Contact Us

University of California
675 Nelson Rising Lane, 3rd Floor
San Francisco, CA 94158
About the Article
Latest Findings
- What Mad-Cow Disease May Reveal About Alzheimer's
Mad-Cow Disease May Hold Clues To Other Neurological Disorders Scientists believe new ways to treat Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and ...
read the article - Pharmacokinetics of quinacrine efflux from mouse brain via the P-glycoprotein efflux transporter
The lipophilic cationic compound quinacrine has been used as an antimalarial drug for over 75 years but its pharmacokinetic profile is limited. Here, ...
read the article - UCSF links key dementia protein, brain traumas
The mysterious proteins called prions, which build up in the human brain to cause Alzheimer's and other dementias, are also linked to post-traumat...
read the article - Cell biology. A unifying role for prions in neurodegenerative diseases
Many neurodegenerative diseases—including Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, Alzheimer's disease (AD), Parkinson's disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosi...
read the article
News & Articles
A protease-resistant protein is a structural component of the scrapie prion
Fractions purified from scrapie-infected hamster brain contain a unique protein, designated PrP. It was labeled with N-succinimidyl 3-(4-hydroxy-5-[125I]-iodophenyl) propionate, which did not alter the titer of the scrapie prion. The concentration of PrP was found to be directly proportional to the titer of the infectious prion. Both PrP and prion infectivity were resistant for 2 hr at 37 degrees C to hydrolysis by proteinase K under nondenaturing conditions. Prolonging the digestion resulted in a concomitant decrease in both PrP and the scrapie prion. When the amino-acid-specific proteases trypsin or SV-8 protease were used instead of proteinase K, no change in either PrP or the prion was detected. The parallel changes between PrP and the prion provide evidence that PrP is a structural component of the infectious prion. Our findings also suggest that the prion contains only one major protein, namely PrP.