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February 4, 2005|Volume 33, Number 17



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Infectious proteins associated with Mad Cow Disease found in organs besides the brain

Prions, infectious proteins associated with bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) -- or Mad Cow Disease -- were previously thought to accumulate mainly in the brain, but Yale and University of Zurich researchers report in Science that other organs can also become infected.

Past research had shown that the brain and spinal cord bear the highest infection risk for BSE, followed by organs such as the spleen, lymph nodes and tonsils. All other organs were thought to be devoid of prions.

Ruddle and co-authors analyzed three organ systems that are typically free of prions -- liver, pancreas and kidney -- in five different mouse models of chronic inflammation. After the mice were infected with prions, the team detected prion accumulation in the inflamed organs. They concluded that the spectrum of organs containing prions might be considerably increased in situations of chronic inflammation.

"The study suggests that the current prion risk-classification of farm animal organs may need to be reassessed in animals suffering from inflammation due to microbial infection or autoimmune disease," says Nancy H. Ruddle, the John Rodman Paul Professor and director of graduate studies in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at the School of Medicine.

Previous research in the study director Adriano Aguzzi's group at the Institute of Neuropathology at University of Zurich showed that B cells are essential for the spread of prions to organs other than the brain. B cells are found in lymphoid organs in healthy humans and animals, but they can migrate into non-lymphoid organs under inflammatory circumstances.

Other researchers on the study include first author Mathias Heikenwalder, Nicolas Zeller, Harald Seeger, Marco Prinz, Peter-Christian Klohn, Petra Schwarz and Charles Weissman.

Ruddle's portion of this study was supported by the National Institutes of Health.

-- By Karen Peart


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

Alumnae create W.I.S.E.R. fund for women's athletics

Climbers reach new heights of understanding about poverty

Study: Chemical in marine paint may damage whales' hearing

Black History Month program aims to 'touch the spirit of everyone'


Yale delegation inaugurates initiatives . . . with India during January trip

ENDOWED PROFESSORSHIPS

Yale Opera stages the magical 'A Midsummer Night's Dream'

Shakespeare's merry tale of mix-ups is the next Yale Rep offering

Infectious proteins associated with Mad Cow Disease found . . .

Faculty, students present staged reading of 'Our Country's Good'

In Memoriam: Dr. George Silver

Zedillo takes part in efforts to reduce poverty, boost development

Donors sought for Feb. 8 bone marrow drive at Yale Bookstore

Campus Notes


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