Prion diseases are characterized by the accumulation of a pathogenic misfolded form of a prion protein (PrP) encoded by the Prnp gene in humans. In the present study in zebrafish, two transcripts and the corresponding genes encoding prion proteins, PrP1 and PrP2, related to human PrP have been characterized with a relatively divergent deduced amino acid sequence, but a well preserved overall organization of structural prion protein motifs. Whole‐mount in situ hybridization analysis performed during embryonic and larval development showed a high level of PrP1 mRNA spatially restricted to the anterior floor‐plate of the central nervous system and in ganglia. Transcripts of prp2 were detected in embryonic cells from the mid‐blastula transition to the end of the segmentation period. From 24 h postfertilization up to larval stages, prp2 transcripts were localized in distinct anatomical structures, including a major expression in the brain, eye, kidney, lateral line neuromasts, liver, heart, pectoral fins and posterior intestine. The observed differential developmental expression patterns of the two long PrP forms, prp1 and prp2, and the short PrP form prp3, a more divergent prion‐related gene previously identified in zebrafish, should contribute to understanding of the phylogenetic and functional relationships of duplicated prion gene forms in the fish genome. Together, the complex history of prion‐related genes, reflected in the deduced structural features, conserved amino acid sequence and repeat motifs of the corresponding proteins, and the presence of differential developmental expression patterns suggest possible acquisition or loss of prion protein functions during vertebrate evolution.
Borna disease virus (BDV) is a neurotropic RNA virus with a wide host range. Human infections, although controversial, have been described in Europe, Asia, and the United States. The present study investigated the existence of BDV infections in immunocompromised human beings, namely, 82 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected and 80 therapeutically immunosuppressed patients. BDV p40 RNAs were detected in peripheral white blood cells with reverse transcription-nested PCR and hybridization in, respectively, 11 (13.41%) and 1 (1.25%) of the two groups of patients. BDV p24 RNAs were identified in only one of those. BDV RNA was detected in the absence of any neuropsychiatrical illness, suggesting that BDV infections may occur in asymptomatic carriers. The severity and particularity of cellular immunosuppression could explain the significantly increased detection of BDV RNA in HIV-infected patients.
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