J Vet Sci.  2001 Apr;2(1):25-31.

Immunohistochemical detection of Prion protein (PrP-Sc) and epidemiological study of BSE in Korea

Abstract

Though the aetiology of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) remains uncertain, proteinase resistant prion protein (PrP-Sc), a converted form of the normal cellular prion protein (PrP-C), accumulates in the lysosome of cells of the nervous systems of animals with TSEs. In this study, clinical and epidemiological examinations of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) were conducted in Korea. During the investigated period, none of the cattle exhibited typical clinical signs of BSE, such as behavioral disturbances, high sensitivity, and abnormal locomotion. Immunohistochemical analysis and western immunoblotting were established to detect PrP-Sc in the brain tissue using monoclonal antibody (MAb) F89/160.1.5, produced by immunizing mice with a synthetic peptide which corresponds to bovine PrP residues 146-159, NH2-SRPLIHFGSDYEDRC-COOH. Although some BSE-like spongiform changes were observed in bovine brains randomly collected from Korean slaughterhouses from 1996 to 1999, no PrP-Sc was detected in those brains with the established immunohistochemistry and western immunoblotting assay. Also, no positive reaction was observed in bovine brains infected with rabies. These immunohistochemical and western immunoblotting methods using MAbs, specifically reactive with conserved epitopes on ruminant PrP, can be used for postmortem diagnosis of BSE. Further, the method can be applied to antemortem and the preclinical diagnosis of ovine scrapie by detecting PrP-Sc in lymphoid tissues, such as the tonsils, third eyelid or peripheral lymph nodes.

Keyword

Immunohistochemistry; Western immunoblotting; PrP-Sc; PrP-C; bovine spongiform encephalopathy

MeSH Terms

Abattoirs
Animals
Blotting, Western
Brain/*pathology
Brain Stem/pathology
Cattle
Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/*epidemiology/pathology
Immunohistochemistry
Korea/epidemiology
PrPSc Proteins/*analysis
Sheep
Sheep Diseases/*epidemiology/pathology
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