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Role of CD40 in prion disease and the immune response to recombinant PrP

  • SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University
  • New York University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The CD40 receptor-CD40 ligand (CD40-CD40L) interaction has been shown to affect both immune and non-immune cells and is implicated in diverse activities including immunoglobulin class switching (IgM to IgG), atherosclerosis, chronic inflammation and Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis. A number of groups have studied the role of CD40 in prion disease, however, the results are conflicting presumably due to the use of different scrapie agent-host strain combinations and routes of infection. In the current study, we clarify the effect of CD40 on: (i) replication, progression to clinical disease, PrPSc profile, and neuropathology associated with infection of a single host genotype with three distinct mouse-adapted scrapie strains, and (ii) the immune response of double knockout (PrP, CD40) transgenic mice to recombinant PrP as assessed by the generation of anti-PrP antibodies. Our results suggest that CD40: (i) results in slower disease progression and scrapie strain-specific differences in incubation periods, (ii) does not affect the level of scrapie strain-specific PrPSc, (iii) does not influence disease-associated neuropathology, but (iv), as expected, is required to mount an immune response generating anti-PrP IgG antibodies.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)21-27
Number of pages7
JournalJournal of Neuroimmunology
Volume257
Issue number1-2
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 15 2013

Keywords

  • Anti-PrP antibodies
  • CD40
  • CD40 knockout mice
  • PrP knockout mice
  • Prion disease
  • Recombinant PrP

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