Researchers discover possible
diagnosis, treatment, vaccine for mad cow, prion diseases
Microscopic image of a
tissue sample from a human brain that shows a clump of infectious
prions (dark pink area).
Credit: Dr. Neil Cashman of the University of Toronto.
Full size image available through contact
Research led by scientists at the U of T and Caprion
Pharmaceuticals have uncovered the basis for a diagnostic, immunotherapy and
vaccine, providing a way to detect and treat the brain-wasting damage of
infectious prions like those found in mad cow disease and its human version,
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease.
Dr. Neil Cashman, a principal investigator at U of T's Centre for Research in
Neurodegenerative Diseases and professor in the Department of Medicine
(neurology) and a Caprion founder, says a vaccine approach - which would likely
be of most use in animals and livestock - could prevent animals from becoming
infected. For humans with diseases like classical or variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob,
an immunotherapeutic would provide patients with antibodies that bind infectious
prions, enabling the immune system to recognize and attack them. For both humans
and animals, the diagnostic screening potential of this discovery could
significantly improve the safety of the human blood and food systems.
Cashman, who also holds the Jeno Diener Chair in Neurodegenerative Diseases
at U of T, says his team tried a new approach in studying infectious prions,
which are particles thought to be composed of normal prion proteins that have
been compromised and folded into rogue shapes. "The usual way of raising
antibodies in the immune system is to grind the infectious agent up and inject
it into a mouse to see if it prompts antibody production," he says. "Scientists
have tried this method with prions over the past 15 years, all without success.
My group decided to examine it from the sub-molecular level to determine if
antibodies would recognize and react to the amino acids exposed at the surface
of a prion. It was a novel idea, and when we found that our hypothesis actually
worked, we were surprised and pleased." The researchers' findings are reported
online in the June 1 version of Nature Medicine.
When a normal prion protein (PrPc)
comes in contact with an infectious prion (PrPsc), it is recruited
and converted into an infectious prion.
Credit: Dr. Neil Cashman of the University of Toronto.
Full size image available through contact
All mammals have prion proteins, the highest levels of which are present in
the brain, explains Cashman, a senior scientist at Sunnybrook and Women's
Research Institute and a neurologist in the Department of Medicine at Sunnybrook
and Women's College Health Sciences Centre. Mammals can contract prion diseases
by ingesting abnormal or infectious prions. From the digestive system, these
prions make their way to the brain. When an abnormal prion comes in contact with
a normal prion protein, it causes the protein to misfold, thus creating a copy
of the infectious prion. Cashman says the process is more akin to co-opting than
replication. However, since the abnormal prion has similar characteristics to
the original host protein, the immune system does not recognize it as a foreign
invader and does not attack it.
In their study, Cashman and his colleagues examined the role of chemical
groups in amino acids, which are called side chains. "We wanted to see whether
there were side chains accessible on abnormal prions that were not accessible on
the normal protein. We hypothesized that in a normal prion protein, there will
be side chains buried in the interior of the molecule. When the protein converts
to the abnormal form, we thought that some of these side chains would then be
exposed on the molecular surface. We discovered that the newly exposed side
chains of abnormal prions include a sequence composed of three amino acids -
tyrosine, tyrosine and arginine (Tyr-Tyr-Arg). By raising antibodies against the
Tyr-Tyr-Arg amino acid sequence, the immune system became able to recognize the
abnormal prion as an invader and attack it."
A representation
showing the tyrosine-tyrosine-arginine amino acid sequence (the
yellow, green and purple clumps) on the infectious prion.
Credit: Dr. Neil Cashman of the University of Toronto.
Full size image available through contact
"It was a 'Eureka!' moment," he recalls. "Significantly, while the antibodies
recognized the abnormal prions, they left the normal prion proteins intact."
Cashman and his team further found that the tyrosine-tyrosine-arginine amino
acid sequence appears to be common among species. "Different species have
different sequences of prion proteins," he says. "But this Tyr-Tyr-Arg motif
appears to be the same in every species that we've been able to look at -
humans, cattle, mice, hamsters, sheep and elk. When we applied our antibodies to
the infected tissues and cells of our samples, they only bound to the abnormal
prion protein in all these species."
The researchers are currently testing a possible vaccine to prion disease in
mice. They plan to immunize mice with the Tyr-Tyr-Arg sequence and then infect
them with prions.
"In order to treat prion diseases in the most effective way possible, it is
necessary to understand the manner in which prion proteins fold into a
pathological form," says Dr. Bhagirath Singh, scientific director of the
Institute of Infection and Immunity of the Canadian Institutes of Health
Research. "Dr. Cashman's discovery is a vital step in understanding the causes
of prion diseases and will play key a role in developing vaccines and a new
generation of drugs to combat this condition."
The immediate commercial applications of the discoveries are diagnostics, as
global health authorities urgently seek to ensure that beef and transfused blood
are safe from Mad Cow-related infections. "Neil's discovery represents the
single most promising hope for diagnosing and treating this fatal disease,"
notes Lloyd M. Segal, president and CEO of Caprion. Caprion has already
announced collaborations with Johnson & Johnson and IDEXX Laboratories to apply
these technologies for the development of diagnostics for prion-related
diseases, he adds.
###
Caprion provided the major funding and support for this pioneering research
and own all commercial applications of the discoveries. This research was also
supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and McDonald's Corp.
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