spain.; fCentro de Encefalopatías y Enfermedades Transmisibles Emergentes,
Facultad de Veterinaria, Universidad de Zaragoza – IA2, Zaragoza, Spain; gAnimal Health
Department, NEIKER-Basque Institute for Agricultural Research and Development, Basque
Research and Technology Alliance (BRTA), Parque Científico y Tecnológico de Bizkaia,
Derio, Spain; hIstituto Superiore di Sanità, Department of Food Safety, Nutrition
and Veterinary Public Health, Rome, Italy; iCentro de Investigación en Sanidad Animal,
CISA-INIA-CSIC, Valdeolmos, Madrid, Spain; jMolecular Virology and Immunology, French
National Research Institute for Agriculture, Food and Environment (INRAE), Université
Paris-Saclay, Jouy-en-Josas, France; kPrion Research Center (PRC) and the Department
of Microbiology, Immunology, and Pathology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins,
Colorado; lDepartament de Medicina i Cirurgia Animals, Facultat de Veterinària, Campus
de UAB, Bellaterra, Barcelona, Catalonia; mCIMUS Biomedical Research Institute, University
of Santiago de Compostela-IDIS, Spain; nIKERBASQUE, Basque Foundation for Science,
Bilbao, Bizkaia, Spain; oCentro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades
infecciosas, Carlos III National Health Institute, Madrid, Spain
Aims: Atypical scrapie, which is not linked to epizootics, appears to be the only
truly sporadic prion disease in small ruminants. Therefore, its occurrence is unlikely
to be controlled through selective breeding or other strategies in place for classical
scrapie outbreaks. Its spontaneous nature and its sporadic emergence worldwide are
reminiscent of the occurrence of sporadic prion diseases in humans, accounting for
more than 85% of the cases. Hence, the development of animal models that consistently
reproduce this phenomenon of spontaneous PrP misfolding, is greatly needed to study
the pathobiology of sporadic prion disorders.
Material and Methods: Transgenic mice overexpressing sheep PrPCwith I112 polymorphism
(TgShI112, 1–2x PrP levels compared to sheep brain) manifest clinical signs of a spongiform
encephalopathy spontaneously at 380 days of age. The brains of these animals show
the pathological hallmarks of prion disease and biochemical analyses of the misfolded
prion protein show a ladder-like PrPrespattern with a predominant 7–10 kDa band.
Brain homogenates from spontaneously diseased TgShI112 transgenic mice were inoculated
in several models to assess their transmissibility and characterize the prion strain
generated: TgShI112 (ovine I112 ARQ PrPC), Tg338 (ovine VRQ PrPC), Tg501 (ovine ARQ
PrPC), TgVole (bank vole I109 PrPC), bank vole (I109I PrPC), and Churra-tensina breed
sheep (AHQ/AHQ and AHQ/ARR).
Results: The results of the aforementioned bioassays are discussed, concluding that
the prion strain generated spontaneously in this model is indistinguishable from that
causing atypical scrapie (Nor98).
Conclusions: We present the first faithful model for a bona fide, spontaneous, transmissible,
small ruminant, atypical prion disease.
Funded by:/Grant number: This study was funded by MINECO research project references
AGL2013-46,756-P and RTI2018-098515-B-I00, by RedPRION (Interreg POCTEFA EFA148/16)
and by Fundació la Marató de TV3 ATYPRION (201,821–30-31-32).
ATYPRION project: assessing the zoonotic potential of interspecies transmission of
CWD isolates to livestock (preliminary results).
Enric Vidala,b, Juan Carlos Espinosac, Samanta Gilera,b, Montserrat Ordóñeza,b, Guillermo
Canteroa,b, Vincent Béringued, Justin J. Greenleee, and Juan Maria Torresc
aUnitat mixta d’Investigació IRTA-UAB en Sanitat Animal. Centre de Recerca en Sanitat
Animal (CReSA). Campus de la Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB), Bellaterra,
Catalonia; bIRTA. Programa de Sanitat Animal. Centre de Recerca en Sanitat Animal
(CReSA). Campus de la Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB), Bellaterra, Catalonia;
cCentro de Investigación en Sanidad Animal, CISA-INIA-CSIC, Valdeolmos, Madrid, Spain;
dMolecular Virology and Immunology, French National Research Institute for Agriculture,
Food and Environment (INRAE), Université Paris-Saclay, Jouy-en-Josas, France; eVirus
and Prion Research Unit, National Animal Disease Center, ARS, United States Department
of Agriculture, Ames, IA, USA
Aims: Since variant Creutzfeldt-Jackob disease was linked to the consumption of bovine
spongiform encephalopathy prions, the study of the pathobiological features of animal
prions, particularly their zoonotic potential, is of great concern to the scientific
community and public health authorities. Furthermore, interspecies transmission of
prions has been demonstrated as a putative evolutionary mechanism for prions, that
can lead to the emergence of new features including the ability to infect humans.
For instance, small ruminants’ atypical scrapie prions, when propagated in a bovine
or porcine host, can shift to a classical BSE phenotype thus posing a potential risk
in case of human exposure. So far, no hard evidence of zoonotic transmission of cervids’
chronic wasting disease (CWD) to humans has been published, however experimental transmission
to bovine, ovine and caprine hosts has been achieved. Our goal is to investigate if,
once passaged through these domestic species, CWD prions might become infectious to
humans.
Material and Methods: Different CWD isolates experimentally adapted to cattle, sheep
and goat (Hamir et al, 2005, 2006, 2007, Greenlee et al 2012) have been intracerebrally
inoculated to transgenic mouse models expressing the human cellular prion protein
either homozygous for methionine or valine at codon 129 (Tg340-Met129 and Tg362-Val129).
Additionally, inocula obtained from experimental transmission of elk CWD to ovinized
(Tg501) and bovinized (BoTg110) transgenic mice, as well as white-tailed deer CWD
to BoTg110 mice, are currently being bioassayed in both human PrPCtransgenic models.
Results and conclusions: No evidence of transmission has been found on first passage
for bovine adapted elk and mule deer CWD to none of the humanized models. The remaining
bioassays are ongoing without showing clinical signs yet, as well as second passages
for the negative 1stpassages.
Funded by: La Marató de TV3 foundation.
Grant number: ATYPRION (201,821–30-31-32)
Transmission properties of 129 MV vCJD prions in humanized transgenic mice
Jonathan DF Wadsworth, and John Collinge
MRC Prion Unit at UCL, Institute of Prion Diseases, University College London,London
W1W 7FF, UK
Aims: In 2016 we identified the first definite variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD)
patient with a codon 129 MV genotype (Mok et al. 2017; N. Engl. J. Med. 376, 292–294).
This case provided the first opportunity to study the distribution and strain properties
of prions propagated in brain and lymphoreticular tissues. Using biochemical analyses
of patient tissues and transmission studies to humanized transgenic mice and to wild-type
mice we aimed to address the following key questions. (1) whether 129 MV vCJD has
a peripheral pathogenesis similar to 129 MM vCJD and (2) whether there is co-propagation
of vCJD prions with sporadic CJD-like or novel prions strains in 129 MV vCJD patient
brain or lymphoreticular tissues.
Material and Methods: We prepared multiple homogenates from autopsy brain and lymphoreticular
tissues from the 129 MV vCJD patient and biochemically characterised these to determine
the presence of protease-resistant disease-related prion protein. Homogenates from
four brain regions and from appendix, mesenteric lymph nodes and spleen were inoculated
intracerebrally into transgenic mice expressing human prion protein with codon 129 MM,
VV and MV genotypes on a congenic mouse prion protein null background and into wild-type
FVB/N mice.
Results: Biochemical and immunohistochemical analyses of mouse brains from primary
and secondary transmissions of 129 MV vCJD patient tissues are now largely complete
enabling comparison with findings from our historical transmission series of 129 MM
vCJD prions to the same mice.
Conclusions: Caution must be exercised when extrapolating findings from a single 129 MV
vCJD patient. Nevertheless this first case appears to demonstrate that 129 MV vCJD
has prion transmission properties that are distinct from 129 MM vCJD.
Funded by: This research was funded by the UK National Institute for Health Research
(NIHR) Policy Research Programme (project reference PR-R17-0916-23,002). The views
expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the NIHR or the Department
of Health and Social Care.
Grant number: PR-R17-0916-23,002
Acknowledgements: This research would not have been possible without the support of
patients and their families and we are extremely grateful to them for their consent
to use human tissues in this research. All experimental protocols were approved by
the Local Research Ethics Committee of UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology/National
Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery.
Strain Types for Chronic Wasting Disease and Effort Towards a Virtual Tissue Repository
W. David Waltera, Chia-Hua Lueb, and Jason Bartzc
aU.S. Geological Survey, Pennsylvania Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit,
The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA; bPennsylvania Cooperative
Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park,
PA; cMedical Microbiology and Immunology, Creighton University, Omaha, NE
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a prion disease that affects Cervidae species
and is a prominent transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) in wildlife. Since
CWD was first identified in the 1960s in the United States, it has been documented
in 29 states in captive and wild cervids, along with being present in Canada, South
Korea, and Scandinavia. When normal cellular prion protein (PrPc) misfolds to an abnormal
conformation (PrPsc) it causes CWD infections and different conformations of PrPscresult
in various disease phenotypes that characterize different prion strains. There is
a need to summarize the known CWD strains and to expand our general knowledge of the
CWD strains. One of the main obstacles in CWD research, however, is a lack of a centralized
collection of wild CWD-positive tissues. We will attempt to overcome this obstacle
by introducing a national repository for CWD.
Material and Methods: Advancements in Real-Time Quaking-Induced Conversion (RT-QuIC)
assays and strain-specific biochemical and biological properties of CWD prions, have
provided a unique opportunity to explore prion strains in wild cervids. We summarized
this literature to identify the current state of knowledge of prion strains in various
cervid species. We then used this information to design a virtual repository of tissue
and reagents for chronic wasting disease. The virtual repository will be housed on
a remote server that can be maintained by a representative organization for future
generations. This virtual repository will be accessible by researchers throughout
the world to request samples to achieve study objectives involving prion strain type
and prion protein genotypes.
Results: We are soliciting cooperating researchers and organizations for tissues collected
on a large geographic scale in North America to assess the distribution, frequency,
and strain types to their point of origin. Important metadata (coordinates for collection
location, species, tissue type (e.g. retropharyngeal lymph node, obex)) will be linked
to each tissue type. The virtual repository provides maps of locations of standardized
CWD-infected and uninfected tissue resources and polymorphisms of the host prion protein
gene for each tissue available.
Conclusions: Availability of a virtual repository of this nature will serve as a centralized
platform to facilitate cooperation and the sharing of resources between state agencies
and research institutes. Monitoring these data over time will provide important information
regarding CWD strain dynamics and will allow for identification of novel emerging
strains that may have altered pathogenicity and/or zoonotic potential compared to
currently circulating CWD strains.
Funded by: U.S. Geological Survey, Ecosystems Mission Area, Disease Cyclical Funds
Grant number: GRANT13389923
Acknowledgement: North American Interdisciplinary Chronic Wasting Disease Consortium,
U.S. Department of Agriculture, NC1209
Faithful propagation of prion strain-specific conformation to recombinant protein
Fei Wang, Andrew Scowcroft, Rodrigo Diaz-Espinoza, Luis Concha-Marambio, Damian Gorski,
Sandra Pritzkow, and Claudio Soto
Mitchell Center for Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Brain Disorders, Department of
Neurology, McGovern Medical School, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston,
Houston, Texas, USA
Aims: Prions are self-propagating proteinaceous agents that cause fatal neurological
disorders called Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies (TSEs). Prions replicate
through the template-guided conversion of the normally folded prion protein (PrPC)
by its misfolded, infectious form (PrPSc). Different prion strains composed of PrPScsharing
identical primary sequences are known to exhibit distinguishable molecular properties
and pathologies. Using the PMCA (Protein Misfolding Cyclic Amplification) technique,
it has been reported that bona fide recombinant prions can be generated with bacterially
expressed recombinant PrP (recPrP) and specific cofactors, either spontaneously or
through seeded reactions. However, previous efforts to faithfully propagate native
prion strain properties using recPrP as a substrate have failed. Here, we studied
whether recPrP can serve as a substrate for efficient and faithful in vitro propagations
of the RML prion by maintaining the strain-specific properties.
Material and Methods: In a seeded PMCA reaction supplemented with anionic cofactors,
10% brain homogenate (BH) from a terminally ill RML-infected mouse was used as the
template to amplify the protease-resistant PrP species (PrP-res) from the protease-sensitive
recPrP. Wild-type mice were intracerebrally inoculated with 10% RML BH or the newly
generated recPrP-res and monitored for clinical signs of prion disease. At the terminal
stage, diseased animals were euthanized and brain tissues were collected and used
for the subsequent passaging in wild-type animals. Brain tissues from all animals
were subjected to an array of biochemical and histopathological analyses for prion
strain characterization.
Results: Wild-type mice infected with RML-seeded recPrP-res and animals of the subsequent
passage developed classical prion clinical signs with a very synchronized incubation
time, similar to that of the RML-infected mice. Further biochemical and histopathological
analyses confirmed that these animals succumbed to the RML prion disease.
Conclusions: As a proof of concept, our results support the notion that PMCA can faithfully
propagate prion conformations to recombinant proteins under defined conditions and
in the absence of brain-derived components.
Funded by: National Institute of Health
Grant number: P01 AI077774
Loss of homeostatic microglia in prion diseases
Yue Wang*, Daniela Waddell*, Kristin Hartmann, Edda Thies, Diego Sepulveda-Falla,
Markus Glatzel, and Susanne Krasemann
*contributed equally
Institute of Neuropathology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg,
Germany
Microglia are the innate immune cells of the brain. Microglia can be both protective
and detrimental, and understanding the physiological functions of these cells is crucial
to determining their roles in disease. Activated microglia represent a common pathological
feature of neurodegenerative diseases. While the role of activated microglia have
been studied in prion disease mouse models, less is known about the dysregulation
of homeostatic signature of microglia in disease. Moreover, the role of microglia
in human and primate prion disease have not been thoroughly investigated so far.
Material and Methods: To determine the shift in the microglia profile, we used immunohistochemical
detection of pan microglia/monocyte, homeostatic microglia, and disease marker in
brains of mice experimentally infected with RML5.0 prions. Moreover, we investigated
in a primate model the microglia signature at different pre-clinical time points and
terminal disease. The latter data will be compared to the situation in the human brain
at terminal prion disease and compared to the microglia found in brains of patients
with Alzheimer’s disease.
Results: Microglia get activated during the course of a prion disease. This is accompanied
by an increase in microglia number and a change of the morphologic appearance from
ramified to amoeboid. The degree of microglia dysregulation correlate with brain areas
displaying deposition of misfolded PrPSc. Whereas we could not detect Clec7a, a microglia
disease marker that is upregulated in mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease, the homeostatic
microglia marker TMEM119 was significantly reduced in terminal disease. The loss of
homeostatic microglia marker could also be detected in the primate model and in human
prion disease. Interestingly, upregulation of the activated microglia marker CD68
is more prominent in Prion disease in contrast to Alzheimer’s disease.
Conclusions: Microglia are highly dysregulated in prion diseases of animals and humans
and show a significant loss of their homeostatic signature. On the other hand, they
display marker of activation that are distinct from those in Alzheimer’s disease.
Although microglia are commonly dysregulated in neurodegenerative disease, they differ
in their dysregulation degree and profile.
Generation of human chronic wasting disease in transgenic mice
Zerui Wanga, Kefeng Qinb, Manuel V. Camachoa, Ignazio Cali a,c, Jue Yuana, Pingping
Shena, Tricia Gillilanda, Syed Zahid Ali Shaha, Maria Gerasimenkoa, Michelle Tanga,
Sarada Rajamanickama, Anika Yadatia, Lawrence B. Schonbergerd, Justin Greenleee, Qingzhong
Konga,c, James A. Mastriannib, and Wen-Quan Zoua,c
aDepartment of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland,
OH, USA; bDepartment of Neurology and Center for Comprehensive Care and Research on
Memory Disorders, the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine, Chicago,
USA; cNational Prion Disease Pathology Surveillance Center, Case Western Reserve University
School of Medicine, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA; dDivision of High-Consequence Pathogens
and Pathology, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Rd, Atlanta,
GA, USA; eVirus and Prion Research Unit, National Animal Disease Center, USDA, Agricultural
Research Service, 1920 Dayton Avenue, Ames, IA, USA
Aims: Chronic wasting disease (CWD) results from the accumulation of an infectious
misfolded conformer (PrPSc) of cellular prion protein (PrPC) in the brains of deer
and elk. It has been spreading rapidly throughout many regions of North America, exported
inadvertently to South Korea, and more recently identified in Europe. Mad cow disease
has caused variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD) in humans and is currently the
only known zoonotic prion disease. Whether CWD is transmissible to humans remains
uncertain. The aims of our study were not only to confirm whether CWD prion isolates
can convert human brain PrPCinto PrPSc
in vitro by serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification (sPMCA) but also to determine
whether the sPMCA-induced CWD-derived human PrPScis infectious.
Material and Methods: Eight CWD prion isolates from 7 elks and 1 deer were used as
the seeds while normal human brain homogenates containing either PrP-129 MM (n = 2)
or PrP-129 VV (n = 1) were used as the substrates for sPMCA assay. A normal elk brain
tissue sample was used as a negative control seed. Two lines of humanized transgenic
(Tg) mice expressing either human PrP-129VV or −129 MM polymorphism were included
for transmission studies to determine the infectivity of PMCA-amplified PrPSc. Wester
blotting and immunohistochemistry and hematoxylin & eosin staining were used for determining
PrPScand neuropathological changes of inoculated animals.
Results: We report here the generation of the first CWD-derived infectious human PrPScusing
elk CWD PrPScto initiate conversion of human PrPCfrom normal human brain homogenates
with PMCA in vitro. Western blotting with a human PrP selective antibody confirmed
that the PMCA-generated protease-resistant PrPScwas derived from the human brain PrPCsubstrate.
Two lines of humanized transgenic mice expressing human PrPCwith either Val or Met
at the polymorphic codon 129 developed clinical prion disease following intracerebral
inoculation with the PMCA-generated CWD-derived human PrPSc. Diseased mice exhibited
distinct PrPScpatterns and neuropathological changes in the brain.
Conclusions: Our study, using PMCA and animal bioassays, provides the first evidence
that CWD PrPSchas the potential to overcome the species barrier and directly convert
human PrPCinto infectious PrPScthat can produce bona fide prion disease when inoculated
into humanized transgenic mice.
Funded by: CJD Foundation and NIH
Anti-prion systems in yeast cooperate to cure or prevent the generation of nearly
all variants of the [PSI+] and [URE3] prions in normal cells
Reed B. Wickner, Moonil Son, Herman Edskes, Songsong Wu, and Madaleine Niznikiewicz
Laboratory of Biochemstry and Genetics, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive
and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA
Aims: Human prion and amyloid diseases are largely untreatable. We previously found
anti-prion systems in yeast whose human analogs or homologs might be manipulated to
treat these conditions in the same way that humoral, cellular and innate immunity
is used to treat or prevent viral and bacterial infections. Here we examine the interactions
of these systems and characterize the prion variants whose propagation or generation
they block.
Material and Methods: We constructed all possible combinations of mutations in five
anti-prion genes (ssz1Δ, upf1Δ, btn2Δ, cur1Δ and hsp104T160M
) active against [PSI+] (prion of Sup35p) or [URE3] (prion of Ure2p). We measured
the frequency of [PSI+] prion generation (spontaneous or induced by prion domain overexpression),
and determine which anti-prion system(s) cure which prion variants that arise in the
multiple mutants.
Results: The ssz1Δ, upf1Δ, and hsp104T160M
synergistically elevated the spontaneous frequency of [PSI+] arising so that the triple
mutant has up to a 5000-fold increase above wild type strains. [PSI+] arising in the
triple mutant include those curable by normal levels of any of the three missing proteins,
those needing one specific anti-prion to be cured, and those not cured in normal cells
at all, but arising at 25-fold or high frequency compared to normal cells. The absence
of Btn2 (a ‘sequestrase’ that collects prion amyloids and other denatured proteins)
actually decreases the frequency of [PSI+], but increases the frequency of [URE3].
However, btn2Δ does not affect the frequency of [PSI+] appearance in ssz1Δ upf1Δ hsp104T160M
triple mutant strains.
Conclusions: Prion formation is not a rare event. Instead, prions are quite common,
but yeast has multiple systems that block prion formation, cure the overwhelming majority
of prions formed, limit the infection by prions from another cell and partially block
the lethality of those prions that escape the other anti-prion systems.
Funded by: The Intramural Program of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive
and Kidney Diseases of the National Institutes of Health
Grant number: DK024950
Acknowledgement: This work was supported by the Intramural Program of the National
Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases of the National Institutes
of Health.
PrP shedding from mast cells is dependent upon proteases released during degranulation
Steven D. Willowsa, and Marianna Kulkaa,b
aNanotechnology Research Centre, National Research Council Canada, Edmonton, Canada;
bDepartment of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, University of Alberta, Edmonton,
Canada
Aims: The prion protein (PrP) is best known for its role in several infectious prion
diseases in both humans and animals. The physiological role of PrP is still under
debate, especially its role on several types of immune cells where it is highly expressed.
Our aim was to better understand the expression of PrP on granulated mast cells that
store and release specific proteases upon activation. Mast cells are considered some
of the first responders in the immune system and play a significant role in allergy,
detoxification of venoms/toxins, as well as response to infection, tissue remodeling
and neuroplasticity. Upon stimulation, mast cells release pre-stored granules containing
several signaling molecules and proteases. Although mouse mast cells have previously
been shown to release PrP after degranulation, the mechanism has never been elucidated.
We therefore sought to investigate if human mast cells also release PrP and to better
understand the mechanism by which PrP is released from mast cells.
Material and Methods: Mouse bone marrow mast cells (BMMC) and the human mast cell
line LAD2 were used in all experiments. To induce degranulation, BMMC were activated
by calcium ionophore A23187 or IgE + antigen. LAD2 were degranulated by stimulating
with compound 48/80 (C4880) or IgE + anti-IgE. Protease inhibitors, including complete
protease inhibitor cocktail (CPI) or 4-(2-aminoethyl)benzenesulfonyl fluoride hydrochloride
(AEBSF), were included just before addition of degranulating reagents. LAD2 were treated
with the mast cell-specific protease, recombinant tryptase, to determine its autocrine
effect on PrP expression. Cells were incubated for 30–90 minutes at 37°C before fixation
and levels of PrP were determined by flow cytometry.
Results: Degranulation reduced the amount of PrP on mast cells by 50–80% depending
on the stimulus. PrP levels recovered partially by three hours but took 48 hours to
regain the same expression levels as untreated. Both CPI and AEBSF abrogated the amount
of PrP lost after degranulation. Exposure of LAD2 cells to recombinant tryptase reduced
the amount of PrP on cells by 36%.
Conclusions: Degranulation resulted in decreased PrP expression on both human and
mouse mast cells regardless of the stimulus. The ability of protease inhibitors to
inhibit this decrease suggests that this is a protease-dependent mechanism. The ability
of recombinant tryptase to decrease PrP levels on cells suggests that this enzyme
may be at least partly responsible for this loss of PrP expression on the cell surface.
Funded by: National Research Council Canada
A case of probable Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease with the PrP G114V mutation
Otto Windla, Monika Emplb, Selamawit Gebrekidanc, Peter Bartensteinc, Inga Zerrd,
Jochen Hermsa, and Adrian Danekb
aCenter for Neuropathology and Prion Research, LMU Munich, Munich, Germany; bDepartment
of Neurology, University Hospital, LMU Munich, Munich, Germany; cDepartment of Nuclear
Medicine, University Hospital, LMU Munich, Germany; dPrion Research Group, Department
of Neurology, University Hospital, GAU Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany
At 21 years of age this patient presented with a range of neurological signs and developed
rapidly progressive dementia and myoclonus. Various diagnoses were considered, including
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), but 14-3-3 protein was undetectable in cerebrospinal
fluid and EEG abnormalities were nonspecific. FDG-PET showed elevated bilateral basal
ganglia signal of unknown significance.
Molecular analysis revealed the very rare G114V mutation on one allele of the PrP
gene. This mutation has been described in a handful of CJD cases/families across continents
and ethnicities worldwide. Dying at age 36, the patient had an unusually long disease
duration, but brain autopsy was not performed.
Genetic family study indicates incomplete penetrance of this mutation as the patient´s
father, also with G114V, has remained asymptomatic to this day at age 74.
Pathogenic causality and structural implications of the G114V mutation will be discussed
along with the issue of incomplete penetrance in genetic prion diseases.
Structure and dynamics of alpha-synuclein interaction with fibrillary seeds
Min Wu, and Maria Stepanova
Electrical & Computer Engineering Department, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
Aims: Alpha-synuclein (α-syn) is a protein commonly found in the nervous system. At
normal conditions α-syn adopts disordered unfolded conformations, although it also
can form α-helices upon binding to lipid membranes. Under conditions that are not
yet fully understood α-syn misfolds and aggregates giving rise to β-sheet rich amyloid
fibrils, which tend to accumulate in the body. This leads to Parkinson’s disease (PD)
and several other conditions collectively termed synucleinopathies. Development of
disease-modifying treatments requires detailed understanding of structure and dynamics
of α-syn’s misfolded aggregates and fibrils.
Material and Methods: We have employed extensive all-atom molecular dynamics (MD)
simulations to investigate the interaction of both unstructured and α-helical monomeric
α-syn38-95 fragments, which contain the most important amyloidogenic regions, with
pre-formed fibrillary seed composed of five staggered, β-sheet rich α-syn chains of
matching length. We have considered both disordered and α-helical initial conformations
of α-syn38-95 monomers. We have applied our original essential collective dynamics
(ECD) method to analyze dynamical stability of the α-syn aggregates.
Results: The simulations indicate that the two differently structured α-syn38-95 monomeric
fragments tend to form aggregates with the fibrillary seeds, although we have not
observed alignment of the monomeric chains with β-strands of the fibril. The ECD analysis
revealed extensive dynamical coupling across the initially monomeric α-syn chains
and the core of the fibrillary seed including distal regions of the fibril that have
not contacted the monomer directly. This includes changes in the structure and dynamics
of remote regions of the fibril.
Conclusions: The observed long-range dynamical coupling across α-syn monomeric fragment
and the core of the fibrillary seed suggests that the propensity of the fibril to
elongate might be mediated by binding of small molecules or other ingredients to a
broad range of locations at the surface of the fibril. In particular, C-terminal regions
of α-syn38-95 chains of the fibril might be a promising target for anti-PD therapeutic
interventions.
Funded by: Alberta Innovates
Grant number: 20170016
Acknowledgement: The authors would like to thank Dr. Lyudmyla Dorosh for helpful discussions
of the work.
Uncoupling of Aβ load and neurodegeneration in APP transgenic mouse model
Ying Xua,b,c,
*, Christine Rothera,b,c,
*, Ruth E. Uhlmanna,b,c, Stephan A. Müllerde, Juliane Schellea,b, Angelos Skodrasa,
Ulrike Obermüllera,b, Lisa M. Häslera,b, Marius Lamberta,b, Frank Baumanna,b, Carina
Bergmanna,b,c, Irena Brzakf, Derya Shimshekf, Ulf Neumannf, Stephan A. Kaesera,b,
Stefan F. Lichtenthalerde,g, Lary C. Walkerh, and Matthias Staufenbiela, and Mathias
Juckera,b
aDepartment of Cellular Neurology, Hertie Institute for Clinical Brain Research, University
of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany; bGerman Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE),
Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany; cGraduate School of Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,
University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany, dGerman Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases
(DZNE), Munich, Germany; eNeuroproteomics, School of Medicine, Klinikum rechts der
Isar, Technische Universität München, Munich, Germany; fNeuroscience, Novartis Institutes
for Biomedical Research, Basel, Switzerland;
g
Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology (SyNergy), Munich, Germany; hDepartment of Neurology
and Emory National Primate Research Center, Emory University, Atlanta, GA
Aims: Genetic, pathologic and biochemical data support a primary role of amyloid-β
(Aβ) aggregation in Alzheimer’s disease (AD), but clinical trials of agents targeting
Aβ have not revealed robust clinical benefit. These observations are in line with
the view that Aβ aggregation is the trigger of AD, but that the pathogenic cascade
becomes independent of Aβ load at later and symptomatic stages. To elucidate the dependency
of downstream pathologies on Aβ, we analysed brain Aβ load, Aβ seeding activity, and
neurofilament light chain protein (NfL, a presumed marker of neurodegeneration) in
the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in transgenic mice expressing AD-mutant Aβ-precursor
protein (APP) and presenilin-1 (PS1) at different disease stages.
Material and Methods: To block Aβ generation, APPPS1 mice were treated with an inhibitor
of β-site APP-cleaving enzyme 1 (BACE1) either short-term or long-term at different
ages. Aβ and NfL were measured by electrochemiluminescence-linked immunoassay (Meso
Scale Discovery) and/or the Simoa platform (Quanterix). Aβ seeding activity was estimated
using a well-established in vivo endpoint titration assay. Brain tissues were examined
postmortem by routine immunohistological analysis.
Results: In APPPS1 mice Aβ deposition increases linearly until it reaches a plateau
at a late age. In contrast, Aβ seeding activity increases more rapidly and reaches
a plateau much earlier. A robust increase of CSF NfL was observed only after Aβ seeding
activity had plateaued. Inhibition of Aβ generation in amyloid-laden mice reduced
Aβ deposition, but failed to reduce Aβ seeding activity, and CSF NfL continued to
increase. When Aβ generation was inhibited starting at pre-amyloid stages, CSF NfL
no longer increased despite some Aβ deposition and robust Aβ seeding activity.
Conclusions: Our data indicate that neurodegeneration (as assessed by CSF NfL) starts
when Aβ seeding activity is saturated, a phenomenon reminiscent of the two pathogenic
phases in prion disease. Blocking Aβ deposition in AD is likely to be most beneficial
at a much earlier time-point than that targeted in past clinical trials.
Funded by: Cure Alzheimer’s Foundation; the EU/EFPIA/Innovative Medicines Initiative
(2) Joint Undertaking (IMPRiND); German Research Foundation; Alexander von Humboldt
Foundation; the Chinese Scholarship Council.
Acknowledgement: We thank Carina Leibsle, Jörg Odenthal (Tübingen), Anna Berghofer
(Munich), and all the other members of our departments for experimentalhelp.
Pathological alpha-synuclein profiling in nasal specimens of patients with Parkinson’s
disease
Mary Xylakia, Michael Bartla, Jonas Franzb, Michael Schlossmacherc, Christine Stadelmannb,
and Brit Mollenhauera,d
aDepartment of Neurology, University Medical Center Goettingen, Goettingen, Germany;
bInstitute of Neuropathology, University Medical Center Göttigen, Göttingen, Germany;
cDivision of Neurology, Department of Medicine, Ottawa Hospital, University of Ottawa,
Ottawa,Canada; dParacelsus-Elena-Klinik, Kassel, Germany
Aims: Parkinson’s disease (PD) is an increasingly prevalent neurodegenerative disorder
for which diagnosis is based on clinical criteria that can be difficult to interpret
and distinguish from other parkinsonian syndromes. Biomarkers such as pathological
alpha-synuclein (asyn) detection are established in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) collected
by lumbar puncture. The underlying pathogenesis of PD is still unclear, but a peripheral
origin is discussed, and some PD is thought to start in the olfactory bulb which is
connected to the nose, rendering easily accessible nasal samples potent for biomarker
development. We sought to identify whether asyn seed amplification assay developed
to detect pathological asyn in CSF using samples from PD patients and healthy controls
could detect pathological asyn in nasal lavage samples and olfactory mucosa to be
used as a biomarker.
Material and Methods: In this study, olfactory mucosa and nasal lavage samples were
collected from PD patients recruited at the Paracelsus-Elena-Klinik, Kassel, Germany
(DeNoPa Cohort) and from controls free of neurological disease. Samples were analysed
using seed amplification assay and their seeding ability was compared to that of CSF
samples.
Results: The asyn seed amplification assay activity in olfactory mucosa and nasal
lavage samples from PD patients compared to the controls indicated the specificity
and sensitivity of these samples. In addition, accuracy among results of asyn seed
amplification assay activity for CSF, olfactory mucosa and nasal lavage from the same
patient was estimated. Conclusions: Our results suggest that asyn seed amplification
assay analysis of nasal samples alone or combined with CSF testing are useful for
increasing the diagnostic accuracy of PD. Finally, more research is necessary to establish
the use of the assay in peripheral samples as a biomarker to detect the disease earlier
and monitor progression and response to disease modifying approaches.
Funded by: ASAP Grant number:020625
Structural and Kinetic Characterization of Disease Associated Tau Mutants
Allan Yarahmadya,b, Jónathan Herasc, and Sue-Ann Moka,b
aBiochemistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada; bCentre for Prions and Protein
Folding Diseases, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada; cDepartment of Mathematics
and Computer Sciences, University of La Rioja, Logrono, Spain
Aims: While great advancements have been made in the field of tau biology, one particularly
elusive component is the significance of structural variance of tau aggregates linked
to disease: we see great structural heterogeneity among the aggregates obtained from
various tauopathies despite being made from the same protein. Furthermore, these profiles
appear to be consistent across patients with a given disease. This suggests disease-specific
cellular triggers that favour certain aggregate structures over others. Point mutations
in tau, such as those identified in FTLD-tau, can have marked effects on aggregate
kinetics, structure, and morphology. Probing the effect these mutations have on aggregate
structure could give us a better understanding of these differences and bring us closer
to defining the critical early stages of disease onset and spread.
Material and Methods: Thirty-six disease associated tau mutants were recombinantly
expressed and purified using an optimized small-scale purification protocol yielding
pure tau. The kinetics of aggregation were studied utilizing heparin as an accelerant
and monitoring by thioflavin T fluorescence in a time-course assay. Resultant aggregates
were characterized by core structure using trypsin digestion and visualization by
capillary gel electrophoresis.
Results: Most mutants studied exhibited WT-like aggregation kinetics. Mutants which
delayed aggregation tended to be outside the region comprising the aggregate core
(R2 and R3) and those which increased aggregation tended to be inside that region.
Trypsin digestion revealed ten structural subtypes the mutants fell into as indicated
by altered protease resistant banding patterns.
Conclusions: Certain tau mutants associated with disease exhibit variable structure
and kinetic profiles. A deep mutational scan of tau generating a library of mutants
could elucidate the connection between sequence and aggregate structure as well as
its impact of aggregation kinetics.
Funded by: Alberta Prion Research Institute, Alzheimer’s Society of Alberta and Northwest
Territories
Acknowledgements: Dr. David Westaway
Interactome remodeling of prion/prion-like proteins in response to oxidative stress
Neelam Younas a,b, Saima Zafar a,b,c, Tayyaba Saleema,b, Leticia C. Fernandeza,b,
Matthias Schmitza,b, and Inga Zerra,b
aDepartment of Neurology, Georg-August University, Goettingen, Germany; bGerman Center
for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Göttingen, Germany, cBiomedical Engineering
and Sciences Department, School of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering (SMME),
National University of Sciences and Technology (NUST), Islamabad, Pakistan
Aims: Main aim of the current study is to characterize stress-induced network rearrangements
of prion/prion-like proteins (PrP, tau and synuclein) under basal and stressful conditions.
Emerging evidence indicate that dysregulation of stress response lead to misfolded
protein aggregation in the pathophysiology of many neurodegenerative diseases. Gaining
insights into the molecular pathways associated with prion/prion-like proteins (PrP,
tau and synuclein) under stressful conditions is critical for understanding pathological
cascades linked to these proteins.
Material and Methods: To find out interacting partners and their posttranslational
modifications associated with bait proteins at physiologically relevant levels in
the absence of cross-linking agent, endogenous, native, and untagged proteins were
co-immunoprecipitated. We employed mass spectrometry analysis to identify the interactomes
of tau, synuclein and PrP, representing 30 biological samples (10 samples/bait protein).
Multiple biochemical approaches were used for validations including co-immunoprecipitaion,
co-immunofluorescence, immunoblotting and subcellular fractionation.
Results: In total, 597 proteins passed our cutoff criteria and were classified as
potential interactors. Our comparative interactome maps provide comprehensive network
rearrangements of three aggregation-prone proteins, identify novel interacting components,
their post-translational modifications (PTMs) and validate interactions with target
proteins. In addition, we discovered dysregulation of PrP, exportin-5, and translocation
of exportin-5 into nucleus under stressful condition in vitro, highlighting remodeling
of nucleocytoplasmic transport during stress response.
Conclusions: Overall, using protein-protein interaction networks, current study broadens
the understanding of the pathobiological context of known neurodegenerative disease-associated
proteins. We have established a new category of interest (stress mediated PTMs) for
exploration. We hope further studies of prion/prion-like proteins and stress granule
biology; and their relation to DNA and RNA processing will further elucidate the mechanisms
of neurodegeneration linked to these proteins.
Funded by: Supported by Helmholtz-Alberta Initiative – Neurodegenerative Diseases
Research (HAI-NDR); Alberta innovates Bio solutions, and DZNE Goettingen.
Early preclinical proteomic signatures of prion infection
Neelam Younasa,b, Saima Zafar a,b,c, Matthias Schmitza,b, Niccolò Candelisea,b, Maria
Cramma,b, Susana Correiaa,b, Olivier Andréolettid, and Inga Zerra,b
aDepartment of Neurology, Georg-August University, Göttingen, Germany;bGerman Center
for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Göttingen, Germany), cBiomedical Engineering
and Sciences Department, School of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering (SMME),
National University of Sciences and Technology (NUST), Islamabad, Pakistan;dInstitut
National de la Recherche Agronomique/Ecole Nationale Vétérinaire, Toulouse, France
Aims: Main aim of the current study is to find out early preclinical signatures of
prion infection. Prion diseases characteristically have long preclinical incubation
periods during which the pathological prions and infectivity gradually propagate in
the brain. The earliest molecular changes that accompany neuronal damage and ultimately
lead to neuronal death remain enigmatic. In the current study, we employed RT-QuIC
and proteomics analysis to find out initial seeding and temporal proteomic response
in prion-infected mice.
Material and Methods: We inoculated intracerebrally (i.c.) human sCJD-MM1 and sCJD-VV2
brain homogenate in tg340 and tg361 mice (expressing about four fold of human PrP
MM129 and VV129 respectively) and non-infectious brain homogenate (control) as well.
Mice were sacrificed at 60, 120, 160 and 180 (days post inoculation), corresponding
to early preclinical, late preclinical, early clinical and late clinical. To find
out the time of initial prion seeding during prion infection, we investigated the
seeding activity of prion protein temporally using RT-QuIC. Next, to identify molecular
changes associated with initial prion seeding events and how they change with the
progression of the disease, we performed time-dependent proteomics analysis (SWATH-MS).
Results: Interestingly, positive RT-QuIC responses were seen already at early preclinical
stage (60 dpi) in both CJD-MM1 and VV2 inoculated mouse lines. The fluorescence threshold
was 10,000 rfu, which was the basis of determining positive RT-QuIC response. RT-QuIC
reactivity was increased (THT fluorescence intensity) gradually from early preclinical
stage to late clinical stage in MM1-inoculated mice. For sCJD-VV2, inoculated mice
reactivity was increased from early preclinical stage to early clinical stage but
was decreased at late clinical stage. The differential expression analysis revealed
940 proteins that were differentially expressed between diseased and control mice.
Proteomic alterations were already evident at early preclinical time point. The most
prominent finding in our analysis was that proteomic alterations followed a strictly
temporal pattern and were subtype-specific. Time-dependent functional profile showed
significant alterations in synaptic transmission, abnormal cognition and defects in
neuronal cytoskeleton at preclinical stages. Derangement in neurofilament-cytoskeleton,
exocytosis and innate immune system were the most prominent terms at clinical stages.
Conclusions: In summary, we found a differential seeding activity during the prion
infection, with detection of seeding already at early preclinical time point (60 dpi).
Our work provides an insight of temporal proteomic alterations that accompany prion
infection. Further investigations of these proteomic dysregulations will provide an
inroad for the study of early biomarkers and pathological mechanisms.
Acknowledgement: We thank Dr. Christof Lenz for helping in bioinformatics analysis.
Quantitative measurements of chronic wasting disease prions recovered from swab samples
and environmentally relevant surfaces
Qi Yuana, Gage Rowdenb, Tiffany M. Wolfc, Marc D. Schwabenlanderb, Peter A. Larsenb,
Shannon L. Bartelt-Huntd and Jason C. Bartza
aDepartment of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Creighton University, Omaha, Nebraska;
bDepartment of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences, University of Minnesota, Saint
Paul, MN, USA cDepartment of Veterinary Population Medicine, University of Minnesota,
Saint Paul, MN; dDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Peter Kiewit Institute,
University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Omaha, Nebraska, USA
Aims: To develop a novel method for extracting chronic wasting disease (CWD) prions
from swabs and, in combination with ultrasensitive detection methods, detecting CWD
prions recovered from environmentally relevant surfaces at low levels.
Material and Methods: Brain tissues collected from hamsters infected with hyper strain
(HY) transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) or from elk infected with CWD were used.
Foam-tipped and cotton-tipped swabs, and environmental relevant surfaces including
stainless steel sheets, microscope glass slides, and oak wood coupons were contaminated
with brain homogenates and dried at 22°C for different lengths of period up to 24 hours
followed with extraction by shaking or sonication. Extracts were vacuum concentrated
and analyzed with 96-well immunodetection and/or real-time quake-induced conversion
(RT-QuIC).
Results: Drying on swabs decreased prion recovery with shaking extraction. However,
sonication improved the recovery of swab-dried prions. Using the developed swab extraction
technique by sonication, the recovery of CWD prions dried to glass or stainless steel
was approximately 30% in most cases, whereas that from wood was undetectable by 96-well
immunodetection. RT-QuIC analysis of CWD prions recovered from stainless steel sheets
resulted in an increase of the detection limit by 4 orders of magnitude. More importantly,
the RT-QuIC detection of CWD prions recovered from stainless steel surfaces using
this method was similar to the original CWD prion load applied to the surface.
Conclusions: We developed a novel swab-extraction procedure for field deployable sampling
of CWD prions from stainless steel, glass, and wood. Extended swab-drying was unfavorable
for prion extraction, indicating that hydrated storage of swabs after sampling aided
in prion recovery. This combined surface swabbing with sonication extraction and RT-QuIC
detection method provides an ultrasensitive means for prion detection across many
settings and applications.
Funded by: National Institutes of Health, National Science Foundation
Grant number: NIH: P01 2P01AI077774 to J.C.B., NSF: CBET-1149424 to S.L.B.
Acknowledgement: We thank Drs. Nicholas Haley and Ken Clinkenbeard for providing CWD-infected
tissues.
Prion-like characteristics of Amyloid-β deriving clinical variants of Alzheimer’s
disease
Saima Zafara,b, Aneeqa Noora,b, Mohsin Shafiqa,c, Neelam Younasa, Anna Siegerta, Florian
A Mannad, Sebastian Krussd, Matthias Schmitza, Hassan Dihazie, Isidre Ferrerf, and
Inga Zerra
aDepartment of Neurology, University Medical Center Goettingen, Goettingen, Germany;
bDepartment of Neuropathology, University Medical Center Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany;c
Institute of Neuropathology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg,
Germany; dInstitute of Physical Chemistry, Georg-August University, Tammannstraße
6, 37,077, Göttingen, Germany; eDepartment of Nephrology and Rheumatology, Georg-August
University, University Medical Center Göttingen, Robert-Koch-Straße 40, 37,075, Göttingen,
Germany; fDepartment of Pathology and Experimental Therapeutics, University of Barcelona
CIBERNEDBellvitge University Hospital (IDIBELL), Carrer de la Feixa Llarga, 08907,
Hospitalet de Llobregat, Spain
Aims: The molecular determinants of atypical clinical variants of Alzheimer’s disease,
including the recently discovered rapidly progressive Alzheimer’s disease (rpAD),
are unknown to date. Fibrilization of the amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide is the most frequently
studied candidate in this context. The Aβ peptide can exist as multiple proteoforms
that vary in their post-translational processing, amyloidogenesis, and toxicity.
Material and Methods: The current study was designed to identify these variations
in Alzheimer’s disease patients exhibiting classical (sAD) and rapid progression,
with the primary aim of establishing if these variants may constitute strains that
underlie the phenotypic variability of Alzheimer’s disease. We employed two-dimensional
polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and MALDI-ToF mass spectrometry to validate and
identify the Aβ proteoforms extracted from targeted brain tissues. The biophysical
analysis was conducted using RT-QuIC assay, confocal microscopy, and atomic force
microscopy. Interactome analysis was performed by co-immunoprecipitation.
Results: We present a signature of 33 distinct pathophysiological proteoforms, including
the commonly targeted Aβ40, Aβ42, Aβ4-42, Aβ11-42, and provide insight into their
synthesis and quantities. Furthermore, we have validated the presence of highly hydrophobic
Aβ seeds in rpAD brains that seeded reactions at a slower pace in comparison to typical
Alzheimer’s disease. In vitro and in vivo analyses also verified variations in the
molecular pathways modulated by brain-derived Aβ.
Conclusions: These variations in the presence, synthesis, folding, and interactions
of Aβ among sAD and rpAD brains constitute important points of intervention. Further
validation of reported targets and mechanisms will aid in the diagnosis of and therapy
for Alzheimer’s disease.
Funded by: Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL. This research
was partially funded by the Physics‐to‐Medicine Initiative Göttingen (LM der Niedersächsischen
Vorab)
Serpins in prion diseases
Marco Zattonia,*, Arianna Colini Baldeschia,*, Silvia Vannia,b, Marika Mearellia,c,
Thanh Hoa Trana,d, Chiara Ferracina, Lea Nikolica, Marcella Cataniab, Fabio Modab,
Giuseppe Di Fedeb, Giorgio Giacconeb, Fabrizio Tagliavinic, Gianluigi Zanussod, James
W. Ironsidee, Isidre Ferrerf, Giuseppina La Salag, 5, Maria Summah, Rosalia Bertorellih,
Sine Mandrup Bertozzii, Paolo CarloniJ, Maria Laura Bolognesik, Marco De Vivogand
Giuseppe Legnamea
aLaboratory of Prion Biology, Department of Neuroscience, Scuola Internazionale Superiore
di Studi Avanzati (SISSA), Trieste, Italy; bFondazione IRCCS Istituto Neurologico
Carlo Besta, Division of Neurology 5 and Neuropathology, Milan, Italy; cFondazione
IRCCS Istituto Neurologico Carlo Besta, Scientific Directorate, Milan, Ital; dDepartment
of Neurosciences, Biomedicine and Movement Sciences, University of Verona, Verona,
Italy; eNational CJD Research & Surveillance Unit, Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences,
University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK; fDepartment of Pathology and Experimental
Therapeutics, University of Barcelona; Institute of Biomedical Research of Bellvitge
(IDIBELL); Biomedical Research Network Center of Neurodegenerative Diseases (CIBERNED);
Hospitalet de Llobregat, Spain; gMolecular Modeling & Drug Discovery Lab, Istituto
Italiano di Tecnologia, Via Morego 30, 16,163 Genoa, Ital; hTranslational Pharmacology,
Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Via Morego 30, 16,163 Genoa, Italy; iAnalytical Chemistry
Lab, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Via Morego 30, 16,163 Genoa, Italy; jInstitute
for Advanced Simulations (IAS)-5/Institute for Neuroscience and Medicine (INM)-9,
Forschungszentrum Jülich, 52,428 Jülich, Germany; kDepartment of Pharmacy and Biotechnology,
University of Bologna, Via Belmeloro 6, 40,126 Bologna, Italy; acurrent affiliation:
Institute of Biomedicine, Department of Pathology and Experimental Therapeutics, Bellvitge
University Hospital-IDIBELL, Barcelona, Spain; bcurrent affiliation: Osteoncology
Unit, Bioscience Laboratory, IRCCS Istituto Romagnolo Per Lo Studio Dei Tumori (IRST)
‘Dino Amadori’, 47,014 Meldola, Italy; ccurrent affiliation: German Center for Neurodegenerative
Diseases (DZNE), Tübingen, 72,076, Germany; dcurrent affiliation: VN-UK Institute
for Research and Executive Education, The University of Danang, Da Nang, Vietnam;
ecurrent affiliation: Medicinal Chemistry, Research and Early Development, Cardiovascular,
Renal and Metabolism (CVRM), BioPharmaceuticals R&D, AstraZeneca, Gothenburg, Sweden.
* these authors contributed equally to this work
Aims: Serpins represent the most broadly distributed superfamily of proteases inhibitors.
They contribute to a variety of physiological functions and any alteration of the
serpin-protease equilibrium can lead to severe consequences. SERPINA3 dysregulation
has been associated with prion diseases and Alzheimer’s disease. In this study, we
investigated the differential expression of other serpin superfamily members in prion
diseases. Furthermore, we analyzed the biochemical activity of its murine orthologue,
SerpinA3n, in prion-affected brain tissue. We also modulated SerpinA3n levels, either
genetically or pharmacologically, performing in vitro experiment in scrapie-infected
immortalized cell line, to better investigate its role in prion pathogenesis.
Material and Methods: SERPIN expression was analyzed, by RT-qPCR, in human frontal
cortex samples from cases of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) and age-matched
controls not affected by neurodegenerative disorders. In addition, we studied whether
Serpin expression was dysregulated in RML-infected mouse model.
To check SERPINA3/SerpinA3n activity in tissue, mouse brain samples were incubated
with a known target protease, chymotrypsin, and SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis
were performed to evaluate the formation of a covalent complex between SerpinA3n and
the protease.
Moreover, SerpinA3n-overexpressing cell conditioned medium and recombinant SerpinA3n
treatment, on scrapie-infected N2a cells, were performed to investigate changes in
prion accumulation levels. Similarly, we evaluated prion load in cells transfected
with SerpinA3n-directed siRNA and shRNA and treated with small molecules targeting
SerpinA3n.
Results: Our analysis revealed that, besides the already observed strong upregulation
of SERPINA3 in patients with prion disease, SERPINB1, SERPINB6, SERPINE1, SERPING1,
SERPINH1 and SERPINI1 were mild dysregulated in sCJD individuals compared to controls.
Furthermore, we analyzed whether other serpin members were differentially expressed
in prion-infected mice compared to controls and, together with SerpinA3n, SerpinF2
increased levels were observed.
The SerpinA3n increased anti-protease activity found in brain tissue of RML-infected
mice suggests its involvement in prion disease pathogenesis. A SERPINA3/SerpinA3n
role prion infection was further corroborated by in vitro SerpinA3n-dependent prion
accumulation changes in chronically-infected cells.
Conclusions: SERPINA3/SerpinA3n marked dysregulation in prion diseases and its effect
on the prion accumulation process, suggests its consideration as a potential therapeutic
target.
Although the low bioavailability of the most potent anti-prion compound targeting
SerpinA3n (ARN1468) does not allow in vivo studies in infected mice, our strategy
emerges as a novel and effective approach to the treatment of prion disease. Further
analyses in other neurodegenerative disorders are needed to understand whether the
neurodegenerative mechanism is SERPINA3/SerpinA3n-dependent or whether other serpin
superfamily members are involved in these pathological processes.
Funded by: Intramural SISSA Funding, Helmholtz Partnering Project on ‘Innovative high-performance
computing approaches for molecular neuromedicine’.
Acknowledgement: The authors wish to thank Professor Remo Sanges for assistance with
data source analysis, Helena Krmac, Christina Vlachouli and Nicoletta Brindani for
technical support. Paolo Carloni and Marco De Vivo acknowledge financial support from
the Helmholtz Society for this project. The authors acknowledged SISSA intramural
grant support for carrying out the study.
Engineered zinc finger protein transcription factors potently reduce brain PrP expression
and extend survival in prion-infected mice
Bryan Zeitlera, Meredith A Mortbergb, Mohad Mehrabiana, Kimberly Marlena, Shih-Wei
Choua, Michael Howardb, Samantha Graffamb, Kenney Lenzb, Tyler Caronb, Qi Yua, Angelica
Phillipsa, Jing Hua, Sarah Hinkleya, Alicia Goodwina, Asa Hatamia, Alaric Falcona,
Lei Zhanga, Kathleen Meyera, Jason Fontenota, Amy M Poolera, Eric Vallabh Minikelb,
and Sonia M Vallabhb
aSangamo Therapeutics, Richmond, CA 94804 USA; bBroad Institute of Harvard and MIT,
Cambridge, MA 02142, USA
Aims: Prion disease is an invariably fatal and rapidly progressing neurodegenerative
disorder caused by aggregation of misfolded prion protein, PrP, encoded by the PRNP
gene. Most cases are sporadic or caused by inherited dominant mutations in PRNP. There
are currently no approved or clinical-stage disease-modifying therapies for the prevention
or treatment of prion disease. Lowering endogenous PrP levels by 50% either genetically
or with antisense oligonucleotides can approximately double the lifespan of prion-infected
mice. Moreover, Prnp null animals are completely resistant to prion inoculation. We
investigated a single-administration AAV approach with zinc finger protein transcription
factors (ZF-TFs) as a potential therapeutic strategy to achieve sustained and widespread
reduction of PrP in the brain and rapid pharmacological effect.
Material and Methods: Engineered ZFPs targeting the transcription regulatory elements
of either mouse Prnp or human PRNP were fused to the human KRAB repression domain
and screened in mouse Neuro2A or human SK-N-MC cells. RT-qPCR analysis identified
dozens of ZF-TFs that reduced prion mRNA by 50–99%. Selected ZF-TFs potently reduced
prion mRNA levels in cultured primary mouse cortical and human iPSC-derived neurons
with no detectable off-target activity, as evaluated by transcriptome-wide profiling.
Results: ZF-TFs under the control of the human synapsin promoter reduced bulk prion
protein mRNA and protein levels by >50% across the brain when administrated to adult
wild-type and humanized mice. Multiplexed RNAscope and immunohistochemistry demonstrated
a strong negative correlation between ZF-TF and Prnp expression at the single-neuron
level throughout the brain. Wild-type mice were inoculated with RML prions and treated
with a single dose of ZF-TFs at 60 days post inoculation (dpi), near the onset of
plasma neurofilament light chain (NfL) rise, or at 122 dpi, near the onset of symptoms.
While control groups reached terminal endpoint at 160 ± 8 dpi (mean±sd), 9/19 mice
treated with PrP-lowering AAV-ZF-TFs were alive at 400 dpi, with attendant improvements
in weight gain, nest-building, and plasma NfL. Notably, increasing plasma NfL levels
were arrested abruptly following ZF-TF treatment at both intervention points, suggesting
a rapid attenuation of neurodegeneration.
Conclusions: ZF-TFs can substantially lower PrP in the brain, extend survival, and
alter disease trajectory in a robust prion inoculation mouse mode. These results support
the continued development of a genomic medicine for the treatment of prion disease.
Funded by: Sangamo Therapeutics, CJD Foundation
An imaging-based bimolecular fluorescence complementation assay to screen for unconjugated
degraders for the cellular prion protein
Ilaria Zenia, Valerio Bonaldoa, Tania Massignanb& Emiliano Biasinia
aDepartment CIBIO, University of Trento; bSibylla Biotech S.R.L.
Aims: Bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC) has been initially developed
to detect protein-protein interactions. In the standard BiFC design, two fragments
of a fluorescent protein are individually fused to two potentially interacting proteins.
As a consequence of such interaction, the fluorescent protein fragments come to proximity,
enabling fluorophore reconstitution (complementation) and leading to a fluorescent
signal. Fluorescent protein fragments with an intrinsically high interaction affinity
could theoretically allow employing BiFC as a way to artificially bring to proximity
two proteins residing in the same intracellular compartment. We aim to develop an
imaging-based bimolecular fluorescence complementation assay (BiFC) to rapidly quantify
the cellular prion protein’s expression, trafficking, and degradation (PrP) in real-time.
The technique will also allow us to screen directly for compounds that promote PrP
degradation.
Material and Methods: The opportunity for the application of BiFC to study the expression,
trafficking, and degradation of PrP is provided by the recent development of a superfolder
green fluorescent protein (sfGFP) split into two non-symmetrical halves, one containing
the first ten β-strands of the original β-barrel domain (GFP1-10) and the other represented
by the single missing β-strand (GFP11) (1). GFP1-10 and GFP11 re-assemble spontaneously,
without the need to be fused to interacting proteins. We have attached GFP11 to the
C-terminus of PrP and conjugated the GFP1-10 reporter with a signal peptide that restricts
expression to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER-GFP1-10). This system could allow monitoring
of the expression kinetics of PrP in real-time.
Results: We have collected preliminary evidence about the usefulness and feasibility
of the GFP1-10/GFP11 system for rapidly monitoring the expression of PrP by live imaging.
We have transfected PrP-GFP11 expressed under the control of an inducible promoter
into HEK293 recipient cells transduced with a lentiviral vector encoding for an ER-GFP1-10.
Imaging analysis revealed a specific intracellular fluorescent signal only when both
PrP-GFP11 and ER-GFP1-10 were co-expressed, suggesting that the assay is a viable
method to monitor PrP expression.
Conclusions: Our results introduced a novel imaging-based paradigm to study PrP expression
in real-time. The recent generation of fluorescently diversified GFP1-10 reporters,
which could emit at different wavelengths once complemented by the same GFP11 fragment,
will allow us to employ different GFP1-10 constructs restricted to specific cellular
sites along the expression pathway of PrP, including ER, Golgi, plasma membrane, endosomal-recycling
vesicles, and lysosomes. This strategy could provide a unique opportunity for live
tracking PrP expression in different experimental conditions.
References: 1. Kamiyama et al., Nat Comm 2017.
Funded by: Fondazione Telethon, Italy
Grant number: GGP20043
Funded by: CJD Foundation, USA
Acknowledgments: We thank Antonio Casini, Alia Therapeutics S.R.L., for useful advice
regarding the generation of lentiviral vectors.
ASO-mediated PrP suppression as disease modifying therapy for prion disease
Hien T. Zhaoa, Deborah Cabinb, Jill O’Mooreb, Eric V. Minikelc, Sonia M. Vallabhc,
and Holly B. Kordasiewicza
aNeurology Research, Ionis Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Carlsbad, CA, USA; bMcLaughlin Research
Institute, Great Falls, MT, USA; cBroad Institute, MIT, Cambridge, MA, USA
Aims: To evaluate plasma neurofilament light chain (NfL) response, a disease biomarker
of neuroaxonal injury, and survival effects in the RML prion mouse model following
treatment with a PrP-lowering antisense oligonucleotide (ASO)
Material and Methods: Groups of N = 12 wildtype C57BL/6N mice were inoculated with
RML prions and received either 100 µg, 300 µg or 500 µg PrP ASO or saline via CSF
delivery at 60 days post infection (dpi), while uninoculated mice were included as
controls. These ASO dose levels correspond to roughly 20–60% Prnp mRNA knockdown based
on prior studies (Minikel et al., 2020). At 60 dpi, plasma NfL is elevated, prion
pathology is established and neuroinflammation is increasing; overt behavioral phenotypes
typically develop by 125 dpi (Minikel et al., 2020). Plasma NfL was quantified from
bleeds taken at 1-day pre-ASO treatment, then every 30 days onward. Animals were followed
to the terminal disease endpoint, as defined by 20% weight loss compared to baseline
60 dpi, or death. Paradigms with multiple ASO administrations with varied dosing intervals
were also assessed, e.g. 2 administrations 60 days apart, or up to 4 administrations
at 60, 90, or 120 days interval. ASO administration at 120 dpi was also evaluated.
Results: Plasma NfL levels steadily rose through terminal illness in RML-inoculated
mice treated with saline and remained unchanged in uninoculated animals. A dose-dependent
delay in plasma NfL rise was observed in RML-inoculated mice treated with a single
administration of ASO at 60 dpi, which corresponded to a dose-dependent extension
in survival of up to 40%. Administrations of additional ASO further delayed plasma
NfL rise and further extended survival in RML-inoculated mice up to 200%. In an RML-inoculated
cohort where treatment was initiated at 120 dpi, plasma NfL levels fell significantly
in ASO-treated mice compared to the pre-dose time point, suggesting a reversal of
pathology driving the 35% – 53% increase in survival time to terminal endpoint.
Conclusions: These data demonstrate efficacy of ASO-mediated PrP suppression across
varying degrees of Prnp mRNA suppression and therapeutic paradigms. Our studies support
the use of plasma NfL as a disease biomarker indicative of disease state, as it correlates
with disease course in the animal model and with clinical benefit (i.e., survival
extension) following ASO-mediated PrP lowering.
Funded by: Ionis Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Acknowledgement: The authors thanked Brittany Ford for technical assistance.