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
Naked nucleic acid

Smallest pathogens

Copied by host RNA polymerase

Many cause infections/damage to plants

Hepatitis D in humans
 Liver cell death

Circular RNA molecules
 Few hundred nucleotides long

Don’t encode proteins
 Can replicate in host cells
 Cause errors in regulation of growth

First discovered in 1982

“Proteinaceous infectious particle”

Rogue proteins
 Normal protein = PrP gene
 Prion = misfolded version of this protein

Prion folding

Can arise spontaneously

Trigger NO IMMUNE RESPONSE

Characteristics of prions:
 Long incubation period
 Indestructible

Group of neurodegenerative disorders
 transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs)
 Proteins aggregate & form tough, fibrous deposits

Always fatal

Rapidly progressive once symptoms appear

Animal Prion Diseases:
 Scrapie
 Mad cow

Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD)

Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (vCJD)

Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker Syndrome

Fatal Familial Insomnia

Kuru

Proteins are self-propetuating
 No genetic material

Have distinct strains that produce different
phenotypes

Normal proteins have many alpha helices;
prions have many more beta-pleated sheets

New evidence shows prions can:
 Maintain long-term memory (snails, mice, fruit




flies)
Speed up evolution in yeast
Aid in synthesis of melanin in mammals
Form biofilms
Store hormones

Are prion diseases caused by gain of function
or loss of function?

How does the amino acid sequence of the
prion determine its configuration?
 How can the same sequence determine different
“packing” arrangements?