AMYLOID PLAQUES IN CHRONIC WASTING DISEASE
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Date
1990-09
Type of Work
Department
Hood College Biology
Program
Biomedical and Environmental Science
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Abstract
Chronic wasting disease (CWD), a progressive neurological disorder
of captive mule deer and Rocky Mountain elk, is characterized
neuropathologically by widespread spongiform change of the neuropil,
intracytoplasmic vacuolation of the neuronal perikarya and astrocytic
hypertrophy and hyperplasia. Histochemically demonstrable amyloid
plaques and amyloid plaques reactive to antibodies prepared against
scrapie amyloid in captive mule deer, mule deer hybrids and Rocky
Mountain elk naturally affected with CWD are presented.
Amyloid plaques in CWD-affected mule deer were congophilic,
birefringent and periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) positive. In mule deer
hybrids, only occasional PAS-positive plaques were observed. No
histochemically demonstrable plaques were observed in CWD-affected Rocky
Mountain elk. Antibody raised against scrapie amyloid showed robust
immunoreactivity with amyloid plaques in CWD-affected captive mule deer
and were found in the cerebral grey and white matter in clusters or in
isolation, in deep subcortical nuclei, in all layers of the cerebellum,
in areas of extensive vacuolation and in subpial and perivascular
regions. In hybrid deer, plaques were rarely observed in cerebellum and
subpia. A notable finding in brain sections of CWD-affected hybrid deer
and Rocky Mountain elk was a circumscribed collection of scrapie
amyloid-immunopositive nuclei with non-congophilic, non-birefringent
amyloid deposits located at its center. In elk, plaques were not
observed in cerebellum, subpia and subependyma. Furthermore, amyloid
plaques in CWD-affected captive mule deer were alcianophilic at 0.3 M
magnesium chloride indicating the presence of weakly to moderately
sulfated glycosaminoglycans. Similar scrapie amyloid-immunoreactive
plaques are also present in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, Gerstmann-
Straussler syndrome and kuru in humans. The data presented here
corroborate that CWD belongs to the subacute spongiform virus
encephalopathies (transmissible cerebral amyloidoses).