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Regional variability and genotypic and pharmacodynamic effects on PrP concentration in the CNS

Authors :
Meredith A. Mortberg
Hien T. Zhao
Andrew G. Reidenbach
Juliana E. Gentile
Eric Kuhn
Jill O’Moore
Patrick M. Dooley
Theresa R. Connors
Curt Mazur
Shona W. Allen
Bianca A. Trombetta
Alison McManus
Matthew R. Moore
Jiewu Liu
Deborah E. Cabin
Holly B. Kordasiewicz
Joel Mathews
Steven E. Arnold
Sonia M. Vallabh
Eric Vallabh Minikel
Source :
JCI insight. 7(6)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Prion protein (PrP) concentration controls the kinetics of prion replication and is a genetically and pharmacologically validated therapeutic target for prion disease. In order to evaluate PrP concentration as a pharmacodynamic biomarker and assess its contribution to known prion disease risk factors, we developed and validated a plate-based immunoassay reactive for PrP across 6 species of interest and applicable to brain and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). PrP concentration varied dramatically across different brain regions in mice, cynomolgus macaques, and humans. PrP expression did not appear to contribute to the known risk factors of age, sex, or common PRNP genetic variants. CSF PrP was lowered in the presence of rare pathogenic PRNP variants, with heterozygous carriers of P102L displaying 55%, and D178N just 31%, of the CSF PrP concentration of mutation-negative controls. In rodents, pharmacologic reduction of brain Prnp RNA was reflected in brain parenchyma PrP and, in turn in CSF PrP, validating CSF as a sampling compartment for the effect of PrP-lowering therapy. Our findings support the use of CSF PrP as a pharmacodynamic biomarker for PrP-lowering drugs and suggest that relative reduction from individual baseline CSF PrP concentration may be an appropriate marker for target engagement.

Details

ISSN :
23793708
Volume :
7
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JCI insight
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....455d984b94d2b103b2753c34cf9aff46