The current study focused on the role of lymphoid elements of the lymphoreticular system in scrapie pathogenesis. In the first experiment, adherent and non-adherent splenocytes from mice infected with the 139A scrapie strain were prepared. The level of infectivity on a per cell basis was significantly higher in the adherent cell population. In a second set of experiments, thymocytes, unfractionated splenocytes, T-cell enriched and T-cell depleted fractions of splenocytes were infected in vitro with ME7 scrapie strain. There was no evidence of replication of scrapie in ME7-exposed cells in any of the preparations during the first 5-14 days post-exposure. In assays done 5 days after infection, most of the infectivity was cell-associated. These data suggest that lymphoid cells are not involved in scrapie replication. The level of IgA in the serum of 139A-infected mice was markedly reduced compared to the levels in mice injected with normal mouse brain homogenate or with the ME7 scrapie strain. The reduction in IgA levels in 139A-infected mice was evident at each of the 4 time points tested. The final experiment dealt with the question of scrapie replication in the lymphoreticular organs in mouse strains with different incubation periods for 139A after intraperitoneal injection. The results in this experiment suggest that the difference in incubation periods is related to differences in time of access of infection to the central nervous system rather than to differences in the ability of agent to replicate in spleen.
N-terminally truncated pyroglutamate amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide starting at position 3 represents a significant fraction of Aβ peptides (pE3-Aβ) in amyloid plaques of postmortem brains from patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and older persons with Down syndrome (DS). Studies in transgenic mouse models of AD also showed that pE3-Aβ is a major component of plaques, and mouse monoclonal antibody to pE3-Aβ appears to be a desirable therapeutic agent for AD. Since small peptides do not typically elicit a good immune response in mice, but do so favorably in rabbits, our aims were to generate and partially characterize a rabbit monoclonal antibody (RabmAb) to pE3-Aβ. The generated RabmAb was found to be specific for pE3-Aβ, since it showed no reactivity with Aβ16, Aβ40, Aβ42, Aβ3-11, and pE11-17 Aβ peptides in an enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The isotype of the antibody was found to be IgG class. The antibody possesses high affinity to pE3-Aβ with dissociation constant (KD) for the antibody of 1 nM. The epitope of the antibody lies within the sequence of pE3-FRHD. In dot blotting, the optimal detection of pE3-Aβ was at an antibody concentration of 0.5 μg/ml. The threshold of pE3-Aβ detection was 2 fmol. The antibody was sensitive enough to detect 10 pg/ml of pE3-Aβ in sandwich ELISA. pE3-Aβ was detected in AD and DS brain extracts in ELISA and immunoblotting. Immunohistological studies showed immunolabeling of plaques and blood vessels in brains from patients with AD, and DS showing AD pathology. Thus, the antibody can be widely applied in AD and DS research, and therapeutic applications.
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