Litcius/Paper detail

Plants as vectors for environmental prion transmission

Christina M. Carlson, Samuel Thomas, Matthew W Keating, Paulina Soto, Nicole M. Gibbs, Haeyoon Chang, Jamie K Wiepz, Annabel Gulliver Austin, Jay R. Schneider, Rodrigo Morales, Christopher J. Johnson, Joel A. Pedersen

2023iScience23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Prions cause fatal neurodegenerative diseases and exhibit remarkable durability, which engenders a wide array of potential exposure scenarios. In chronic wasting disease of deer, elk, moose, and reindeer and in scrapie of sheep and goats, prions are transmitted via environmental routes and the ability of plants to accumulate and subsequently transmit prions has been hypothesized, but not previously demonstrated. Here, we establish the ability of several crop and other plant species to take up prions via their roots and translocate them to above-ground tissues from various growth media including soils. We demonstrate that plants can accumulate prions in above-ground tissues to levels sufficient to transmit disease after oral ingestion by mice. Our results suggest plants may serve as vectors for prion transmission in the environment-a finding with implications for wildlife conservation, agriculture, and public health.

Topics & Concepts

Chronic wasting diseaseScrapieTransmission (telecommunications)BiologyDiseaseWildlifeAgricultureCropIngestionPrion proteinEcologyMedicinePathologyElectrical engineeringBiochemistryEngineeringPrion Diseases and Protein MisfoldingNeurological diseases and metabolism