Genetics of Prion Diseases
Normal cellular prion protein is encoded by a single exon of a single copy gene.
Can a mutated prion gene result in disease without exogenous infection or predispose an individual to exogenous infection?
There are at least 20 known mutations in the PrP gene sequence resulting in "spontaneous" PrPsc formation.
Experimental transmission of BSE to a variety of animals including sheep suggests that susceptibility is not entirely controlled by overall sequence similarity between donor and recipient PrP.
According to Goldman et al.
(1996) the combined effects of six amino acid differences between sheep
and bovine PrP proteins appear to be outweighed by a single additional change
at codon 171 indicating that this may be a crucial region. While these alterations
and relationships are interesting, correlation between any single feature
of a PrP protein sequence and likely transmissibility must be demonstrated
experimentally.
Collinge et al.
(1995) ref unk. suggest aberrant bovine PrP
is unlikely to affect normal human PrP. Researchers at the Imperial College
School of Medicine studied mice genetically-engineered to produce human prion
protein as well as normal mouse prion protein. When injected with CJD the mice
fell victim to the disease, demonstrating that with human PrP,
the human disease CJD was transmitted. They then exposed similar mice to BSE.
Abnormal mouse PrP was
formed, but no abnormal human PrP,
suggesting the bovine PrP
does not interact with the human protein to cause disease. However, the human
PrP used for this work was hPrP V129 which appears not to be susceptible to
BSE.
These experiments were repeated with genetically-modified mice that express only human PrP and no mouse PrP. These remain well at 500+ days after inoculation (300 days longer than for CJD to develop in mice of this genotype) and are approaching their natural life span of 600-700 days..
Mice with a murine transgene with the P102L GSS mutation spontaneously develop a lethal scrapie-like disease.
"Knock out" mice (mice lacking PrP completely) do not develop overt prion disease (even on challenge) which probably indicates that loss of normal PrP function is not responsible for disease characteristics.