Prion infection relies on a continuous chain of PrPc -expressing tissues to spread from peripheral sites to the central nervous system (CNS). Direct neuroinvasion via peripheral nerves has long been considered likely. However, the speed of axonal flow is incompatible with the lengthy delay prior to the detection of PrP Sc in the brain. We hypothesized that Schwann cells could be the candidate implicated in this mechanism; for that, it has to express PrP c and to allow PrP
Several studies have suggested the implication of the classical complement pathway in the early stages of prion disease pathogenesis. To explore this hypothesis, surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy was used to test the ability of human C1q to recognize mouse PrP immobilized on a sensor chip. In this configuration, C1q bound avidly to PrP, with a K(D) of 5.4 nM (k(on) = 2.4 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1); k(off) = 1.3 x 10(-3) s(-1)). The isolated C1q globular domain also bound to immobilized PrP, although with a higher K(D) (238 nM), due to a decreased k(on) (4.2 x 10(3) M(-1) s(-1)). Interaction was strongly enhanced by Cu(2+) ions, with a 10-fold increase in overall binding in the presence of 10 microM CuSO(4), without significant modification of the kinetic parameters. In contrast, using the same technique, no interaction was detected between immobilized C1q and soluble PrP. Likewise, gel filtration and chemical cross-linking analyses yielded no evidence for an interaction between these proteins in solution. Comparative analysis of the antigenic reactivity of soluble and immobilized PrP was performed by ELISA and surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy, respectively, using anti-PrP monoclonal antibodies. This analysis provides evidence that immobilized PrP undergoes a major conformational change in the sequence stretch 141GNDWEDRYYRENMYRYPNQ159 located in its C-terminal globular domain. It is concluded that immobilized PrP undergoes structural modifications that possibly mimic the conformational changes occurring during conversion to the pathological isoform and that C1q represents a natural sensor of these changes. Pathological implications of this recognition property are discussed in light of recent reports.
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