Estimating chronic wasting disease susceptibility in cervids using real-time quaking-induced conversion

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1099/jgv.0.000952

Language of the publication
English
Date
2017-11-01
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Haley, Nicholas
  • Rielinger, Rachel
  • Davenport, Kristen A.
  • O'Rourke, Katherine
  • Mitchell, Gordon
  • Richt, Jürgen A.
Publisher
The Microbiology Society

Abstract

In mammals, susceptibility to prion infection is primarily modulated by the host’s cellular prion protein (PrPC) sequence. In the sheep scrapie model, a graded scale of susceptibility has been established both in vivo and in vitro based on PrPC amino acids 136, 154 and 171, leading to global breeding programmes to reduce the prevalence of scrapie in sheep. Chronic wasting disease (CWD) resistance in cervids is often characterized as decreased prevalence and/or protracted disease progression in individuals with specific alleles; at present, no PrPC allele conferring absolute resistance in cervids has been identified. To model the susceptibility of various naturally occurring and hypothetical cervid PrPC alleles in vitro, we compared the amplification rates and amyloid extension efficiencies of eight distinct CWD isolates in recombinant cervid PrPC substrates using real-time quaking-induced conversion. We hypothesized that the in vitro conversion characteristics of these isolates in cervid substrates would correlate to in vivo susceptibility – permitting susceptibility prediction for the rare alleles found in nature. We also predicted that hypothetical alleles with multiple resistance-associated codons would be more resistant to in vitro conversion than natural alleles with a single resistant codon. Our studies demonstrate that in vitro conversion metrics align with in vivo susceptibility, and that alleles with multiple amino acid substitutions, each influencing resistance independently, do not necessarily contribute additively to conversion resistance. Importantly, we found that the naturally occurring whitetail deer QGAK substrate exhibited the slowest amplification rate among those evaluated, suggesting that further investigation of this allele and its resistance in vivo is warranted.

Subject

  • Animal diseases

Keywords

  • Transmissible spongiform encephalitis,
  • Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies,
  • Prion diseases,
  • Prions

Rights

Pagination

2882-2892

Peer review

Yes

Open access level

Gold

Identifiers

ISSN
1465-2099
0022-1317

Article

Journal title
Journal of General Virology
Journal volume
98
Journal issue
11
Accepted date
2017-10-03
Submitted date
2017-06-07

Citation(s)

Haley, N., Rielinger, R., Davenport, K. A., O'Rourke, K., Mitchell, G., & Richt, J. A. (2017). Estimating chronic wasting disease susceptibility in cervids using real-time quaking-induced conversion. Journal of General Virology, 98(11), 2882-2892. https://doi.org/10.1099/jgv.0.000952

URI

Collection(s)

Animals

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