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Determining the role of follicular dendritic cells in TSE agent neuroinvasion

Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs), such as scrapie and variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease are infectious, fatal, neurodegenerative diseases. Following peripheral infection TSE agents usually accumulate in lymhoid tissues before spreading to the central nervous system. In mice, follicular dendritic cells (FDCs) expressing the host prion protein (PrPC) are essential for scrapie agent accumulation in lymphoid tissues. The accumulation of the scrapie agent on FDCs is critical for the efficient spread of infection to the brain. However, it is unknown whether FDCs themselves actively replicate the scrapie agent, or simply accumulate it following production by other cells types such as neurones, lymphocytes or other stromal cell populations. To definitively address this issue a transgenic mouse model was created in which PrPC is switched on or off exclusively on FDCs. Expression of cre-recombinase (Cre) under the action of cell-specific gene promoters can be used to induce or delete the expression of a target gene in specific cell populations. In this model, Cre expression is driven by the complement receptor type 2 gene (Cr2/CD21) which is expressed by FDCs and mature B lymphocytes. Characterisation of the CD21-cre mouse line was achieved by crossing with a ROSA26 reporter strain. The CD21-cre mouse line was subsequently crossed with floxed-PrP mouse lines to produce compound transgenic mouse lines in which PrPC expression was switched on or off, only in FDCs. Cre expression by B lymphocytes was eliminated by γ-irradiation and grafting recipient mice with Cre-deficient bone marrow. Immunohistochemical analysis confirmed the expression PrPC had been switched on or off exclusively on FDCs. Subsequently, the mice were challenged with scrapie by intra-peritoneal injection to determine the precise role of FDCs in the accumulation of scrapie in lymphoid tissues. Switching off PrPC expression exclusively on FDCs prevented the accumulation of TSE agent specific disease-associated PrPSc in the spleen after i.p inoculation. Conversely, in mice in which PrPC was expressed only on FDC, successful replication of the agent occurred on the FDC network in the spleen. Taken together, these data show PrPC-expressing FDCs alone are sufficient to support the accumulation of the scrapie agent within lymphoid tissues. Furthermore, these data suggest FDC replicate the TSE agent and do not simply accumulate it following synthesis by other cell types.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:563228
Date January 2011
CreatorsMcCulloch, Laura
ContributorsMabbott, Neil. : Hopkins, John
PublisherUniversity of Edinburgh
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://hdl.handle.net/1842/5923

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