Classical scrapie in small ruminants is caused by at least four different prion strains

Author:

Marín-Moreno Alba,Aguilar-Calvo Patricia,Espinosa Juan Carlos,Zamora-Ceballos María,Pitarch José Luis,González Lorenzo,Fernández-Borges Natalia,Orge Leonor,Andréoletti Olivier,Nonno Romolo,Torres Juan MaríaORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe diversity of goat scrapie strains in Europe has recently been studied using bioassays in a wide collection of rodent models, resulting in the classification of classical scrapie into four different categories. However, the sole use of the first passage does not lead to isolate adaptation and identification of the strains involved and might therefore lead to misclassification of some scrapie isolates. Therefore, this work reports the complete transmission study of a wide collection of goat transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) isolates by intracranial inoculation in two transgenic mouse lines overexpressing either small ruminant (TgGoat-ARQ) or bovine (TgBov) PrPC. To compare scrapie strains in sheep and goats, sheep scrapie isolates from different European countries were also included in the study. Once the species barrier phenomenon was overcome, an accurate classification of the isolates was attained. Thus, the use of just two rodent models allowed us to fully differentiate at least four different classical scrapie strains in small ruminants and to identify isolates containing mixtures of strains. This work reinforces the idea that classical scrapie in small ruminants is a prion disease caused by multiple different prion strains and not by a single strain, as is the case for epidemic classical bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE-C). In addition, the clear dissimilarity between the different scrapie strains and BSE-C does not support the idea that classical scrapie is the origin of epidemic BSE-C.

Funder

EU

Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad, Gobierno de España

Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Veterinary

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