Prion propagation in mice lacking central nervous system NF-κB signalling
Article 2008 en
Authors
CJ
Christian Julius
MH
Mathias Heikenwälder
PS
Petra Schwarz
Abstract
1 min read
Prions induce highly typical histopathological changes including cell death, spongiosis and activation of glia, yet the molecular pathways leading to neurodegeneration remain elusive. Following prion infection, enhanced nuclear factor- κ B (NF- κ B) activity in the brain parallels the first pathological changes. The NF- κ B pathway is essential for proliferation, regulation of apoptosis and immune responses involving induction of inflammation. The I κ B kinase (IKK) signalosome is crucial for NF- κ B signalling, consisting of the catalytic IKK α /IKK β subunits and the regulatory IKK γ subunit. This study investigated the impact of NF- κ B signalling on prion disease in mouse models with a central nervous system (CNS)-restricted elimination of IKK β or IKK γ in nearly all neuroectodermal cells, including neurons, astrocytes and oligodendrocytes, and in mice containing a non-phosphorylatable IKK α subunit ( IKKα AA/AA ). In contrast to previously published data, the observed results showed no evidence supporting the hypothesis that impaired NF- κ B signalling in the CNS impacts on prion pathogenesis.
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