Saturday, June 14, 2025

Understanding How a Rare Brain Wasting Disease Hides in Neurons For Decades

Good news! Seems to be an impressive study!

"In April of this year, three people in Oregon developed Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), a rare, fatal neurological condition that is similar to bovine spongiform encephalopathy, also known as mad cow disease. It impacts one or two people per million each year, making the chances of three cases emerging in the same small geographic area quite low. ...

CJD and mad cow disease are both transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, named for the sponge-like holes that compromise the brain as the disease progresses. These diseases can have long latency periods; CJD can remain dormant for up to 38 years, but once it spreads to the brain, it decimates the brain and kills its host.

An abnormally folded protein—called a prion—is the hallmark of neurodegeneration in CJD. Once formed, prions can’t be cleared, leading to a build-up of aggregated proteins that damage the brain. Some researchers believe the prions themselves are infectious, but ... [others] suspects misfolded prions are a late-stage response to an infectious agent, such as a small virus. In a new study ...  developed the first cellular model of a latent CJD infection, revealing key pieces of the puzzle.

In the study, when the researchers induced rat neurons to divide, those infected with CJD looked just like healthy neurons. But when the researchers halted cell division, infected neurons quickly began producing infectious particles, and a robust immune response followed. Only then did the neurons begin to express many other changes resulting from infection. Interestingly, all forms of prion protein were reduced in these highly infectious neurons.

“Here we have a latent infection that we can turn on and turn off,” says Manuelidis, senior author of the study. “As a biological and disease mechanism, it's paradigm-shifting.” ...

Many pathogens evade immune responses by hiding or going dormant within cells. Infectious agents can persist for years in lymphoid tissues—where white blood cells are made—or selected specialized cells without producing symptoms. Herpes virus, for example, is present in more than half of the U.S. population, causing occasional outbreaks when a person is stressed, sick, or tired. Tuberculosis also has a long latency period when sequestered in lymph nodes, and the human immunodeficiency virus can take many years to manifest as disease.

Latent viruses often emerge when the immune system is weakened. “We carry a whole bunch of known latent viruses and other unknown elements,” says Manuelidis, “and suddenly, when conditions are right, they come out of the woodwork.”

To investigate how the infectious agent accumulates in CJD, the researchers looked at rat brain neurons that had stopped dividing. Unlike other cell types, mature neurons do not divide and can’t be replaced. For the study, the researchers engineered the neurons to continue dividing until the temperature was raised, upon which the neurons stopped dividing, or became arrested. This switch between division and arrest was meant to model physiological conditions in which CJD infection could re-emerge.

The researchers then analyzed gene expression patterns in uninfected and infected neurons, both while they were dividing and after their arrest.

Infected neurons behave differently after arrest
The infected neurons looked and acted almost indistinguishable from the uninfected ones during division, but several days after arrest, their gene expression patterns changed, the researchers found. The neurons activated innate immune response genes, signaling an infection, and upregulated a plethora of genes related to cell division even though division should have been arrested.

The infected neurons resumed cell division when they were returned to the low temperature environment but became infectious again upon re-arrest, switching between latent and re-activated infection. During the cell division phase, the neurons lost infectivity, the researchers found. ...

Re-arrested cells responded as if they had been changed by the previous infection,” ... Even though the latently infected neurons looked like normal dividing cells, they were primed to escape future arrest.

When CJD cells were re-arrested, they also increased production of the gene that encodes prion protein, but at a much lower level than the uninfected cells, signaling that the initial infection that was “lost” had modified the prion protein responses. ..."

From the abstract:
"Rat post-mitotic septal neurons, engineered to reversibly proliferate and arrest under physiological conditions, can be maintained for weeks without cytotoxic effects. Nine representative independent cDNA libraries were made to evaluate global arrest-induced neural differentiation and innate immune responses, e.g., upregulated interferon (β-IFN) RNA, that were previously identified in normal uninfected and Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease agent (CJ) infected septal neurons.
This reversible cell model encompassed a non-productive latent (CJ−) and a highly infectious (CJ + , 10 logs/gm) state.
Arrest of normal uninfected neurons upregulated a plethora of anti-proliferative transcripts and known neuronal differentiation transcripts (e.g., Neuregulin-1, GDF6 and Prnp). As expected, many activated IFN innate immune genes were simultaneously upregulated (e.g., OAS1, ISG20, CD80, cytokines, chemokines and complement) along with clusterin (CLU) that binds misfolded proteins.
Arrest of latently infected CJ− cells induced even more profound global transcript differences. CJ+ cells markedly downregulated the anti-proliferative controls seen in arrested normal cells. CJ+ infection also suppressed neuronal differentiation transcripts, including Prnp which is essential for CJ infection. In contrast, IFN and cytokine/chemokine pathways were strongly upregulated. Analysis of the 342 CJ+ unique transcripts revealed additional innate immune and anti-viral-linked transcripts, e.g., Il17, ISG15, and RSAD2 (viperin).
These data show:
1) innate immune transcripts are produced by normal neurons during differentiation;
2) CJ infection enhances and expands anti-viral responses;
3) non-productive latent infection can epigenetically imprint many proliferative pathways to thwart complete arrest.
This rare cell model of latent infection is fundamental for interrogating triggers of late onset disease that are also relevant for Alzheimer’s Disease. Peripheral human blood and intestinal myeloid cells that are latently infected may also be conditionally stimulated in vitro to produce CJ+ linked diagnostic transcripts."

Understanding How a Rare Brain Wasting Disease Hides in Neurons For Decades < Yale School of Medicine



Fig 9. Graphical summary: Normal rat septal neurons, engineered to reversibly proliferate and arrest DNA synthesis, were compared with CJ infected cells (top row).


No comments: