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Proteins are fundamental components of
all living cells:
The hemoglobin
Hormones
Antibodies
Enzymes
Actin and myosin,Keratin
Collagen ……………
“All are proteins”
Proteins
 Primary structures
 Secondary structure
 The most common shapes are the alpha helix
and the beta conformation.
Secondary Structure
α helix β sheet
+ +
variable
loops =
Tertiary Structure
Secondary structure of a protein
Examples of alpha helices
and beta sheets
 Only one of these many ways allows the protein
to function properly.
 Too much of a misfolded protein could be worse
than too little of a normally folded one.
 This is because a misfolded protein can actually
poison the cells around it.
Why do proteins fold ?
To cary out their function a protein should fold
and attain stability
Transmissibility in 1943 when a population of
Scottish sheep was inoculated against a
common virus with a formalin extract of
lymphoid tissue unknowingly derieved from
an animal with scrapie after two years nearly
10 of flock developed Scrapie.
GORDON 1946
History of Prions
 Sometimes a scientific discovery shakes
the confidence of scientists, making them
question whether they truly understand
nature's "ground rules."
 That's exactly what prions have done to
scientists, understanding of the ground
rules for infectious diseases.
Confusion created by Prions
Contd…
 After some years a clinically and pathologically
Similar human disease KURU meaning “trembling”.
 Lead to hypotheses that the nature
of infectious agent ranging from a Replicating
polysaccharide to Nucleo protein complex
 Filterable, formalin treatment didn’t completely
abolish infectivity.
Kuru victims- lose the ability to walk, talk, and
see
Gajdusek
Scrapie
 The prototype (18th
century in England)
 Causes intense itching to make the sheep
scrape off their wool
 A natural progressive brain disease
 Evidence of transmissibility during
vaccination
Dr Stanely Prusiner
The Prion Hypothesis
“ a replicating protein”
 The molecular nature was a mystery till 15 years
 Stanley Prusiner showed its assosciation with a
specific Protein.
 Activity of prion was inactivated by
proteinase K, Diethylpyrocarbonate, Urea,
Phenol and SDS.
 Activity not lost by nuclease treatments
or UV irrradiation.
Nature of prions
Contd..
 PrP is a 250 amino-acid residue glycosylated protein
connected to GPI-anchor.
 The primary structure of PrP encoded by the gene of a
normal was found to be identical to that encoded by a
c DNA from a scrapie infected animal
 Ab against prP 27-30 identified the prp protein
in the brain of uninfected animals and in many
tissues as a 33-35KDa glycosylated
species,termed PrPC.
The normal protein is called
 PrPC-alpha helices.
 PrPSc- forscrapie
 Beta helices
Nomenclature of Prion Protein
 PrPSc
has the ability to convert
PrPc
to Itself
Conformational Differences between PrPc and PrPsc
PrPc PrPsc
Monomeric Multimeric
Soluble Insoluble
Protease sensitive Protease resistant
Predominantly alpha helices Beta helices
A protein of identical size was also observed in scrapie-infected
brain extracts.
Limited proteinase k digestion
Prpc completely degraded.
Prpsc a protein in infected
Brain was only partially
cleaved
66 aa on –NH2 terminus
Yields PrP 27-30
 Proteinaceous infectious particles
 Abnormal proteins that have an affinity for the
CNS
 Very highly resistant to heating (survive
routine autoclaving)
 Not sensitive to irradiation
 Not destroyed by enzymes that damage DNA
or
RNA
 Sensitive to protein denaturing agents
Characteristic features of Prions
Contd…
 Abnormal prions contact and change the
shapes of other normal prions in the nerve cell.
 The nerve cell tries to get rid of them
 When the cell dies, the abnormal prions are
released to infect other cells.
 Large, sponge-like holes are left where many cells
die.
 Sheep - Scrapie Spongiform Encephalopathy.
 Chronic Wasting Disease -Elk, Deer
 Cow - Bovine spongiform encephalopaty
 Human - Creutzfeldt-Jakobs Disease
Kind of Disease they cause in Different animals
Cerebral cortex : loss of memory and mental acuity,visual impairment (CJD)
Thalamus : Damage to the thalamus may result in insomnia (FFI)
Cerebellum : problems to coordinate body movements and difficulties to walk
(kuru, GSS)
Brain stem : In the mad cow disease (BSE), the brain stem is affected
Prion replication theories
2) Splitting theory
1) The nucleated polymerization theory
Jarret and Lansbury, (Cell 1993)
PrPC
PrPSC
PrPC
PrPsc
fibrils
Plaque
How are these abnormal proteins acquired?
 Spontaneous conversion
 A mutation in the prion gene in a brain
cell
 Inherit the abnormal gene from your
parents
 Ingestion of the protein
 Humans could be accidentally infected
with the protein (iatrogenic) Needles,
Tissue, Pituitary extracts
How are Prion Diseses Usually Diagnosed ?
 There is no blood test to detect the presence of
prions
 Currently there are two laboratory methods to
confirm a diagnosis:
– Microscopic examination of the brain tissue
– Special staining and microscopic techniques to
detect the partially-proteinase resistant form of
the prion (PrP) protein. SDS PAGE
Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy
First noted in UK in early 1985
Animals fed rendered sheep meal
Prevalence peaked at about 35,000
animals
2 to 4 year incubation time (longer?)
Loss of motor control, other neural
control
 Following the onset of clinical signs, the
animals condition deteriorates until it either
dies or is destroyed.
 This process usually takes from 2 weeks to 6
months.
 Most cases in Great Britain (where it was first
detected) have occurred in dairy cows
between 3 to 6 years of age.
How Does it Progress?
There are three phases of BSE in
cattle:
 The first phase:
Low infectivity rate, and the cow does not pose a large
threat to humans at this level
 The second phase:
Symptoms are not evident, but the infectivity level is
very high
The prion agent is abundant in both the spinal chord and
the brain – the cow is a risk to public health
 The third phase:
Cattle affected by BSE
experience progressive
degeneration of the
nervous system.
Affected animals may display changes
in temperament, nervousness or
aggression,abnormal posture……….
How to identify the affected
Cattle
 Prions in cattle are mainly from the carcasses
of scrapie-infected sheep
 Infected sheep brains and other sheep
byproducts infected with scrapie is used to
feed cattle with the meat and bone meal
 The prions are concentrated in the brain, and
spinal cord of these animals
How Prions transmitted from Sheep to Cattle?
 UK still had about 200 BSE cases in 2005.
Portugal and Spain are still increasing in
numbers of BSE cases.
Cattle on the way to
Grave yard
Impact of mad cow disease on economy
 The shock wave ripples across the world.
 Import bans imposed by many other nations have cut deeply into
the US beef industry
 Direct and indirect economic activity from the industry adds up to
$188 billion annually, making it the largest portion of the nation's
food and fiber industry in US
 Japan which had been the largest importer of US beef - continues
to demand that all US cattle scheduled for export be tested for
BSE
 One challenge is that the animals have to be killed in order to test
for BSE.
Mad Cow Disease in
Humans
 When cattle brains and other cattle byproducts
infected with BSE are ingested by humans, there
is a risk of developing the Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease
How did BSE Transfer to Humans
 Sheep with Scrapie used in Meat and Bone
Meal (MBM) – known as “Offal”
 MBM fed to cattle
 Infected Beef eaten by humans
 Not affected by cooking
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD)
 Identified by Creutzfeldt and Jakob (1920)
 A progressive fatal neurodegenerative disease of
unknown cause
 Characterized by seizures, massive
incoordination, dementia
 Incidence about 1/1,000,000
CJD is classified into 2 forms:
 Classic CJD & Variant CJD
 Classic CJD can be transmitted to other species,
however other animals cannot carry it. Variant Creutzfeldtt-Jakob Disease (vCJD), is
caused by the consumption of BSE infected
meat products
 First 10 cases of variant CJD were observed
in 1996, ten years after the outbreak of BSE in
the UK
Variant CJD seems to affect mostly young patients
New Treatment for vCJD?
 A 19-year-old male from Belfast has been
treated with pentosan polysulphate by injection
into the brain
There is no Cure for
Mad Cow Disease
&
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease
Prevention is the
only available
option
What is the risk?
Mad cow disease in india
Epidemic that struck Europe had its
roots in India
Lancet
“thank you”

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Prions

  • 1.
  • 2. Proteins are fundamental components of all living cells: The hemoglobin Hormones Antibodies Enzymes Actin and myosin,Keratin Collagen …………… “All are proteins”
  • 3. Proteins  Primary structures  Secondary structure  The most common shapes are the alpha helix and the beta conformation. Secondary Structure α helix β sheet + + variable loops = Tertiary Structure
  • 4. Secondary structure of a protein Examples of alpha helices and beta sheets
  • 5.  Only one of these many ways allows the protein to function properly.  Too much of a misfolded protein could be worse than too little of a normally folded one.  This is because a misfolded protein can actually poison the cells around it. Why do proteins fold ?
  • 6. To cary out their function a protein should fold and attain stability
  • 7. Transmissibility in 1943 when a population of Scottish sheep was inoculated against a common virus with a formalin extract of lymphoid tissue unknowingly derieved from an animal with scrapie after two years nearly 10 of flock developed Scrapie. GORDON 1946 History of Prions
  • 8.  Sometimes a scientific discovery shakes the confidence of scientists, making them question whether they truly understand nature's "ground rules."  That's exactly what prions have done to scientists, understanding of the ground rules for infectious diseases. Confusion created by Prions Contd…
  • 9.  After some years a clinically and pathologically Similar human disease KURU meaning “trembling”.  Lead to hypotheses that the nature of infectious agent ranging from a Replicating polysaccharide to Nucleo protein complex  Filterable, formalin treatment didn’t completely abolish infectivity.
  • 10. Kuru victims- lose the ability to walk, talk, and see Gajdusek
  • 11. Scrapie  The prototype (18th century in England)  Causes intense itching to make the sheep scrape off their wool  A natural progressive brain disease  Evidence of transmissibility during vaccination
  • 12. Dr Stanely Prusiner The Prion Hypothesis “ a replicating protein”
  • 13.  The molecular nature was a mystery till 15 years  Stanley Prusiner showed its assosciation with a specific Protein.  Activity of prion was inactivated by proteinase K, Diethylpyrocarbonate, Urea, Phenol and SDS.  Activity not lost by nuclease treatments or UV irrradiation. Nature of prions Contd..
  • 14.  PrP is a 250 amino-acid residue glycosylated protein connected to GPI-anchor.  The primary structure of PrP encoded by the gene of a normal was found to be identical to that encoded by a c DNA from a scrapie infected animal  Ab against prP 27-30 identified the prp protein in the brain of uninfected animals and in many tissues as a 33-35KDa glycosylated species,termed PrPC.
  • 15. The normal protein is called  PrPC-alpha helices.  PrPSc- forscrapie  Beta helices Nomenclature of Prion Protein  PrPSc has the ability to convert PrPc to Itself
  • 16. Conformational Differences between PrPc and PrPsc PrPc PrPsc Monomeric Multimeric Soluble Insoluble Protease sensitive Protease resistant Predominantly alpha helices Beta helices
  • 17.
  • 18. A protein of identical size was also observed in scrapie-infected brain extracts. Limited proteinase k digestion Prpc completely degraded. Prpsc a protein in infected Brain was only partially cleaved 66 aa on –NH2 terminus Yields PrP 27-30
  • 19.  Proteinaceous infectious particles  Abnormal proteins that have an affinity for the CNS  Very highly resistant to heating (survive routine autoclaving)  Not sensitive to irradiation  Not destroyed by enzymes that damage DNA or RNA  Sensitive to protein denaturing agents Characteristic features of Prions Contd…
  • 20.  Abnormal prions contact and change the shapes of other normal prions in the nerve cell.  The nerve cell tries to get rid of them  When the cell dies, the abnormal prions are released to infect other cells.  Large, sponge-like holes are left where many cells die.
  • 21.  Sheep - Scrapie Spongiform Encephalopathy.  Chronic Wasting Disease -Elk, Deer  Cow - Bovine spongiform encephalopaty  Human - Creutzfeldt-Jakobs Disease Kind of Disease they cause in Different animals
  • 22. Cerebral cortex : loss of memory and mental acuity,visual impairment (CJD) Thalamus : Damage to the thalamus may result in insomnia (FFI) Cerebellum : problems to coordinate body movements and difficulties to walk (kuru, GSS) Brain stem : In the mad cow disease (BSE), the brain stem is affected
  • 23. Prion replication theories 2) Splitting theory 1) The nucleated polymerization theory Jarret and Lansbury, (Cell 1993)
  • 25.
  • 28. How are these abnormal proteins acquired?  Spontaneous conversion  A mutation in the prion gene in a brain cell  Inherit the abnormal gene from your parents  Ingestion of the protein  Humans could be accidentally infected with the protein (iatrogenic) Needles, Tissue, Pituitary extracts
  • 29. How are Prion Diseses Usually Diagnosed ?  There is no blood test to detect the presence of prions  Currently there are two laboratory methods to confirm a diagnosis: – Microscopic examination of the brain tissue – Special staining and microscopic techniques to detect the partially-proteinase resistant form of the prion (PrP) protein. SDS PAGE
  • 30. Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy First noted in UK in early 1985 Animals fed rendered sheep meal Prevalence peaked at about 35,000 animals 2 to 4 year incubation time (longer?) Loss of motor control, other neural control
  • 31.  Following the onset of clinical signs, the animals condition deteriorates until it either dies or is destroyed.  This process usually takes from 2 weeks to 6 months.  Most cases in Great Britain (where it was first detected) have occurred in dairy cows between 3 to 6 years of age. How Does it Progress?
  • 32. There are three phases of BSE in cattle:  The first phase: Low infectivity rate, and the cow does not pose a large threat to humans at this level  The second phase: Symptoms are not evident, but the infectivity level is very high The prion agent is abundant in both the spinal chord and the brain – the cow is a risk to public health  The third phase:
  • 33. Cattle affected by BSE experience progressive degeneration of the nervous system.
  • 34. Affected animals may display changes in temperament, nervousness or aggression,abnormal posture……….
  • 35. How to identify the affected Cattle
  • 36.
  • 37.  Prions in cattle are mainly from the carcasses of scrapie-infected sheep  Infected sheep brains and other sheep byproducts infected with scrapie is used to feed cattle with the meat and bone meal  The prions are concentrated in the brain, and spinal cord of these animals How Prions transmitted from Sheep to Cattle?
  • 38.  UK still had about 200 BSE cases in 2005. Portugal and Spain are still increasing in numbers of BSE cases.
  • 39. Cattle on the way to Grave yard
  • 40. Impact of mad cow disease on economy
  • 41.  The shock wave ripples across the world.  Import bans imposed by many other nations have cut deeply into the US beef industry  Direct and indirect economic activity from the industry adds up to $188 billion annually, making it the largest portion of the nation's food and fiber industry in US  Japan which had been the largest importer of US beef - continues to demand that all US cattle scheduled for export be tested for BSE  One challenge is that the animals have to be killed in order to test for BSE.
  • 42.
  • 43. Mad Cow Disease in Humans  When cattle brains and other cattle byproducts infected with BSE are ingested by humans, there is a risk of developing the Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease
  • 44. How did BSE Transfer to Humans  Sheep with Scrapie used in Meat and Bone Meal (MBM) – known as “Offal”  MBM fed to cattle  Infected Beef eaten by humans  Not affected by cooking
  • 45. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD)  Identified by Creutzfeldt and Jakob (1920)  A progressive fatal neurodegenerative disease of unknown cause  Characterized by seizures, massive incoordination, dementia  Incidence about 1/1,000,000
  • 46. CJD is classified into 2 forms:  Classic CJD & Variant CJD  Classic CJD can be transmitted to other species, however other animals cannot carry it. Variant Creutzfeldtt-Jakob Disease (vCJD), is caused by the consumption of BSE infected meat products  First 10 cases of variant CJD were observed in 1996, ten years after the outbreak of BSE in the UK Variant CJD seems to affect mostly young patients
  • 47. New Treatment for vCJD?  A 19-year-old male from Belfast has been treated with pentosan polysulphate by injection into the brain
  • 48. There is no Cure for Mad Cow Disease & Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease Prevention is the only available option
  • 49. What is the risk?
  • 50. Mad cow disease in india Epidemic that struck Europe had its roots in India Lancet