نتایج جستجو برای: prp gene

تعداد نتایج: 1146211  

2017
Wuyun DALAI Eiko MATSUO Natsumi TAKEYAMA Junichi KAWANO Keiichi SAEKI

The cellular isoform of the prion protein (PrPC) plays critical roles in the development of prion disorders. Although PrP mRNA is ubiquitously present in a tissue-specific manner, the DNA methylation of PrP gene (Prnp) is still unknown. In this study, we demonstrated that the CpG island (CGI, positioned at -218 to +152 bp from the transcriptional start site) including the Prnp core promoter reg...

2014
Walker S. Jackson Clemens Krost Andrew W. Borkowski Lech Kaczmarczyk

Prion diseases induce neurodegeneration in specific brain areas for undetermined reasons. A thorough understanding of the localization of the disease-causing molecule, the prion protein (PrP), could inform on this issue but previous studies have generated conflicting conclusions. One of the more intriguing disagreements is whether PrP is synthesized by astrocytes. We developed a knock-in report...

Journal: :The Journal of general virology 1994
W Goldmann N Hunter G Smith J Foster J Hope

Man and sheep are the two species in which spongiform encephalopathies occur naturally, and in which there are recognized genetic components that predispose an individual person or sheep to clinical disease. In both species mutations/polymorphisms in the PrP gene have been linked to the incidence of natural disease, but only in sheep is it possible to investigate by deliberate exposure to infec...

Journal: :Neurobiology of disease 2005
K Xanthopoulos I Paspaltsis V Apostolidou S Petrakis C J Siao A Kalpatsanidis N Grigoriadis A Tsaftaris S E Tsirka T Sklaviadis

Prion propagation involves conversion of host PrP(C) to a disease-related isoform, PrP(Sc), which accumulates during disease and is the principal component of the transmissible agent. Proteolysis seems to play an important role in PrP metabolism. Plasminogen, a serine protease precursor, has been shown to interact with PrP(Sc). Plasminogen can be proteolytically activated by tissue plasminogen ...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1990
W Goldmann N Hunter J D Foster J M Salbaum K Beyreuther J Hope

Sheep are the natural hosts of the pathogens that cause scrapie, an infectious degenerative disease of the central nervous system. Scrapie-associated fibrils [and their major protein, prion protein (PrP)] accumulate in the brains of all species affected by scrapie and related diseases. PrP is encoded by a single gene that is linked to (and may be) the major gene controlling the incubation perio...

Journal: :British medical bulletin 2003
Axel Behrens

A misfolded version of the prion protein PrP(C), known as PrP(Sc), is the major component of scrapie infectivity, the pathological agent in transmissible spongiform encephalopathies. The Prnp gene that encodes the cellular PrP(C) protein was cloned almost 20 years ago, but remained without sequence or structural relatives for over a decade. Only recently a novel protein, named Doppel (Dpl), was...

Journal: :Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry 2005
G Beck T Kawano I Naba T Nishimura J Sawada T Hazama

Familial prion diseases are associated with underlying mutations in the prion protein gene located on the short arm of human chromosome 20. The normal and wild type of the prion protein gene encodes the cellular prion protein, PrP, and it is thought that there is a post-translational modification to a disease related form, protease resistant PrP. PrP and PrP have the same amino acid sequence, b...

2014
Samira Makzhami Bruno Passet Sophie Halliez Johan Castille Katayoun Moazami-Goudarzi Amandine Duchesne Marthe Vilotte Hubert Laude Sophie Mouillet-Richard Vincent Béringue Daniel Vaiman Jean-Luc Vilotte

Based on its developmental pattern of expression, early studies suggested the implication of the mammalian Prion protein PrP, a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored ubiquitously expressed and evolutionary conserved glycoprotein encoded by the Prnp gene, in early embryogenesis. However, gene invalidation in several species did not result in obvious developmental abnormalities and it was only re...

Journal: :Microbiology 2005
Baoguang Li Eric W Brown Christine D'Agostino J Eugene Leclerc Thomas A Cebula

Phosphoprotein phosphatases encoded by the prpA and prpB genes function in signal transduction pathways for degradation of misfolded proteins in the extracytoplasmic compartments of Escherichia coli. In order to trace the evolution of prp genes and assess their roles in other enteric pathogens, the structure and distribution of these genes among closely related Shigella subgroups were studied. ...

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