On our initial discovery that prion protein (PrP)-derived peptides were capable of capturing the pathogenic prion protein (PrP Sc ), we have been interested in how these peptides interact with PrP Sc . After screening peptides from the entire human PrP sequence, we found two peptides (PrP 19 -30 and PrP100-111) capable of binding full-length PrP Sc in plasma, a medium containing a complex mixture of other proteins including a vast excess of the normal prion protein (PrP C ). The limit of detection for captured PrP Sc was calculated to be 8 amol from a Ϸ10 5 -fold dilution of 10% (wt/vol) human variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease brain homogenate, with >3,800-fold binding specificity to PrP Sc over PrP C . Through extensive analyses, we show that positively charged amino acids play an important, but not exclusive, role in the interaction between the peptides and PrP Sc . Neither hydrophobic nor polar interactions appear to correlate with binding activity. The peptide-PrP Sc interaction was not sequence-specific, but amino acid composition affected binding. Binding occurs through a conformational domain that is only present in PrP Sc , is species-independent, and is not affected by proteinase K digestion. These and other findings suggest a mechanism by which cationic domains of PrP C may play a role in the recruitment of PrP C to PrP Sc .plasma ͉ Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease ͉ detection ͉ cationic interaction ͉ diagnostic
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