Abstract:
When recombinant and cellular prion protein (PrPC) binds copper, it acquires properties resembling the scrapie isoform (PrPSc), namely protease resistance, detergent insolubility and increased β sheet content. However, whether the conformations of PrPC induced by copper and PrPSc are similar has not been studied in great detail. Here, we use a panel of seven monoclonal antibodies to decipher the epitopes on full-length mouse PrPC that are affected by exogenous copper, and to compare the antigenicity of the copper-treated full-length PrPC with the full-length PrPSc present in scrapie-infected mouse brains. In the presence of copper, we found that epitopes along residues 115–130 and 153–165 become more accessible on PrPC. These regions correspond to the two β sheet strands in recombinant PrP and they were proposed to be important for prion conversion. However, when we compared the antibody-binding patterns between full-length PrPC with full-length PrPSc and between copper-treated full-length PrPC with full-length PrPSc, antibody binding to residues 143–155 and 175–185 was consistently increased on PrPSc. Collectively, our results suggest that copper-treated full-length PrPC does not resemble full-length PrPSc, despite acquiring PrPSc-like properties. In addition, since each full-length protein reacts distinctively to some of the antibodies, this binding pattern could discriminate between PrPC and PrPSc.
Keywords: Key words: Prion protein; copper; epitope mapping; antigenicity.
Footnotes
Received 13 February 2003; received after revision 21 March 2003; accepted 24 March 2003
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