The misfolded form of cellular prion protein (PrPc) is the main component of the infectious agent of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies and the validated biomarker for these diseases. The expression of PrPc is highest in the central nervous system and has been found in peripheral tissues. Soluble PrPc has been detected in cerebrospinal fluid, urine, serum, milk, and seminal plasma. In this study, attempts were made to characterize prion protein in urine samples from normal and scrapie-infected sheep. Urine samples from scrapie-infected sheep and age-matched healthy sheep were collected and analyzed by Western blot following concentration. A protease K-sensitive protein band with a molecular weight of approximately 27–30 kDa was visualized after immunoblotting with anti-PrP monoclonal antibodies to a C-terminal part of PrPc, but not after immunoblotting with monoclonal antibodies to an N-terminal epitope of PrPc or with secondary antibodies only. The amount of PrPc in the urine of 49 animals (control group:
Research article
Prion protein in sheep urine
Olga Andrievskaia, James Algire, Aru Balachandran , [...]
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Abstract