Vaccine could wipe out
BSE and lead to therapy for CJD
Ian Sample, science
correspondent Monday June 2, 2003 The Guardian
Researchers in Canada are
testing a prototype vaccine which could halt the spread of brain-wasting
diseases such as scrapie, BSE and its human form, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
If the tests are successful, the vaccine will first be used to wipe out the
devastating infections, caused by rogue proteins called prions, in national
herds of cattle and sheep.
Prions occur naturally in all mammals and usually cause no ill-effects. But
sometimes, the proteins fold into abnormal shapes. These can then spread around
the body and convert other normal prions into abnormal, disease-causing prions
on contact.
A team led by Neil Cashman at the University of Toronto has now found what
could be the achilles heel of infectious prions. The team took normal prions and
forced them to fold into abnormal shapes in a petri dish. They found that the
prions exposed sections of protein that were usually tucked inside normal
proteins, remaining hidden.
Dr Cashman realised that the section of protein that was exposed in abnormal
prions, a short strand of three amino acids, was their weakness.
To target the abnormal prions, he cut the three amino acids out of the prions
and tagged them to a molecule known to cause an immune response in animals. He
then injected them into mice. As Dr Cashman hoped, the mice began to churn out
antibodies against the amino acids. Antibodies let the immune system identify
anything in the blood that should be destroyed.
The team then purified the antibodies from the mice and tested them to see if
they could identify infectious prions from other animals.
"The amazing thing is that once we found it worked for hamster scrapie and
mouse scrapie, we tested all the samples we could lay our hands on, from vCJD in
humans, to BSE in cattle and scrapie in sheep. It worked for every species," he
said.
Dr Cashman, whose study was published yesterday in the journal Nature
Medicine, is now testing a vaccine which targets abnormal prions in mice. If it
works, the team will move on to sheep and cattle.
The vaccine may be of little use for humans, however. "You wouldn't want to
vaccinate every person against a disease that only affects about one in a
million," he said. But the discovery could lead to a new therapy for CJD,
triggering the immune system to mop up rogue prions in the brain.
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-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
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"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
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