Prion diseases or transmissible spongiform encephalopathies

Rev Med Interne. 2021 Jun 17:S0248-8663(21)00451-3. doi: 10.1016/j.revmed.2021.05.002. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTPrion diseases or transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) are human and animal diseases naturally or experimentally transmissible with a long incubation period and a fatal course without remission. The nature of the transmissible agent remains debated but the absence of a structure evoking a conventional microorganism led Stanley B. Prusiner to hypothesize that it could be an infectious protein (proteinaceous infectious particle or prion). The prion would be the abnormal form of a normal protein, cellular PrP (PrPc) which will change its spatial conformation and be converted into scrapie prion protein (PrPsc) with properties of partial resistance to proteases, aggregation and insolubility in detergents. No inflammatory or immune response are detected in TSEs which are characterized by brain damage combining spongiosis, neuronal loss, astrocytic gliosis, and deposits of PrPsc that may appear as amyloid plaques. Although the link between the accumulation of PrPsc and the appearance of lesions remains debated, the presence of PrPsc is constant during TSE and necessary for a definitive diagnosis. Even if they remain rare diseases (2 cases per million), the identification of kuru, at the end of the 1950s, of iatrogenic cases in the course of the 1970s and of the variant of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in the mid-1990s explain the interest in these diseas...
Source: Revue de Medecine Interne - Category: Internal Medicine Authors: Source Type: research