The aim of this study was to determine the frequency of the 12-bp and 23-bp indel polymorphisms in the prion protein gene (PRNP) in cattle and to investigate the association between these frequencies and the occurrence of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE). There was no significant difference in the 12-bp indel frequency between the BSE animals and control group. For the 23-bp indel, the BSE animals had a significantly lower + + (insins) genotype frequency and + allele frequency compared with the control animals. The - - / - - genotype frequency in the BSE animals was not significantly higher when compared with the control animals. One - allele increased the risk of BSE by a factor of 1.55 (i.e. by 55%) for the 12-bp indel and by a factor of 2.10 for the 23-bp indel. When both indels are considered, one - allele increased the risk of BSE by a factor of 1.54.
Rapid BSE tests are widely used diagnostics in veterinary medicine and more than 11 million tests are applied worldwide. The evaluation of new rapid BSE tests and the quality assurance of approved BSE tests pose a challenge owing to the natural scarcity of BSE-infected bovine brainstems and regional variations in prion titer. Transgenic mice expressing bovine prion protein (Tg4092) offer an alternative approach to these problems. To determine whether BSE-infected Tg4092 mouse brains could serve as a general standard for rapid BSE tests, we inoculated Tg4092 mice intracerebrally with BSE prions, harvested brains at defined time points post-infection and analyzed cerebral hemispheres with several approved rapid BSE tests. The results show that de novo formation of the disease-causing prion protein isoform, PrP(Sc), can be monitored during the course of infection. We demonstrate that BSE-infected Tg4092 mouse brains provide a renewable and controllable source of reference samples and suggest that such samples can generally be used for the evaluation and quality control of rapid BSE tests.
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