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Role of Palatine Tonsils as a Prion Entry Site in Classical and Atypical Experimental Sheep Scrapie
Author(s) -
Maria Giovanna Cancedda,
Giovanni Di Guardo,
Roberto Chiocchetti,
Francesca Demontis,
Giuseppe Marruchella,
C. Sorteni,
Caterina Maestrale,
Alfio Lai,
Ciriaco Ligios
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of virology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.617
H-Index - 292
eISSN - 1070-6321
pISSN - 0022-538X
DOI - 10.1128/jvi.02750-13
Subject(s) - scrapie , palatine tonsil , biology , tonsil , pathology , lymphatic system , spinal cord , anatomy , pathogenesis , medulla oblongata , virology , central nervous system , immunology , prion protein , medicine , neuroscience , disease
Atypical and classical scrapie-infected sheep brain tissue was monolaterally injected into the tonsils of lambs to investigate their role as a prion entry point. We first detected classical PrP(Sc) within the inoculated tonsil and in the ipsilateral retropharyngeal lymph node at 3 months postinoculation (p.i.). At 7 months p.i., PrP(Sc) colonized other lymphoid tissues bilaterally, including ileal Peyer's patches. The earliest PrP(Sc) deposition within the brain was ipsilaterally observed at 9 months p.i. in the substantia reticularis of the medulla oblongata. At 12 months p.i., PrP(Sc) deposition was present bilaterally in the nucleus parasympathicus nervi vagi, as well as in the intermediolateral cell column of the thoracolumbar spinal cord. No PrP(Sc) was detected in the lambs inoculated with atypical scrapie. These findings suggest that neuroinvasion may naturally occur from the tonsil after a widespread prion replication within the lymphoid tissues during classical scrapie only, thus mimicking the pathogenesis after oral ingestion.

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