NR AQGQ

AU Banks,W.A.; Niehoff,M.L.; Adessi,C.; Soto,C.

TI Passage of murine scrapie prion protein across the mouse vascular blood-brain barrier

QU Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 2004 May 21; 318(1): 125-30

PT journal article

AB Prions are the infectious agents associated with transmissible spongiform encephalopathies and are composed mainly of a misfolded form of the endogenous prion protein. Prion protein must enter the brain to produce disease. Previous work has emphasized various mechanisms which partially bypass the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Here, we used the brain perfusion method to directly assess the ability of mouse scrapie protein (PrPsc) to cross the mouse BBB independent of the influences of neural pathways or circulating immune cells. We found that PrPsc oligomers rapidly crossed the BBB without disrupting it with a unidirectional influx rate of about 4.4microl/g-min. HPLC and capillary depletion confirmed that PrPsc crossed the entire width of the capillary wall to enter brain parenchyma. PrPsc also entered the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) compartment. These results show that a prion protein can cross the intact BBB to enter both the parenchymal and CSF compartments of the brain.

MH Animals; Blood-Brain Barrier/*metabolism; Brain/blood supply; Comparative Study; Iodine Radioisotopes; Mice; Perfusion/methods; PrPsc Proteins/genetics/*pharmacokinetics; Recombinant Proteins/genetics/pharmacokinetics; Statistical Distributions; Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.; Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.; Technetium

AD GRECC, Veterans Affairs Medical Center-St. Louis and Division of Geriatrics, Department of Internal Medicine, Saint Louis University School of Medicine, 915 N. Grand Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63106, USA. bankswa@slu.edu

SP englisch

PO USA

EA pdf-Datei

Autorenindex - authors index
Startseite - home page