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Prion transmission

Prion excretion and occurrence in the environment

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Pages 275-282 | Received 17 Sep 2010, Accepted 17 Sep 2010, Published online: 01 Oct 2010
 

Abstract

Prion diseases range from being highly infectious, for example scrapie and CWD which show facile transmission between susceptible individuals, to showing negligible horizontal transmission, such as BSE and CJD which are spread via food or iatrogenically respectively. Scrapie and CWD display considerable in vivo dissemination, with PrPSc and infectivity being found in a range of peripheral tissues. This in vivo dissemination appears to facilitate the recently reported excretion of prion through multiple routes such as from skin, faeces, urine, milk, nasal secretions, saliva and placenta. Furthermore, excreted scrapie and CWD agent is detected within environmental samples such as water and on the surfaces of inanimate objects. The cycle of ‘uptake of prion from the environment - widespread in vivo prion dissemination - prion excretion - prion persistence in the environment’ is likely to explain the facile transmission and maintenance of these diseases within wild and farmed populations over many years.

Figures and Tables

Table 1 Detection of prion infectivity or PrPSc within excreta/secreta or within tissues released into the environment

Table 2 Levels of scrapie prion detected in excreta/secreta

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