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From the Laboratory of Persistent Viral Diseases,* Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Hamilton, Montana; and the Laboratory of Immunology,
National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland
| Abstract |
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Studies of the pathology of scrapie have primarily focused on changes in the brain and spinal cord where the most characteristic lesion consists of spongy vacuolar degeneration of gray and sometimes white matter.12 As an extension of the central nervous system, the retina has increasingly featured in pathological studies because of its relatively simple architecture and well-described physiological properties. An early description of retinal degeneration in natural scrapie of sheep13 was followed by reports of retinal changes in laboratory rodents with experimental scrapie, and there is now a significant amount of information available about the targeting and infectivity of mouse scrapie in the rodent visual system.14,15 Retinopathy in mice after intraocular inoculation is dependent on the strain of scrapie and the genotype of mouse.16 Some scrapie strains (22C, ME7, 87A, and 87V) produce minimal or no retinal pathology, whereas other strains (79A and 139A) produce degeneration of the photoreceptor layer in several mouse genotypes. This pathology occurs in hamsters terminally sick with the 263K strain of scrapie,17,18 and retinal degeneration has also been observed in mice after infection with human Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.19 Although neurons are clearly affected in the disease process, it is still unclear what role other cells have in scrapie pathogenesis.
The development of hamster PrP (HaPrP)-transgenic mice has made it possible to experimentally separate PrP-sen expression in neural or glial cell types in vivo. In the present study we took advantage of mice that differentially express hamster PrP (HaPrP) under the control of the neuron-specific enolase (NSE) promoter (tgNSE);20 the astrocyte-specific glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) gene promoter (tgGFAP);21 or the endogenous PrP promoter (tg7), which drives the expression of HaPrP in many tissues.22 In these original studies intracerebral scrapie inoculation induced clinical disease in all three transgenic lines, although the incubation period for tgGFAP mice was found to be considerably longer than for the other two lines.
In this report, we have used the direct intraocular route for scrapie infection of these transgenic mouse lines to establish a localized infection for early histopathological analysis. Disease susceptibility as well as pathological effects on both retinal and brain tissue were analyzed. In these experiments all three lines of transgenic mice were susceptible to scrapie after intraocular inoculation, but the appearance and distribution of PrP-res in the retinas after infection varied in the different transgenic lines. Furthermore, these lines differed in the extent of retinal degeneration and apoptosis observed suggesting that the cell types expressing PrP-sen had a strong influence on the pathological processes in retina.
| Materials and Methods |
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All mice were bred and raised at the Rocky Mountain Laboratories and were handled according to policies of the Rocky Mountain Laboratories Animal Care and Use Committee and all applicable federal guidelines. Adult (6 to 8 weeks old) animals were used for all experiments. The transgenic animals used in this study have been described.20-22
Mice were inoculated intraocularly, and for comparison were inoculated intracranially, intraperitoneally, and orally with hamster scrapie strain 263K. Before inoculation, mice were deeply anesthetized by intramuscular injection of a combination anesthetic cocktail containing ketamine, xylazine, and acepromazine. Approximately 2 x 105 intracranial 50% infectious doses (ID50) of hamster 263K scrapie infectivity in 1 µl of phosphate-buffered saline (pH 7.2) supplemented with 2% fetal bovine serum (Hyclone, Logan, UT) was injected unilaterally into the vitreous cavity using a 32-gauge needle attached to a 10-µl Hamilton syringe. After injection, the needle was left in the vitreal chamber for 1 minute to minimize leaking of the inoculum. Mice inoculated intracranially or intraperitoneally received 1 x 107 ID50 in a volume of 50 µl. Mice infected orally received 2 x 108 ID50 in 100 µl via a small-diameter flexible polypropylene catheter inserted over the base of the tongue
1 to 2 cm into the esophagus. All mice were observed several times each week for clinical signs of scrapie, which included weight loss, kyphosis, ataxia, and an exaggerated high-stepping gait most noticeable in the hind limbs.22
Mice exhibiting short incubation periods (less than 100 days) died within 1 to 4 days after the appearance of clinical symptoms, whereas mice exhibiting longer incubation periods had more prolonged clinical disease that lasted 10 to 14 days. Brain samples from mice in each group with clinical evidence of scrapie were analyzed for PrP-res by Western blotting to confirm the clinical diagnosis.20
Pathology and Immunohistochemistry
Mice used for histopathological analysis were lightly anesthetized, then trans-cardially perfused with 30 ml of phosphate-buffered saline. The eyes were removed and placed in Davidsons fixative (3 parts of 100% ETOH, 2 parts of 37 to 40% formaldehyde, and 1 part glacial acetic acid) for 24 hours before dehydration and paraffin-embedding. Whole brains were removed and placed in 3.7% phosphate-buffered formalin for 3 to 5 days, then cut into 2- to 3-mm coronal sections before dehydration and paraffin-embedding. Serial 4-µm sections were cut using a standard Leica microtome, placed on positive-charged glass slides and dried overnight at 56°C. All histopathological procedures were performed on brain and eye sections from both mock-infected and scrapie-infected animals including appropriate immunohistochemical controls. Ocular sections of the retina were stained by standard hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) and analyzed for degeneration by measurement of retinal thickness and the loss of normal retinal architecture. Immunohistochemical analysis was performed using the Ventana automated Nexus stainer (Ventana, Tucson, AZ). Slides were deparaffinized, rehydrated to Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.5 (GFAP staining), or 0.1 mmol/L citrate buffer, pH 6.0 (3F4 staining). Staining for GFAP used a standard avidin-biotin complex immunoperoxidase protocol using anti-GFAP at a dilution of 1:1000 (DAKO, Carpinteria, CA), biotinylated goat anti-rabbit IgG at a dilution of 1:250 (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA), and amino-ethyl carbazole as substrate (Ventana). For the detection of PrP-res, it is necessary to perform antigen retrieval by treating the sections with formic acid, or subjecting them to autoclaving and/or proteinase K digestion.23,24 The sections in this study were rehydrated and autoclaved for 20 minutes at 122°C and 22 psi in 0.1 mmol/L citrate buffer (pH 6.0). PrP-res was then stained with mouse monoclonal antibody 3F4 cell culture supernatant (1:50).25 Detection was performed with biotinylated horse anti-mouse IgG diluted 1:250 (Vector Laboratories) followed by supersensitive streptavidin diluted 1:3 in Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, buffer (Biogenex, San Ramon, CA) and amino-ethyl carbazole. Staining for caspase-3 used rabbit anti-cleaved caspase-3 at a dilution of 1:100 (Cell Signaling, Beverly, MA), biotinylated goat anti-rabbit IgG at a dilution of 1:250 (Vector Laboratories), and amino-ethyl carbazole as a substrate. Terminal dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL) staining of retinas was performed manually using terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TDT) enzyme from a NeuroTacs II in situ apoptosis detection kit (Trevigen, Gaithersburg, MD) according to the manufacturers instructions.
Real-Time Quantitative Reverse Transcriptase (RT)-Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)
Quantitative real-time RT-PCR was performed as previously described, with some modifications.26 Total RNA was isolated from whole eye and brain tissue of individual transgenic mice using an RNeasy mini kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA), plus DNase treatment. Each RNA sample was reverse-transcribed and then PCR amplified in triplicate by using TaqMan one-step RT-PCR master mix (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) in a total reaction volume of 10 µl. The relative quantity of the PrP target gene was normalized with glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) for each sample by amplifying GAPDH in separate triplicate reaction tubes. Normalized average relative PrP expression values for each sample were compared with the gene expression level of PrP from a normal hamster brain. Primer and probe sequences (Applied Biosystems) used for PrP RT-PCR were: forward, 5'-CTG GAG CAG GCC CAT GAT G; reverse, 5'-GCG GTA CAT GTT TTC ACG GTA GT; probe, 5'-CGG TCC TCC CAG TCG TTG CCA AA.
Immunoblot Analysis for PrP
Eye and brain tissues were analyzed for the presence of PrP-sen and PrP-res using Western blotting techniques as previously described20 with some modifications. For PrP-sen, 10% (w/v) homogenates of eye and brain tissue were made in modified RIPA buffer (50 mmol/L Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 1% Triton X-100, 0.2% sodium deoxycholate, and 0.2% sodium dodecyl sulfate, with protease-inhibitor cocktail tablets added according to the manufacturers recommendation; Roche, Indianapolis, IN). To remove nucleic acids, the homogenates were treated with 20 U Benzoase nuclease (Novagen, Madison, WI) for 30 minutes at 37°C, and debris was removed by centrifugation at 12,000 x g for 10 minutes at 4°C. After normalization to total protein (BCA protein quantification assay; Pierce, Rockford, IL), homogenates were diluted in 2x sample buffer to a concentration of 1 mg of tissue equivalents or appropriate serial dilution per 10 µl, boiled for 5 minutes, and run on 16% polyacrylamide gels. Proteins were transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes and probed with a 1:3000 dilution of monoclonal antibody 3F4 anti-hamster PrP for 2 hours at room temperature. Detection was with a 1:2500 dilution of goat anti-mouse IgG-alkaline phosphatase and standard enhanced chemifluorescence procedures (Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL). The blots were dried for 2 hours, scanned with a Storm phosphorimager, then analyzed with ImageQuaNT V5.2 software (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA).
PrP-res was isolated from eyes and brains of clinically sick animals as previously described,27 except proteinase K digestion was performed with 1 mg/ml of proteinase K for 30 minutes at 37°C, and the final pellets were resuspended by sonication in 100 µl of sample buffer. Five-mg tissue equivalents were run on 16% polyacrylamide gels and proteins were transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes and probed with monoclonal antibody 3F4 as described above, except detection was with goat anti-mouse IgG-horseradish peroxidase (1:3000) and standard enhanced chemiluminescence procedures (Amersham).
| Results |
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To study the effect of PrP expression in neurons or astrocytes on scrapie infection via the ocular route, tg7, tgNSE, and tgGFAP mice were inoculated intraocularly with 2 x 105 ID50 of hamster scrapie strain 263K. Tg7 mice and tgNSE mice had the most rapid course to clinical disease, and all mice died before 100 days after infection (Figure 1)
. In contrast, tgGFAP mice developed disease between 300 to 350 days after infection. These results demonstrated that expression of PrP in either neurons only or astrocytes only was sufficient to confer susceptibility to typical scrapie disease after intraocular scrapie inoculation.
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Mice were also inoculated intraperitoneally and orally. By both routes in tg7 and tgNSE animals the interval to sacrifice was longer than with intracranial or intraocular routes (Figure 1)
; however, all mice eventually succumbed to scrapie by 300 days. The tgGFAP mice developed scrapie around 350 days after infection after intraperitoneal inoculation, and this time to disease was in the same range as that seen after intraocular infection. In contrast, only 5% of the tgGFAP mice developed disease after oral inoculation. The reduced susceptibility of tgGFAP mice to infection by the oral route suggested that PrP-expressing cells or mechanisms required for oral infection were limited in the tgGFAP mice.
HaPrP Is Expressed in the Ocular Tissue of Transgenic Mice
One possible explanation for the difference in disease tempo in intraocular-inoculated tg7 and tgNSE versus tgGFAP mice is that retinal or brain PrP-sen expression could differ in these mice. To determine the possible influence of PrP expression levels, we measured hamster PrP-sen in the eyes and brains of tg7, tgNSE, and tgGFAP mice by Western blotting with serial dilutions. By this method PrP-sen was readily detected from the ocular tissue of tg7 and tgNSE mice (Figure 2A)
. However, in the tgGFAP eye PrP-sen was detected only when the protein extract from the entire eye was analyzed in a single gel lane (Figure 2A
, right). PrP-sen was detected at similar levels in the eyes of tg7 and tgNSE mice, and these levels were threefold to fourfold higher than in normal hamsters. In the eyes of tgGFAP mice PrP-sen levels were
10 times lower than hamster (Figure 2C)
.
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PrP-res Accumulation in Transgenic Mouse Retinas
The timing and location of PrP-res deposition within the central nervous system are important features of the pathogenic process of transmissible spongiform encephalopathy diseases. To determine the extent of PrP-res accumulation in the eye after ocular infection, tg7, tgNSE, and tgGFAP retinas were examined throughout the course of disease for the appearance and accumulation of PrP-res by immunohistochemical staining using the 3F4 monoclonal antibody (Figure 3)
. In tg7 mice no PrP-res was observed early in infection (28 days after infection). In these mice PrP-res accumulation was first detected midway through the course of infection (45 days after infection, compare Figure 3, D and G
). At this time point there was abundant diffuse and punctate PrP-res staining in all layers of the retina (Figure 3G)
. This finding was consistent in all animals evaluated (Table 1)
. By the time clinical symptoms were apparent (90 to 100 days after infection), the retinas had degenerated completely and residual PrP-res staining was still present (Figure 3J)
.
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The retinas from tgGFAP mice were also examined at several times from early to the clinical time of disease (28 to 355 days after infection). Because the disease course was much slower in tgGFAP mice, the midway and clinical time points were much later than in the other two transgenic lines. Similar to tg7 and tgNSE mice, PrP-res was first detected in these mice midway through the course of disease (140 days after infection, Figure 3I
). At this time there was a uniform, diffuse PrP-res staining pattern in the plexiform layers. The amount of PrP-res staining in the plexiform layers increased as the disease progressed to the clinical stage (355 days after infection) (Figure 3
, compare I and L). More PrP-res accumulated as small plaque-like deposits in the OPL compared to the inner plexiform layer, and this was consistent in all mice that were evaluated (Table 1)
. There was very little or no PrP-res staining observed in the outer nuclear layer or photoreceptor layer at any time during the course of infection (Figure 3
; F, I, and L). Interestingly, in both tgNSE and tgGFAP mice the appearance of PrP-res in the retinas after intraocular infection was primarily in the plexiform layers; with lesser involvement of the nuclear layers even late in disease.
Histopathology and Müller Cell Astrocytosis after Intraocular Inoculation of Hamster Scrapie
The up-regulation of GFAP in glial astrocytes of the brain is a prominent feature of transmissible spongiform encephalopathy diseases. The retina contains a specialized type of astroglia, the Müller cell, which under normal conditions express minimal levels of GFAP.28
However, the levels of GFAP are markedly increased in Müller cells after retinal degeneration, detachment, or disease. To determine the extent of retinal damage after scrapie infection, retinas of transgenic mice were examined for pathology by H&E and for reactive astrocytosis by anti-GFAP immunostaining (Figure 4)
. By midway through the infection, some tg7 retinas had more degeneration or atrophy of the outer nuclear layer (Table 1)
as well as some vitritis (Figure 4A
, arrow) and retinal vasculitis. This was in contrast to the tgNSE and tgGFAP retinas (Figure 4, B and C)
, which had no ocular inflammation (vitritis or vasculitis), and thinning of the outer nuclear layer was observed in only a few retinas at the midway point. By the clinical stage of disease, the tg7 retinas had progressed to loss of photoreceptor cells (Figure 4G)
. In contrast, the overall architecture of the tgNSE and tgGFAP retinas remained intact, but there was mild thinning of the outer nuclear layer and some degeneration of the inner and outer segments of the photoreceptor layer (PL) when compared to retinas earlier in the course of disease (Figure 4
, compare H with B and I with C).
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Retinal Apoptosis in Scrapie-Infected Transgenic Mice
Because there was a marked difference in the levels of PrP-res accumulation, astrocytosis, and ultimate retinal destruction in the transgenic mice after intraocular scrapie infection, we next studied the retinas for indications of apoptotic cell death. Serial sections of the same ocular tissue used for PrP-res and GFAP immunohistochemical analysis were stained for TUNEL at midway and clinical time points (Figure 5)
. Midway through disease, tg7 mice showed abundant TUNEL staining primarily in the outer nuclear layer (Figure 5B)
, while retinas from tgNSE and tgGFAP mice did not show any detectable staining (data not shown). However, at the clinical time of disease retinas from tgNSE and tgGFAP mice did show occasional positive TUNEL staining, which was mostly in the outer nuclear layer (Figure 5, C and D)
. In tg7 mice, but not in tgNSE or tgGFAP mice, there was positive immunostaining for anti-active caspase-3 (Figure 5E)
. Furthermore, in these same mice in areas with more advanced retinal degeneration there was no detectable caspase staining. Instead, there was ample morphological evidence of apoptosis with degenerative nuclear changes and apoptotic bodies, particularly in the outer nuclear layer (Figure 5F)
. Thus, the retinal degeneration observed in the retinas from tg7 mice was associated with apoptotic cell death.
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Because detection of PrP-res by immunohistochemistry is not a quantitative method PrP-res was also measured by Western blotting of retinal extracts from scrapie-infected transgenic mice at the time of clinical disease. In the eye, tg7 mice accumulated the highest levels of PrP-res (Figure 6A)
. The levels in tgNSE mice were slightly lower than in tg7, whereas in tgGFAP mice the levels were markedly lower than both tg7 and tgNSE mice (Figure 6, B and C)
. Therefore, in all three transgenic mice the relative amounts of PrP-res that accumulated in the retinal tissues were consistent with the retinal PrP-sen expression levels (Figure 2)
.
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10% of the level seen in hamsters and
3% of that seen in tg7 and tgNSE (Figure 2C)Pathology and PrP-res Distribution in the Brains of Clinically Ill Transgenic Mice
Because there was a large accumulation of PrP-res in the brains of tgGFAP mice after intraocular inoculation, we investigated the distribution of PrP-res in brain tissue of the transgenic mice at the clinical time of disease (Figure 7)
. The regional distribution of PrP-res in the brains of both tg7 (Figure 7B)
and tgNSE (Figure 7C)
mice infected with hamster scrapie intraocularly was similar to the distribution seen previously after intracranial inoculation of tgNSE mice.20
In the tg7 mice, there was abundant diffuse PrP-res found in the thalamus (Figure 7B)
. We also observed diffuse staining in the superior colliculus and olfactory bulb, and there was some focal, plaque-like staining in the cerebral cortex (not shown). There was only rarely detectable PrP-res staining in the basal ganglia, hippocampus, or cerebellar cortex. In tgNSE mice, the majority of PrP-res immunostaining in the thalamus had a diffuse staining pattern similar to tg7 mice (Figure 7C)
. However, in the hypothalamic region the PrP-res was located in or adjacent to neuronal perikarya and axons and was characterized by intense focal, punctate staining. In tgGFAP mice there was also abundant PrP-res staining in thalamus, but these mice differed from tg7 and tgNSE mice because they had unusual focal, spherical, or ovoid PrP-res staining in the hippocampus (Figure 7D)
. There was also abundant, more diffuse staining in the cerebral cortex (Figure 7D
, top), as well as intense staining in the cerebellar granule cell layer (data not shown).
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Similar to what has been observed previously after intraocular inoculations of scrapie,15,29
the appearance of PrP-res in both tg7 and tgNSE mice appeared sequentially in ascending visual target regions of the brain throughout the course of infection; firstly in the retina, next in the contralateral lateral geniculate nucleus of the thalamus, then in the superior colliculus, and finally in the visual projection of the cerebral cortex (data not shown). In contrast, the accumulation of PrP-res in the tgGFAP mice did not follow a clear progression through the visual system throughout the course of disease (Table 2)
. PrP-res was first observed in both the retina and lateral geniculate nucleus at the midpoint of infection (140 days after infection), however, subsequently PrP-res did not appear in the superior colliculus, but instead was detected in multiple brain regions outside the visual system including the cortex, hippocampus, and granule cell layer of the cerebellum at 200 days after infection. This widespread distribution was maintained through the final disease progression to the clinical stage at 355 days after infection. Therefore, in tgGFAP mice progression of PrP-res detection did not appear to follow the neurons of the visual system as it did in tg7 and tgNSE mice. Instead, PrP-res accumulations appeared to diverge into various adjacent regions after initial establishment in the retina and lateral geniculate nucleus.
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| Discussion |
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Retinal Müller cells are likely to be involved in the retinal pathology observed in this system. Numerous GFAP-positive Müller cells were detected at 42 days after infection in both the tg7 and the tgNSE mice; however, these cells were not prominent at 90 to 100 days after infection, ie, at the time of clinical scrapie (Figure 4)
. In tg7 mice PrP-res may be generated directly by GFAP-positive Müller cells, and injury to these cells could contribute to the pathogenesis by interrupting one of their normal neuron support roles, such as maintaining normal glutamate levels.30
It is also possible that PrP-res-positive Müller cells could release neurotoxic products such as chemokines, cytokines, or oxidative molecules.31,32
In the tgNSE mice Müller cells appeared to be activated transiently in response to the neuronal injury caused by the neuronal PrP-res generation, but this process did not proceed to neuronal death. We cannot exclude the possibility that the observation of transient GFAP-positive staining was because of death of the Müller cell by the clinical stage of disease, however this is unlikely because the TUNEL staining of tgNSE retinas was minimal throughout the course of disease (Figure 5
and data not shown). An alternative possibility could be that GFAP-positive staining disappeared in the tgNSE mice because the neuronal injury incurred was itself minor and transient.
Microglia might also play a role in the retinal degeneration seen in tg7 mice. In typical scrapie brain pathogenesis microglial activation is a prominent feature33 and in recent experiments ocular inoculation using scrapie-infected cell homogenates resulted in rapid recruitment of microglia into the retina.34 In these same experiments neurons and astrocytes exposed to scrapie in vitro were able to secrete soluble factors capable of attracting microglia. It is possible microglia can participate both as a primary cause of injury and as a component of the host response to the injury.35 In tg7 mice microglia could express PrP-sen, so they would also generate PrP-res, which could contribute to the retinal damage. Whether or not activated microglia are simply a consequence of the neurodegeneration or if they contribute to disease progression in chronic neurodegenerative diseases is not known,36 and further experiments will be required to determine the possible contributions of both microglia and Müller cells to the retinal degeneration seen in tg7 mice.
In all three transgenic mouse lines studied by intraocular inoculation in the present experiments generation of PrP-res was detected in the brain and in the contralateral retina (data not shown). These data were in agreement with previous results showing that scrapie infectivity spreads from the eye to the brain via the optic nerve and follows the neuroanatomy of the visual system in the brain14
and that spread also proceeds down the optic nerve from the brain to the eye.37
Similarly, in the present study PrP-res could be detected sequentially in the visual system in retina, lateral geniculate nucleus, and finally in the superior colliculus of tg7 and tgNSE mice. In contrast, in tgGFAP mice the pathway of spread of PrP-res from eye to brain was different. PrP-res was first detected in retina at 140 days after infection and appeared simultaneously in the lateral geniculate nucleus (Table 2)
. At the next time point tested (200 days after infection) PrP-res was detected in several regions not associated with the visual system including cerebral cortex, hippocampus, hypothalamus, and cerebellum. Thus, our data suggest that in tgGFAP mice PrP-res did not spread via the neurons of the visual system, but more likely spread by another mechanism, possibly by sequential conversion in adjacent glial cells.38,39
In the present experiments all three transgenic mouse lines developed typical scrapie central nervous system signs of disease including ataxia, kyphosis, weakness, tremor, paralysis, and somnolence. Brain pathology and neurodegeneration was also typical of scrapie with PrP-res deposition, astrogliosis, and vacuolation, even in the two mouse lines (tgGFAP and tgNSE) that had no obvious evidence of retinal degeneration. The time to death was much shorter in tg7 and tgNSE mice (100 days) compared to tgGFAP mice (335 days), and these differences appeared to correlate with the levels of hamster PrP transgene expression in brain in these mouse lines. In contrast to what was seen in the retina, the amount of PrP-res deposition in brain was far higher in the tgGFAP mice than in tg7 and tgNSE (Figure 6)
. Our previous electron microscopic studies of the tgGFAP mice indicated that PrP-res was deposited exclusively around astrocytes,40
and in these earlier studies there was evidence of severe damage to adjacent neuronal processes, suggesting that the PrP-res generated by astrocytes had an indirect pathological effect on PrP-negative neurons. Similar conclusions were drawn from in vitro studies using cells from tgGFAP mice after stimulation with a toxic PrP peptide.41
Possibly the indirect neurotoxic effects of astrocytic PrP-res are less toxic than the direct effects of neuronal PrP-res, thus requiring accumulation of astrocytic PrP-res to higher levels to achieve a significant clinical effect. This would explain the longer incubation times to clinical disease and the higher PrP-res levels in brain of tgGFAP mice at the time of sacrifice. An alternative hypothesis is that the early sites of PrP-res accumulation in tgGFAP mice are less important clinically than those involved early in the tg7 and tgNSE mice. If so, the tgGFAP mice would survive longer until the more clinically important regions were damaged, and during this time higher levels of PrP-res would accumulate as we observed. We consider this latter hypothesis less likely because in all three transgenic lines the earliest site of PrP-res appears to be the thalamus; and in tgNSE mice this thalamic accumulation appears to be sufficient to cause clinical signs leading to death. Whereas in tgGFAP mice thalamic PrP-res is found midway through the disease course, but higher levels in thalamus and elsewhere appear to be required for clinical disease and death.
| Acknowledgements |
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| Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication August 31, 2004.
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