articleScienceOct 30, 2003Closed access

Depleting Neuronal PrP in Prion Infection Prevents Disease and Reverses Spongiosis

MRC Prion Unit

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

The mechanisms involved in prion neurotoxicity are unclear, and therapies preventing accumulation of PrPSc, the disease-associated form of prion protein (PrP), do not significantly prolong survival in mice with central nervous system prion infection. We found that depleting endogenous neuronal PrPc in mice with established neuroinvasive prion infection reversed early spongiform change and prevented neuronal loss and progression to clinical disease. This occurred despite the accumulation of extraneuronal PrPSc to levels seen in terminally ill wild-type animals. Thus, the propagation of nonneuronal PrPSc is not pathogenic, but arresting the continued conversion of PrPc to PrPSc within neurons during scrapie…

Citation impact

759
total citations
FWCI
15.46
Percentile
100%
References
22
Citations per year

Authors

6

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Scrapie
  • Neurotoxicity
  • Spongiosis
  • Biology
  • Disease
  • Virology
  • Prion protein
  • Central nervous system
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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