Medical Hypotheses
Volume 53, Issue 2 , Pages 91-102, August 1999

Is the pathogen of prion disease a microbial protein?

Budapest Institute of National Public Health and Medical Officer Service, Budapest, Hungary

Received 4 November 1997; accepted 23 December 1997.

Abstract 

Though considerable circumstantial evidence suggests that the pathogen of prion disease is proteinaceous, it has not yet been conclusively identified. Epidemiological observations indicate that a microbial vector is responsible for the transmission of natural prion disease in sheep and goats and that the real causative agent may correspond to a structural protein of that microorganism. The microbial protein should resemble prion protein (PrP) and may replicate itself in the host by using mammalian DNA. A similar phenomenon was already described with a protein antigen of the ameba Naegleria gruberi (1–4). The various serotypes of the microbial protein may account for the existence of scrapie strains. It is proposed that many microbial proteins may be capable of replicating themselves in mammalian cells eliciting and sustaining thereby degenerative and/or autoimmune reactions subsequent to infections with microorganisms.

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PII: S0306-9877(97)90715-5

doi:10.1054/mehy.1997.0715

Medical Hypotheses
Volume 53, Issue 2 , Pages 91-102, August 1999