نتایج جستجو برای: prions

تعداد نتایج: 4608  

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2009
Holger Wille Wen Bian Michele McDonald Amy Kendall David W Colby Lillian Bloch Julian Ollesch Alexander L Borovinskiy Fred E Cohen Stanley B Prusiner Gerald Stubbs

A conformational isoform of the mammalian prion protein (PrP(Sc)) is the sole component of the infectious pathogen that causes the prion diseases. We have obtained X-ray fiber diffraction patterns from infectious prions that show cross-beta diffraction: meridional intensity at 4.8 A resolution, indicating the presence of beta strands running approximately at right angles to the filament axis an...

2014
Djamel Harbi Paul M. Harrison

Prions are transmissible, propagating alternative states of proteins. Prions in budding yeast propagate heritable phenotypes and can function in large-scale gene regulation, or in some cases occur as diseases of yeast. Other 'prionogenic' proteins are likely prions that have been determined experimentally to form amyloid in vivo, and to have prion-like domains that are able to propagate heritab...

2010
Vidhu Mathur Vibha Taneja Yidi Sun Susan W. Liebman

Various proteins, like the infectious yeast prions and the noninfectious human Huntingtin protein (with expanded polyQ), depend on a Gln or Asn (QN)-rich region for amyloid formation. Other prions, e.g., mammalian PrP and the [Het-s] prion of Podospora anserina, although still able to form infectious amyloid aggregates, do not have QN-rich regions. Furthermore, [Het-s] and yeast prions appear t...

2010
Ian Pepper

The transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE) are a group of neurological prion diseases of mammals caused by infectious prion proteins. Prions may be present in raw wastewater through the discharge, animal rendering and meat processing operations that may process BSE-contaminated cattle or scrapie infected sheep. Recently, a cell culture method was developed to detect the infectivity of ...

2010
Federico Benetti Michael D Geschwind Giuseppe Legname

Prions are responsible for a heterogeneous group of fatal neurodegenerative diseases. They occur in three forms - sporadic, genetic, or acquired - and involve non-covalent post-translational modifications of the cellular prion protein (PrP(C)). Prions (PrP(Sc)) are characterized by their infectious properties and intrinsic ability to act as a template, converting the normal, physiological PrP(C...

Journal: :Cell 2004
Adriano Aguzzi Magdalini Polymenidou

Prions have been responsible for an entire century of tragic episodes. Fifty years ago, kuru decimated the population of Papua New Guinea. Then, iatrogenic transmission of prions caused more than 250 cases of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. More recently, transmission of bovine spongiform encephalopathy to humans caused a widespread health scare. On the other hand, the biology of prions represents a...

Journal: :Cell 2016
Mick F. Tuite

A comprehensive analysis uncovered a set of yeast proteins promoting protein-based inheritance that shares many of the non-Mendelian properties of prions. Lacking any sequence or structural signatures of known prions, these proteins represent a new class of non-amyloid, protein-based epigenetic determinants that can control phenotype without impacting genotype.

Journal: :Science 2010
Randal Halfmann Susan Lindquist

Prions are an unusual form of epigenetics: Their stable inheritance and complex phenotypes come about through protein folding rather than nucleic acid-associated changes. With intimate ties to protein homeostasis and a remarkable sensitivity to stress, prions are a robust mechanism that links environmental extremes with the acquisition and inheritance of new traits.

2011
Justin R. Piro Brent T. Harris Surachai Supattapone

Single-stranded polyanions ≥40 bases in length facilitate the formation of hamster scrapie prions in vitro, and polyanions co-localize with PrP(Sc) aggregates in vivo. To test the hypothesis that intact polyanionic molecules might serve as a structural backbone essential for maintaining the infectious conformation(s) of PrP(Sc), we produced synthetic prions using a photocleavable, 100-base olig...

2015
Zachary A Sporn Justin K Hines

Yeast prions are heritable protein-based elements, most of which are formed of amyloid aggregates that rely on the action of molecular chaperones for transmission to progeny. Prions can form distinct amyloid structures, known as 'strains' in mammalian systems, that dictate both pathological progression and cross-species infection barriers. In yeast these same amyloid structural polymorphisms, c...

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