1. Rapidly progressive dementia with thalamic degeneration and peculiar cortical prion protein immunoreactivity, but absence of proteinase K resistant PrP: a new disease entity?
- Author
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Gabor G. Kovacs, Albrecht Gröner, Alexander Peden, Thomas Ströbel, Regina Katzenschlager, Stefan Koppi, James W. Ironside, Michael Knoflach, Dieter Langenscheidt, Mark Head, Till Voigtländer, Romana Höftberger, Serge Weis, Anna S. Berghoff, Gina Puska, Helen Yull, Armin Muigg, Elisabeth Zaruba, Astrid E. Grams, Hamid Assar, Lajos László, Eva Hametner, Herbert Budka, University of Zurich, and Kovacs, Gabor G
- Subjects
Male ,Pathology ,Neurology ,animal diseases ,2804 Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Degeneration (medical) ,0302 clinical medicine ,Thalamus ,Protease-sensitive PrPSc ,Aged, 80 and over ,Cerebral Cortex ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,Neurodegenerative Diseases ,Middle Aged ,3. Good health ,Blot ,2728 Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cerebral cortex ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Endopeptidase K ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prions ,10208 Institute of Neuropathology ,610 Medicine & health ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Thalamic degeneration ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,medicine ,Dementia ,Humans ,030304 developmental biology ,Aged ,Prionopathy ,Research ,medicine.disease ,Proteinase K ,nervous system diseases ,2734 Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Prion protein ,biology.protein ,570 Life sciences ,Conformational assay ,Neurology (clinical) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Immunostaining - Abstract
BackgroundHuman prion diseases are a group of rare fatal neurodegenerative conditions with well-developed clinical and neuropathological diagnostic criteria. Recent observations have expanded the spectrum of prion diseases beyond the classically recognized forms.ResultsIn the present study we report six patients with a novel, apparently sporadic disease characterised by thalamic degeneration and rapidly progressive dementia (duration of illness 2–12 months; age at death: 55–81 years). Light and electron microscopic immunostaining for the prion protein (PrP) revealed a peculiar intraneuritic distribution in neocortical regions. Proteinase K resistant PrP (PrPres) was undetectable by Western blotting in frontal cortex from the three cases with frozen tissue, even after enrichment for PrPres by centrifugation or by phosphotungstic acid precipitation. Conformation-dependent immunoassay analysis using a range of PK digestion conditions (and no PK digestion) produced only very limited evidence of meaningful D-N (denatured/native) values, indicative of the presence of disease-associated PrP (PrPSc) in these cases, when the results were compared with appropriate negative control groups.ConclusionsOur observation expands the spectrum of conditions associated with rapidly progressive dementia and may have implications for the understanding of the pathogenesis of prion diseases.
- Published
- 2013
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