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Ex vivo mammalian prions are formed of paired double helical prion protein fibrils
Author(s) -
Cassandra Terry,
Adam Wenborn,
Nathalie Gros,
Jessica Sells,
Susan Joiner,
Laszlo L. P. Hosszu,
M. Howard Tattum,
Silvia Panico,
Daniel K. Clare,
John Collinge,
Helen R. Saibil,
Jonathan D. F. Wadsworth
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
open biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.078
H-Index - 53
ISSN - 2046-2441
DOI - 10.1098/rsob.160035
Subject(s) - infectivity , biology , recombinant dna , prion protein , fibril , virology , ex vivo , amyloid (mycology) , titer , fungal prion , microbiology and biotechnology , in vivo , biophysics , virus , biochemistry , genetics , phenotype , gene , medicine , botany , disease , pathology
Mammalian prions are hypothesized to be fibrillar or amyloid forms of prion protein (PrP), but structures observed to date have not been definitively correlated with infectivity and the three-dimensional structure of infectious prions has remained obscure. Recently, we developed novel methods to obtain exceptionally pure preparations of prions from mouse brain and showed that pathogenic PrP in these high-titre preparations is assembled into rod-like assemblies. Here, we have used precise cell culture-based prion infectivity assays to define the physical relationship between the PrP rods and prion infectivity and have used electron tomography to define their architecture. We show that infectious PrP rods isolated from multiple prion strains have a common hierarchical assembly comprising twisted pairs of short fibres with repeating substructure. The architecture of the PrP rods provides a new structural basis for understanding prion infectivity and can explain the inability to systematically generate high-titre synthetic prions from recombinant PrP.

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