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Journal of General Virology 2004-Nov

Propagation of a protease-resistant form of prion protein in long-term cultured human glioblastoma cell line T98G.

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Yutaka Kikuchi
Tomoshi Kakeya
Ayako Sakai
Kosuke Takatori
Naoto Nakamura
Haruo Matsuda
Takeshi Yamazaki
Ken-Ichi Tanamoto
Jun-Ichi Sawada

Mots clés

Abstrait

Human prion diseases, such as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), a lethal, neurodegenerative condition, occur in sporadic, genetic and transmitted forms. CJD is associated with the conversion of normal cellular prion protein (PrP(C)) into a protease-resistant isoform (PrP(res)). The mechanism of the conversion has not been studied in human cell cultures, due to the lack of a model system. In this study, such a system has been developed by culturing cell lines. Human glioblastoma cell line T98G had no coding-region mutations of the prion protein gene, which was of the 129 M/V genotype, and expressed endogenous PrP(C) constitutively. T98G cells produced a form of proteinase K (PK)-resistant prion protein fragment following long-term culture and high passage number; its deglycosylated form was approximately 18 kDa. The PK-treated PrP(res) was detected by immunoblotting with the mAb 6H4, which recognizes residues 144-152, and a polyclonal anti-C-terminal antibody, but not by the mAb 3F4, which recognizes residues 109-112, or the anti-N-terminal mAb HUC2-13. These results suggest that PrP(C) was converted into a proteinase-resistant form of PrP(res) in T98G cells.

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