Two lines of transgenic mice expressing mouse/elk and mouse/ horse prion protein (PrP) hybrids, which both form a well-structured β2-α2 loop in the NMR structures at 20°C termed rigid-loop cellular prion proteins (RL-PrP C ), presented with accumulation of the aggregated scrapie form of PrP in brain tissue, and the mouse/ elk hybrid has also been shown to develop a spontaneous transmissible spongiform encephalopathy. Independently, there is in vitro evidence for correlations between the amino acid sequence in the β2-α2 loop and the propensity for conformational transitions to disease-related forms of PrP. To further contribute to the structural basis for these observations, this paper presents a detailed characterization of RL-PrP C conformations in solution. A dynamic local conformational polymorphism involving the β2-α2 loop was found to be evolutionarily preserved among all mammalian species, including those species for which the WT PrP forms an RL-PrP C . The interconversion between two ensembles of PrP C conformers that contain, respectively, a 3 10 -helix turn or a type I β-turn structure of the β2-α2 loop, exposes two different surface epitopes, which are analyzed for their possible roles in the still evasive function of PrP C in healthy organisms and/or at the onset of a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans, scrapie in sheep and goats, bovine spongiform encephalopathy in cattle, and chronic wasting disease (CWD) in elk and deer (1-3). A common feature of these diseases is the conversion of the cellular form of the prion protein (PrP C ) found in healthy organisms into aggregated isoforms (PrP Sc ), which are deposited primarily in the brain of the diseased individuals (1, 4). Despite extensive investigations, the physiological function of PrP C in healthy organisms as well as the mechanistic aspects of its pathophysiological role remain elusive (4-9). Although the PrP Sc form found in diseased tissue has been intensively studied, other approaches underline the importance of PrP C as a potential target for TSE prevention and medical intervention after outbreak of the disease (10-12), with a special focus on rigid-loop cellular prion proteins (RL-PrP C s) (11,(13)(14)(15), which are investigated in this paper.A common PrP C fold for a globular domain formed by the polypeptide segment of residues 125-228 in mouse PrP (mPrP) [see Schätzl et al. (16) for the numeration in different species], with three α-helices and a short two-stranded antiparallel β-sheet, has been observed for the cellular prion proteins of all mammalian species studied so far (17-27). For WT PrP of most species, parts of the backbone amide group NMR signals of residues in a loop between a β-strand, β2, and a helix, α2, are not observable in NMR spectra recorded with aqueous solutions at pH 4.5 and 20°C at a 1 H resonance frequency of 500 MHz (or higher) because of line broadening by conformational exchange; therefore, the β2-α2 loop in these PrP C s is poorly defined in NMR structures determined un...