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1.
J Comp Pathol ; 152(1): 28-40, 2015 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25435510

ABSTRACT

The onset and distribution of infectivity and disease-specific prion protein (PrP(d)) accumulation was studied in Romney and Suffolk sheep of the ARQ/ARQ, ARQ/ARR and ARR/ARR prion protein gene (Prnp) genotypes (where A stands for alanine, R for arginine and Q for glutamine at codons 136, 154 and 171 of PrP), following experimental oral infection with cattle-derived bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) agent. Groups of sheep were killed at regular intervals and a wide range of tissues taken for mouse bioassay or immunohistochemistry (IHC), or both. Bioassay results for infectivity were mostly coincident with those of PrP(d) detection by IHC both in terms of tissues and time post infection. Neither PrP(d) nor infectivity was detected in any tissues of BSE-dosed ARQ/ARR or ARR/ARR sheep or of undosed controls. Moreover, four ARQ/ARQ Suffolk sheep, which were methionine (M)/threonine heterozygous at codon 112 of the Prnp gene, did not show any biological or immunohistochemical evidence of infection, while those homozygous for methionine (MARQ/MARQ) did. In MARQ/MARQ sheep of both breeds, initial PrP(d) accumulation was identified in lymphoreticular system (LRS) tissues followed by the central nervous system (CNS) and enteric nervous system (ENS) and finally by the autonomic nervous system and peripheral nervous system and other organs. Detection of infectivity closely mimicked this sequence. No PrP(d) was observed in the ENS prior to its accumulation in the CNS, suggesting that ENS involvement occurred simultaneously to that of, or followed centrifugal spread from, the CNS. The distribution of PrP(d) within the ENS further suggested a progressive spread from the ileal plexus to other ENS segments via neuronal connections of the gut wall. Differences between the two breeds were noted in terms of involvement of LRS and ENS tissues, with Romney sheep showing a more delayed and less consistent PrP(d) accumulation than Suffolk sheep in such tissues. Whether this accounted for the slight delay (∼5 months) in the appearance of clinical signs in Romney sheep is debatable since by the last scheduled kill before animals reached clinical end point, both breeds showed widespread accumulation and similar magnitudes of PrP(d) accumulation in the brain.


Subject(s)
Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/genetics , Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/pathology , PrPC Proteins/metabolism , Sheep Diseases/genetics , Sheep Diseases/pathology , Animals , Cattle , Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/transmission , Genotype , Immunohistochemistry , Mice , Sheep , Sheep Diseases/transmission , Sheep, Domestic
3.
Int J Surg ; 11(4): 329-31, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23459187

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Current investigation for patients with colorectal symptoms without overt rectal bleeding is undertaken by colonoscopy or by flexible sigmoidoscopy and barium enema. A large majority of patients do not have colorectal cancer. There exists no instant, objective measure to discriminate patients who are likely to have colorectal cancer and therefore require expedient investigation. AIM: To evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of immunological faecal occult blood testing (FOBT) in patients with colorectal symptoms without overt rectal bleeding. METHODS: Consecutive patients referred for urgent colonic investigation, were prospectively studied. A faecal sample was obtained from each one and subjected to immunological FOB which tested either negative or positive. All patients then underwent complete colonic imaging. The correlation between FOBT status and results from colonic imaging was studied. RESULTS: Of 126 tested, thirty patients (26.8%) were FOBT positive. One hundred and twelve patients underwent complete colonic imaging. In the FOBT positive group colonic imaging identified 17 cases of histologically proven adenocarcinoma, 1 recurrent squamous cell carcinoma of anus, 1 adenomatous polyp, 6 cases of diverticulosis, and no pathology in 5 cases. In the 82 FOBT negative patients, no cancers were found. Overall the Immunological Faecal Occult Blood Test was found to have 100% sensitivity and 86.3% specificity. CONCLUSION: Immunological faecal occult blood testing is a sensitive and specific test in identifying colorectal cancer and may be useful in identifying those patients who warrant urgent investigation. Routine clinical application may be useful in the allocation of resources.


Subject(s)
Colorectal Neoplasms/blood , Colorectal Neoplasms/diagnosis , Immunologic Tests/methods , Occult Blood , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Predictive Value of Tests , Prospective Studies
4.
J Comp Pathol ; 147(2-3): 305-15, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22516087

ABSTRACT

In sheep infected experimentally with the bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) agent, amplification of infectivity in peripheral organs during early preclinical stages is thought to contribute to high titres of the agent being detected in blood, with subsequent haematogenous neuroinvasion through the circumventricular organs (CVOs). In contrast, little disease-associated prion protein (PrP(d)) or infectivity is detected in the peripheral tissues of cattle during the preclinical and clinical stages of BSE. The aim of this study was to investigate immunohistochemically the role of haematogenous neuroinvasion in cattle with spontaneously arising and experimentally induced BSE. There was almost complete absence of PrP(d) in the peripheral organs of BSE infected cattle. Additionally, there was minimal involvement of the CVOs during preclinical disease and there was progressive caudorostral accumulation of PrP(d) in the brain. These findings do not support haematogenous neuroinvasion in the bovine disease.


Subject(s)
Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/pathology , Hypothalamus, Anterior/pathology , Prions/metabolism , Sheep Diseases/pathology , Animals , Blood-Brain Barrier , Brain/metabolism , Brain/pathology , Cattle , Disease Models, Animal , Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/metabolism , Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/transmission , Hypothalamus, Anterior/metabolism , Sheep , Sheep Diseases/metabolism
5.
J Comp Pathol ; 145(2-3): 289-301, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21388635

ABSTRACT

European regulations for the control of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) decree destruction of the intestines from slaughtered cattle, therefore producers have been obliged to import beef casings from countries with a negligible BSE risk. This study applies immunohistochemical and biochemical approaches to investigate the occurrence and distribution of disease-associated prion protein (PrP(Sc)) in the duodenum, jejunum and ileum of cattle orally exposed to a 1 g or 100 g dose of a titrated BSE brainstem homogenate. Samples were derived from animals at various times post exposure. Lymphoid follicles were counted and the frequency of affected follicles recorded. No PrP(Sc) was detected in the duodenum or jejunum of animals exposed to a 1 g dose or in the duodenum of animals receiving a 100 g dose. PrP(Sc) was detected in the lymphoid tissue of the ileum of 1/98 (1.0%) animals receiving the 1 g dose and in the jejunum and ileum of 8/58 (13.8%) and 45/99 (45.5%), respectively, of animals receiving the 100 g dose. The frequency of PrP(Sc)- positive follicles was less than 1.5% per case and biochemical tests appeared less sensitive than immunohistochemistry. The probability of detecting lymphoid follicles in the ileum declined with age and for the 100 g exposure the proportion of positive follicles increased, while the proportion of positive animals decreased with age. Detection of PrP(Sc) in intestinal neural tissue was rare. The results suggest that the jejunum and duodenum of BSE-infected cattle contain considerably less BSE infectivity than the ileum, irrespective of exposure dose. In animals receiving the low exposure dose, as in most natural cases of BSE, the rarity of PrP(Sc) detection compared with high-dose exposure, suggests a very low BSE risk from food products containing the jejunum and duodenum of cattle slaughtered for human consumption.


Subject(s)
Aging , Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/metabolism , Intestine, Small/metabolism , PrPSc Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Cattle , Immunohistochemistry , Peyer's Patches/metabolism
6.
J Comp Pathol ; 144(4): 277-88, 2011 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21145564

ABSTRACT

Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) is a prion disease of domesticated cattle, first identified in Great Britain (GB) in 1986. The disease has been characterized by histopathological, immunohistochemical, biochemical and biological properties, which have shown a consistent disease phenotype among cases obtained by passive surveillance. With the advent of active surveillance in 2001, immunological tests for detection of the prion protein revealed some cases with different biochemical characteristics and, in certain instances, differences in pathology that have indicated variant phenotypes and the possibility of agent strain variation. This study examines a case set of 523 bovine brains derived from archived material identified through passive surveillance in GB. All cases conformed to the phenotype of classical BSE (BSE-C) by histopathological, immunohistochemical and biochemical approaches. The analyses consolidated an understanding of BSE-C and, by western blotting, confirmed differentiation from the known atypical BSE cases which exhibit higher or lower molecular masses than BSE-C (BSE-H and BSE-L respectively).


Subject(s)
Brain/pathology , Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/pathology , PrPSc Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Biodiversity , Blotting, Western/veterinary , Brain/metabolism , Cattle , Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/metabolism , Immunohistochemistry/veterinary , Phenotype , Population Surveillance/methods , PrPSc Proteins/isolation & purification , United Kingdom
7.
Vet Pathol ; 48(5): 948-63, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21078883

ABSTRACT

Tissues from sequential-kill time course studies of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) were examined to define PrP immunohistochemical labeling forms and map disease-specific labeling over the disease course after oral exposure to the BSE agent at two dose levels. Study was confined to brainstem, spinal cord, and certain peripheral nervous system ganglia-tissues implicated in pathogenesis and diagnosis or disease control strategies. Disease-specific labeling in the brainstem in 39 of 220 test animals showed the forms and patterns observed in natural disease and invariably preceded spongiform changes. A precise temporal pattern of increase in labeling was not apparent, but labeling was generally most widespread in clinical cases, and it always involved neuroanatomic locations in the medulla oblongata. In two cases, sparse labeling was confined to one or more neuroanatomic nuclei of the medulla oblongata. When involved, the spinal cord was affected at all levels, providing no indication of temporal spread within the cord axis or relative to the brainstem. Where minimal PrP labeling occurred in the thoracic spinal cord, it was consistent with initial involvement of general visceral efferent neurons. Labeling of ganglia involved only sensory ganglia and only when PrP was present in the brainstem and spinal cord. These experimental transmissions mimicked the neuropathologic findings in BSE-C field cases, independent of dose of agent or stage of disease. The model supports current diagnostic sampling approaches and control measures for the removal and destruction of nervous system tissues in slaughtered cattle.


Subject(s)
Brain Stem/pathology , Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/pathology , PrPSc Proteins/analysis , Spinal Cord/pathology , Zoonoses/etiology , Animals , Cattle , Disease Progression , Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/diagnosis , Immunohistochemistry/methods , Immunohistochemistry/veterinary , Retrospective Studies
8.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19464383

ABSTRACT

Production of the lipoprotein vitellogenin (Vg) is induced in fish upon exposure to estrogens and is a biomarker of endocrine disruption in fish. In some fish, three types of Vg (VgA, VgB, and VgC) are recognized and transcribed from at least three distinct Vg genes (vtg). We investigated expression of vtg coding for Vg1A/B, Vg2A/B, and VgC in adult male and larval zebrafish exposed to various estrogenic substances. Quantitative PCR was conducted for transcripts of each vtg and a control gene (beta-actin). Male fish were exposed to 17beta-estradiol (E2) and 17alpha-ethinylestradiol, total RNA was extracted from excised liver, and histopathology of liver, trunk kidney, and gonads was conducted. Larval fish were exposed to 10 different estrogenic substances and total RNA was extracted from groups of whole larvae. In adult male fish, the relative fold change varied, but pattern of expression change (i.e., Vg1A/B > Vg2A/B > VgC) was consistent. Larger males exposed to E2 had significantly higher induction of each vtg. In larval zebrafish, the relative fold change in vtg expression varied according to specific estrogenic substance tested, but the pattern of change (i.e., Vg2A/B > Vg1A/B > VgC) was consistent for each substance that induced vtg.


Subject(s)
Estradiol/pharmacology , Ethinyl Estradiol/pharmacology , Vitellogenins/genetics , Actins/biosynthesis , Animals , Gene Expression/drug effects , Larva/drug effects , Larva/genetics , Larva/metabolism , Male , Vitellogenins/biosynthesis , Zebrafish , Zebrafish Proteins/genetics
10.
Mult Scler ; 15(3): 299-303, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19244395

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the possibility that susceptibility loci in multiple sclerosis (MS) have a role in determining the disease outcome in Northern Ireland population. BACKGROUND: The Genetic Analysis of Multiple Sclerosis in Europeans (GAMES) initiative and follow-up refined analysis identified 15 candidate susceptibility loci within the Northern Irish population for MS. We aimed to investigate the 12 most significant markers for their role in disease outcome. METHODS: Cases with probable or definite MS (Poser criteria) were classified as benign onset (Kurtzke Expanded Disability Status Scale [EDSS]or=6.0 by 10 years), or primary progressive MS. All cases were Caucasian of Northern Irish origin. DNA was extracted from venous blood, microsatellite markers were amplified using polymerase chain reaction and typed using fluorescent fragment analysis. Allele frequencies were compared statistically using a chi-squared test with allowance for multiple comparisons (critical P<0.0042); significant markers were further analyzed by CLUMP (critical P<0.0014). RESULTS: Two microsatellite markers were significant: D3S1278 (Chr 3q13, P<0.001) and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha (Chr 6p21, P<0.001). A further three markers were significant in our preliminary analysis suggesting a trend toward impact on disease outcome; D4S432 (Chr 4p16, P=0.001), D2S347 (Chr 2q14, P=0.003), and D19S903 (Chr 19p13, P=0.003). CONCLUSIONS: This is the first study to suggest a role for TNF-alpha in the disease outcome in MS. Larger replication studies need to be performed to assess the role of markers D4S432, D2S347, and D19S903.


Subject(s)
Genetic Markers , Multiple Sclerosis, Chronic Progressive/epidemiology , Multiple Sclerosis, Chronic Progressive/genetics , Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting/epidemiology , Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting/genetics , Adult , Alleles , Female , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/epidemiology , Humans , Male , Microsatellite Repeats , Middle Aged , Northern Ireland/epidemiology , Predictive Value of Tests , Severity of Illness Index
11.
Vet Pathol ; 46(1): 59-62, 2009 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19112116

ABSTRACT

To investigate the relative involvement of the olfactory region in classical bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), immunohistochemical labeling of prion protein scrapie (PrP(Sc)) was scored in the brainstem, frontal cerebral cortex, and olfactory bulb of cattle with natural and experimental clinical cases of BSE in Great Britain. The intensity of immunolabeling was greatest in the brainstem, but PrP(Sc) was also detected in the olfactory bulb and the cerebral cortex. A diffuse, nonparticulate labeling, possibly due to abundance of cellular PrP, was consistently observed in the olfactory glomeruli of the cases and negative controls. Involvement of the olfactory bulb in BSE and other naturally occurring TSEs of animals raises speculation as to an olfactory portal of infection or a route of excretion of the prion agent.


Subject(s)
Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/metabolism , Olfactory Bulb/metabolism , Prions/metabolism , Animals , Cattle , Immunohistochemistry , United Kingdom
12.
Mult Scler ; 14(7): 880-6, 2008 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18573832

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Northern Ireland is recognized as an area of high risk for multiple sclerosis. The original study of Allison and Millar in 1951 found a prevalence of 51/100,000 and mean annual incidence of 2.74/100,000/year. Subsequent studies in 1961, 1986, and 1996 suggested rising prevalence--80, 138, and 168.2/100,000, respectively. METHODS: In 2004, we surveyed the North-East of Northern Ireland (population 160,446, area 2030 km(2)) using multiple sources of case ascertainment, all satisfying the Poser criteria for definite or probable multiple sclerosis (MS) or the McDonald criteria. RESULTS: From a provisional list of 469 cases, 370 (123 males, 247 females) were identified. The prevalence was 230.6 per 100,000 (95% CI 207.0-255.4) with significantly higher prevalence in females (300.8/100,000) than males (157.0/100,000). Direct standardization to the 1961 Northern Ireland population reduced the overall prevalence rate to 200.5/100,000 (95% CI 193.2-208.0), in females to 270.2/100,000 (95% CI 258.8-282.4) and in males to 131.1/100,000 (95% CI 122.8-139.9). In 1996, incidence had risen to 9.3/100,000/year (14 cases in population of 151,000) with a higher incidence in females (10.3/100,000/year) than males (8.3/100,000/year). CONCLUSIONS: Northern Ireland continues to have a rising prevalence of MS. The increase in incidence suggests a true increase in the disease.


Subject(s)
Multiple Sclerosis/epidemiology , Adolescent , Adult , Age Distribution , Aged , Bias , Child , Female , Humans , Incidence , Male , Middle Aged , Northern Ireland/epidemiology , Prevalence , Risk Factors , Sex Distribution
14.
J Gen Virol ; 88(Pt 11): 3198-3208, 2007 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17947547

ABSTRACT

This study examines tissues from sequential-kill, time-course pathogenesis studies to refine estimates of the age at which disease-specific PrP (PrP(Sc)) can first be detected in the central nervous system (CNS) and related peripheral nervous system ganglia of cattle incubating bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE). Such estimates are important for risk assessments of the age at which these tissues should be removed from cattle at slaughter to prevent human and animal exposure to BSE infection. Tissues were examined from cattle dosed orally with 100 or 1 g BSE-infected brain. Incubation period data for the doses were obtained from attack rate and the sequential-kill studies. A statistical model, fitted by maximum likelihood, accounted for the differences in the lognormal incubation period and the logistic probability of infection between different dose groups. Initial detection of PrP(Sc) during incubation was invariably in the brainstem and the earliest was at 30 and 44 months post-exposure for the 100 g- and 1 g-dosed sequential-kill study groups, respectively. The point at which PrP(Sc) in 50 % of the animals would be detected by immunohistochemistry applied to medulla-obex was estimated at 9.6 and 1.7 months before clinical onset for the 100 g- and 1 g-dosed cattle, respectively, with a low probability of detection in any of the tissues examined at more than 12 months before clinical onset. PrP(Sc) was detected inconsistently in dorsal root ganglia, concurrent with or after detection in CNS, and not at all in certain sympathetic nervous system ganglia.


Subject(s)
Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/diagnosis , Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/physiopathology , PrPSc Proteins/isolation & purification , Animals , Cattle , Central Nervous System/chemistry , Central Nervous System/pathology , Ganglia, Autonomic/chemistry , Ganglia, Autonomic/pathology , Ganglia, Spinal/chemistry , Ganglia, Spinal/pathology , Immunochemistry , Time Factors
15.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun ; 364(2): 366-71, 2007 Dec 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17950692

ABSTRACT

We previously reported reduced expression of erythroid-associated factor (ERAF) within haematopoietic tissues of rodent scrapie models, suggesting an unrecognized role for the erythroid lineage in prion disease. In the present study, we compared the expression of a panel of erythroid genes within four murine scrapie models and five virus infection models with parallels to prion disease pathogenesis. We report that differential expression of erythroid genes is not limited to ERAF, and is a common feature of murine scrapie, dependent on host expression of cellular prion protein. In contrast, erythroid gene expression was not altered following virus infection. Whilst these results further implicate cells of the erythroid lineage in the peripheral pathogenesis of prion disease, analysis of blood from BSE-infected cattle and scrapie-infected sheep reveals that the extent of differential expression of erythroid genes within peripheral blood is not sufficient to provide a discriminatory diagnostic test.


Subject(s)
Erythroid Cells/metabolism , Gene Expression Profiling , Prion Diseases/metabolism , Alphavirus Infections/metabolism , Animals , Biomarkers/metabolism , Cardiovirus Infections/metabolism , Cattle , Disease Models, Animal , Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/metabolism , Female , Gammaherpesvirinae , Herpesviridae Infections/metabolism , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred Strains , Scrapie/metabolism , Semliki forest virus , Sheep , Theilovirus
16.
J Gen Virol ; 88(Pt 4): 1363-1373, 2007 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17374783

ABSTRACT

The dose-response of cattle exposed to the bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) agent is an important component of modelling exposure risks for animals and humans and thereby, the modulation of surveillance and control strategies for BSE. In two experiments calves were dosed orally with a range of amounts of a pool of brainstems from BSE-affected cattle. Infectivity in the pool was determined by end-point titration in mice. Recipient cattle were monitored for clinical disease and, from the incidence of pathologically confirmed cases and their incubation periods (IPs), the attack rate and IP distribution according to dose were estimated. The dose at which 50 % of cattle would be clinically affected was estimated at 0.20 g brain material used in the experiment, with 95 % confidence intervals of 0.04-1.00 g. The IP was highly variable across all dose groups and followed a log-normal distribution, with decreasing mean as dose increased. There was no evidence of a threshold dose at which the probability of infection became vanishingly small, with 1/15 (7 %) of animals affected at the lowest dose (1 mg).


Subject(s)
Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/transmission , Animals , Cattle , Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/diagnosis , Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/pathology , Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/physiopathology , Time Factors
17.
Genes Immun ; 7(6): 494-502, 2006 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16837933

ABSTRACT

Understanding the genetic basis of multiple sclerosis (MS) remains a major challenge, despite decades of intensive research. In order to identify candidate non-MHC susceptibility regions to MS, the results of whole genome screens for linkage or association and follow-up studies in 18 different populations were superimposed together in a combined genomic map. Analysis of this map led to the prediction of at least 38 potential susceptibility regions, each showing linkage and/or association in several populations. Among these, 17 regions were the most reproducibly reported in these studies, thus representing top predicted candidates for MS. This non-formal approach to meta-analysis demonstrated the ability to verify results and retrieve lost information in an association study. Assessment of the map in a Northern Irish refined screen (n=415 cases, n=490 controls) revealed association in 15 regions (P<0.05), including 10 promising candidates on chromosomes 1p13, 2p13, 2q14, 3p23, 7q21, 13q14, 15q13, 17p13, 18q21 and 20p12 (P<0.0025). Seven of these regions were previously overlooked in the Northern Irish whole genome association study. Collating results from numerous studies, this draft map represents a tool that should facilitate the analysis of the genetic backgrounds of MS in many populations.


Subject(s)
Chromosome Mapping , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Multiple Sclerosis/genetics , Adult , Female , Genome, Human , Humans , Male , Microsatellite Repeats , Polymerase Chain Reaction
18.
Vet Rec ; 158(10): 325-31, 2006 Mar 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16531580

ABSTRACT

Samples of tissue from the central nervous system (cns), the lymphoreticular system (lrs) and the rectal mucosa of a large number of scrapie-exposed sheep, with and without signs of clinical disease, were examined immunohistochemically for evidence of disease-associated prion protein (PrP(d)). The rectal mucosa has received almost no attention so far in scrapie diagnosis, despite its abundant rectoanal mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue, and its accessibility. The scrapie-confirmed cases included 244 with clinical disease, of which 237 (97.1 per cent) were positive in the rectal mucosa, and 121 apparently healthy sheep, of which 104 (86 per cent) were positive in the rectal mucosa. PrP(d) was detected in 86.4 to 91.5 per cent of the other lrs tissues of the healthy sheep examined and in 77.7 per cent of their cns tissues. The stage of infection, therefore, affected the probability of a positive result in the rectal mucosa, whereas the breed, PrP genotype, age and sex had little or no independent effect. Accumulations of PrP(d) were observed in the rectal mucosa and other lrs tissues of vrq/arr sheep with preclinical and clinical scrapie, albeit with a lower frequency and magnitude than in sheep of other PrP genotypes. Western immunoblotting analyses of samples of rectal mucosa gave the characteristic PrP glycoprofile, with a sensitivity similar to that of immunohistochemistry.


Subject(s)
Intestinal Mucosa/metabolism , Lymphoid Tissue/metabolism , Prions/isolation & purification , Scrapie/diagnosis , Animals , Female , Immunohistochemistry/veterinary , Intestinal Mucosa/pathology , Lymphoid Tissue/pathology , Male , Rectum , Scrapie/metabolism , Scrapie/pathology , Sheep
20.
Vet Rec ; 156(13): 401-7, 2005 Mar 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15816193

ABSTRACT

The infectivity in tissues from cattle exposed orally to the agent of BSE was assayed by the intracerebral inoculation of cattle. In addition to the infectivity in the central nervous system and distal ileum at stages of pathogenesis previously indicated by mouse bioassay, traces of infectivity were found in the palatine tonsil of cattle killed 10 months after exposure. Because the infectivity may therefore be present throughout the tonsils in cattle infected with BSE, observations were made of the anatomical and histological distribution of lingual tonsil in the root of the tongue of cattle. Examinations of tongues derived from abattoirs in Britain and intended for human consumption showed that macroscopically identifiable tonsillar tissue was present in more than 75 per cent of them, and even in the tongues in which no visible tonsillar tissue remained, histological examination revealed lymphoid tissue in more than 90 per cent. Variations in the distribution of the lingual tonsil suggested that even after the most rigorous trimming of the root of the tongue, traces of tonsillar tissue may remain.


Subject(s)
Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/pathology , Palatine Tonsil/microbiology , Tongue/microbiology , Animals , Cattle , Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/etiology , Mice
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