نتایج جستجو برای: prion disease

تعداد نتایج: 1496086  

2007
Marta Gwinn

Prions are believed to be the causative agents of a group of rapidly progressive neurodegenerative diseases called transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, or prion diseases. They are infectious isoforms of a hostencoded cellular protein known as the prion protein. Prion diseases affect humans and animals and are uniformly fatal. The most common prion disease in humans is Creutzfeldt-Jakob di...

Journal: :JAMA neurology 2016
Connie Luk Samantha Jones Claire Thomas Nick C Fox Tze H Mok Simon Mead John Collinge Graham S Jackson

Importance Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) is a fatal neurodegenerative disorder associated with the accumulation of infectious abnormal prion protein through a mechanism of templated misfolding. A recent report has described the detection of abnormal prion protein in the urine of patients with variant CJD (vCJD) using protein misfolding by cyclic amplification, which was apparently absent in t...

2017
Jiapu Zhang

Prion diseases (e.g. ‘mad cow’ disease in cattle, chronic wasting disease in deer and elk, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans) have been a major public health concern affecting humans and almost all animals. However, dogs are strongly resistant to prion diseases. Recently, through transgenic techniques, it was reported that the single (surface) residue D159 is sufficient to confer protection a...

2017
Rodrigo Morales

Prion diseases are neurodegenerative disorders affecting mammals with a diverse etiology. Although rare, most of the cases occur spontaneously in humans, with a minority being inherited or acquired by infection. Prion disease in ruminants such as sheep, goat, and deer are relatively frequent and likely feed borne [1] or environmentally transmitted [2]. The confirmed zoonotic potential of bovine...

Journal: :The Journal of clinical investigation 2014
Charles E Mays Chae Kim Tracy Haldiman Jacques van der Merwe Agnes Lau Jing Yang Jennifer Grams Michele A Di Bari Romolo Nonno Glenn C Telling Qingzhong Kong Jan Langeveld Debbie McKenzie David Westaway Jiri G Safar

The symptoms of prion infection can take years or decades to manifest following the initial exposure. Molecular markers of prion disease include accumulation of the misfolded prion protein (PrPSc), which is derived from its cellular precursor (PrPC), as well as downregulation of the PrP-like Shadoo (Sho) glycoprotein. Given the overlapping cellular environments for PrPC and Sho, we inferred tha...

Journal: :British medical bulletin 2003
Andrew F Hill John Collinge

Transmission of prion diseases between mammalian species is limited by a so-called 'species' or 'transmission' barrier. Recognition of prion transmission usually relies on the appearance of clinical symptoms in inoculated animals and the interval between inoculation and appearance of clinical disease is designated incubation period. At some point during this clinically silent period, neuropatho...

Journal: :The Journal of clinical investigation 2004
Adriano Aguzzi Mathias Heikenwalder Gino Miele

The term "prion" was introduced by Stanley Prusiner in 1982 to describe the atypical infectious agent that causes transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, a group of infectious neurodegenerative diseases that include scrapie in sheep, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans, chronic wasting disease in cervids, and bovine spongiform encephalopathy in cattle. Over the past twenty years, the word "p...

2014
Ermias D. Belay

The occurrence of sporadic prion disease among adolescents is extremely rare. A prion disease was confirmed in an adolescent with disease onset at 13 years of age. Genetic, neuropathologic, and biochemical analyses of the patient’s autopsy brain tissue were consistent with sporadic fatal insomnia, a type of sporadic prion disease. There was no evidence of an environmental source of infection, a...

2016
Vera I. Wiersma Wim van Hecke Wiep Scheper Martijn A. J. van Osch Will J. M. Hermsen Annemieke J. M. Rozemuller Jeroen J. M. Hoozemans

Human prion diseases are fatal neurodegenerative disorders with a genetic, sporadic or infectiously acquired aetiology. Neuropathologically, human prion diseases are characterized by deposition of misfolded prion protein and neuronal loss. In post-mortem brain tissue from patients with other neurodegenerative diseases characterized by protein misfolding, including Alzheimer's disease (AD) and f...

Journal: :Veterinary research 2008
Christina J Sigurdson

Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a prion disease of deer, elk, and moose, initially recognized in Colorado mule deer. The discovery of CWD beyond the borders of Colorado and Wyoming, in Canada and as far east as New York, has led to its emergence as a prion disease of international importance. Epidemiological studies indicate that CWD is horizontally transmitted among free-ranging animals, pote...

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