Prions and the lymphoreticular system

Following intracerebral or peripheral inoculation of mice with scrapie prions, infectivity accumulates first in the spleen and only later in the brain. In the spleen of scrapie-infected mice, prions were found in association with T and B lymphocytes and to a somewhat lesser degree with the stroma, w...

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Veröffentlicht in:Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological sciences 2001-02, Vol.356 (1406), p.177-184
Hauptverfasser: Dobson, C. M., Ellis, R. J., Fersht, A. R., Weissmann, Charles, Raeber, Alex J., Montrasio, Fabio, Hegyi, Ivan, Frigg, Rico, Klein, Michael A., Aguzzi, Adriano
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Following intracerebral or peripheral inoculation of mice with scrapie prions, infectivity accumulates first in the spleen and only later in the brain. In the spleen of scrapie-infected mice, prions were found in association with T and B lymphocytes and to a somewhat lesser degree with the stroma, which contains the follicular dendritic cells (FDCs) but not with non-B, non-T cells; strikingly, no infectivity was found in lymphocytes from blood of the same mice. Transgenic PrP knockout mice expressing PrP restricted to either B or T lymphocytes show no prion replication in the lymphoreticular system. Therefore, splenic lymphocytes either acquire prions from another source or replicate them in dependency on other PrP-expressing cells. The essential role of FDCs in prion replication in spleen was shown by treating mice with soluble lymphotoxin-β receptor, which led to disappearance of mature FDCs from the spleen and concomitantly abolished splenic prion accumulation and retarded neuroinvasion following intraperitoneal scrapie inoculation.
ISSN:0962-8436
1471-2970
DOI:10.1098/rstb.2000.0763