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Contacts:
Dr. Jason Shih,
919/515-5521
Mick Kulikowski,
News Services, 919/515-3470
Jan.
5, 2004
Scientists
Discover That Enzyme Degrades Mad Cow Disease Prion
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Research by North Carolina State University
scientists, in conjunction with scientists from the
Netherlands and BioResource International, an NC State
spin-off biotechnology company, has shown that, under
proper conditions, an enzyme can fully degrade the prion
– or protein particle – believed to be responsible
for mad cow disease and other related animal and human
diseases.
These transmissible prions – believed
to be the cause of bovine spongiform encephalopathy
(BSE), the technical name for mad cow disease, as well
as the human and sheep versions, called Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease and scrapie, respectively – are highly
resistant to degradation, says Dr. Jason Shih, professor
of biotechnology and poultry science at NC State. But
the new research, which tested the effects of a bacterial
enzyme keratinase on brain tissues from cows with BSE
and sheep with scrapie, showed that, when the tissue
was pretreated and in the presence of a detergent, the
enzyme fully degraded the prion, rendering it undetectable.
The
research was published in the Dec. 1 edition of The
Journal of Infectious Diseases.
Shih’s colleagues in the research
study included first author Jan Langeveld, Dick Van
de Wiel, Jan Garssen and Alex Bossers from the Central
Institute for Animal Disease Control in Lelystad, The
Netherlands; and Giles Shih and Jeng-Jie Wang from BioResource
International, which is located on NC State’s
Centennial Campus.
The researchers now plan another study
to test the effectiveness of the enzyme on the treated
BSE prions in mice. The two-year study begins in January
2004 and is funded with $190,000 from the National Cattleman’s
Beef Association.
“Our
work has been done in vitro, or in test tubes, and we’ve
reduced the prion to undetectable levels,” Jason
Shih says. “Our work with mice will show whether
these undetectable levels of prion are indeed non-infectious.”
Jason
Shih will also test keratinase’s effectiveness
in decontaminating equipment that processes animal by-products.
Many scientists believe that mad cow disease is spread
by healthy animals eating feed containing by-products
from BSE-infected animals. Using keratinase to gobble
up harmful prions on the processing equipment would
go a long way in reducing the risk of spreading BSEs
like mad cow disease, Shih believes.
This study to optimize the degradation
process is funded for two years with $180,000 from the
Food and Drug Administration. Shih says in lieu of using
actual BSE materials, which are quite dangerous to work
with, researchers will use a surrogate protein produced
from yeast that has similar physical and chemical properties,
but is non-pathogenic.
Shih
hit upon the idea of using keratinase to degrade prions
based on his more than two decades of work as a poultry
scientist looking for ways to manage poultry waste.
He discovered that a bacteria, Bacillus licheniformis
strain PWD-1, could degrade chicken feathers. Shih isolated
and characterized the bacterial enzyme keratinase, and
then isolated and sequenced the gene that encodes keratinase.
By fermentation technology, he was able to develop a
way to produce mass quantities of the enzyme, and did
studies that proved many valuable applications of the
enzyme.
Shih
found that keratinase can be added to chicken feed to
increase digestibility and the efficiency of the feed;
that is, chickens who eat feed with the enzyme grow
to optimal weight quicker and need less feed to grow
to that optimal weight. The enzyme thus can provide
the same benefit in feed that antibiotics currently
provide. Animal producers are looking for safer substitutes
to antibiotics, and Shih believes that keratinase can
serve that purpose.
Soon, it will become clear whether keratinase
can also help prevent mad cow and other harmful diseases
caused by prions.
-
kulikowski -
Note to editors: An abstract
of The Journal of Infectious Diseases paper
follows.
“Enzymatic
Degradation of Prion Protein in Brain Stem from Infected
Cattle and Sheep”
Authors: Jan P.M. Langeveld, Dick F.M. Van
de Wiel, G. Jan Garssen and Alex Bossers, Central Institute
for Animal Disease Control, Lelystad, The Netherlands;
Jeng-Jie Wang and Giles Shih, BioResource International;
and Jason C.H. Shih, Department of Poultry Science,
North Carolina State University
Published: Dec. 1, 2003, edition of The
Journal of Infectious Diseases
Abstract:
Prions – infectious agents involved in transmissible
spongiform encephalopathies – normally survive
proteolytic and mild protein-destructive processes.
Using bacterial keratinase produced by Bacillus
licheniformis strain PWD-1, we tested conditions
to accomplish the full degradation of prion protein
(PrP) in brain-stem tissue from animals with bovine
spongiform encephalopathy and scrapie. The detection
of PrP^Sc, the disease-associated isoform of PrP, in
homogenates was done by Western blotting and various
antibodies. The results indicated that only in the presence
of detergents did heat pretreatment at >100°C
allow the extensive enzymatic breakdown of PrP^Sc to
a state where it is immunochemically undetectable. Proteinase
K and 2 other subtilisin proteases, but not trypsin
and pepsin, were also effective. This enzymatic process
could lead to the development of a method for the decontamination
of medical and laboratory equipment. The ultimate effectiveness
of this method of prion inactivation has to be tested
in mouse bioassays.
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