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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?