Cell study explains why younger people more at risk of vCJDOctober 14, 2009Specific cells within the immune system could help explain why younger people are more susceptible to variant CJD, scientists believe Specific cells within the immune system could help explain why younger people are more susceptible to variant CJD, scientists believe. Patients diagnosed with variant CJD are, on average, 28 years old but it has been unclear why older people are not as affected by the disease. Research at The Roslin Institute of the University of Edinburgh has identified specific cells within the immune system that attract corrupted proteins - known as prions - linked to variant CJD and encourage them to multiply and spread. The study, published in the Journal of Immunology, looked at how these cells behaved in mice and found that the cells were impaired in older mice. As a result, they were unable to trap and replicate the prions and the mice did not develop clinical disease. Neil Mabbott, of The Roslin Institute, said: "It has always been unclear why younger people were more susceptible to variant CJD and the assumption that they were more likely to eat cheap meat products is far too simplistic. "Understanding what happens to these cells, which are important for the body's immune responses, could help us develop better ways of diagnosing variant CJD or even find ways of preventing prions from spreading to the brain. It could also help to create a vaccine." Prions accumulate in lymphoid tissues - part of the body's immune system that include the spleen, lymph nodes and tonsils - before spreading to the central nervous system where they kill off brain cells and cause neurological disease. Attempts to estimate the number of people carrying variant CJD have relied upon identifying the presence of prions in tonsil and appendix samples collected during routine operations. The latest study, funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, suggests that even more people may be infected than previously thought as researchers also found prions present in brain tissue from older mice, which had not developed clinical disease. Even when prions were present in the brains of older mice, however, they were not always found in lymphoid tissues, suggesting that the prediction of cases may be underestimated. It is thought the prions may have spread to the brain before they died off in the lymphoid tissues. University of Edinburgh |
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| Related Prions Current Events and Prions News Articles The Protein Srebp2 Drives Cholesterol Formation in Prion-Infected Neuronal Cells Which May Promote Prion-Dependent Diseases The regulating protein Srebp2 drives cholesterol formation, which prions need for their propagation, in prion-infected neuronal cells. Prion study reveals first direct information about the protein's molecular structure A collaboration between scientists at Vanderbilt University and the University of California, San Francisco has led to the first direct information about the molecular structure of prions. One nano-step closer to weighing a single atom By studying gold nanoparticles with highly uniform sizes and shapes, scientists now understand how they lose energy, a key step towards producing nanoscale detectors for weighing any single atom. Scripps Florida scientists devise accelerated method to determine infectious prion strainsScripps Florida scientists devise accelerated method to determine infectious prion strains Current tests to identify specific strains of infectious prions, which cause a range of transmissible diseases (such as mad cow) in animals and humans, can take anywhere from six months to a year to yield results - a time-lag that may put human populations at risk. Redefining what it means to be a prion Whitehead Institute researchers have quintupled the number of identifiable prion proteins in yeast and have further clarified the role prions play in the inheritance of both beneficial and detrimental traits. Prion discovery gives clue to control of mass gene expression The discovery in common brewer's yeast of a new, infectious, misfolded protein -- or prion -- by University of Illinois at Chicago molecular biologists raises new questions about the roles played by these curious molecules, often associated with degenerative brain diseases like "mad cow" and its human counterpart, Creutzfeldt-Jakob. Antibody key to treating variant CJD, scientists find Scientists at the University of Liverpool have determined the atomic structure of the 'binding' between a brain protein and an antibody that could be key to treating patients with diseases such as variant CJD. Self-regulating molecular 'transformers' control intracellular protein delivery Scientists from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have uncovered the Transformer like properties of molecules responsible for carrying and depositing proteins to their correct locations within cells. Study confirms vCJD could be transmitted by blood transfusion The findings underline the importance of precautions against vCJD transmission, such as the Government decision in 2004 to ban blood donations from anyone who had received a blood transfusion since 1980. Deadly dose: Rensselaer heparin expert helps uncover source of lethal contamination The mysterious death of patients around the world following a routine dosage of the common blood thinner, heparin, sent researchers on a frantic search to uncover what could make the standard drug so toxic. More Prions Current Events and Prions News Articles |
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