A unified model for the origins of spongiform degeneration and other neuropathological features in prion diseases
Gerold Schmitt-Ulms, Xinzhu Wang, Joel Watts, Stephanie Booth, Holger, Wille, Wenda Zhao

TL;DR
This paper proposes a unified model linking ER dilation, ribosome aggregation, and other neuropathological features in prion diseases, suggesting ER stress and cellular rescue responses are central to disease progression.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model connecting various prion disease hallmarks through ER-centered cellular stress responses and adaptive mechanisms.
Findings
ER dilation correlates with major prion diseases
Varicose tubules and oval bodies are ER hypertrophy
Virus-like particles are inactive ribosome aggregates
Abstract
Decades after their initial observation in prion-infected brain tissues, the identities of virus-like dense particles, varicose tubules, and oval bodies containing parallel bands and fibrils have remained elusive. Our recent work revealed that a phenotype of dilation of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), most notable for the perinuclear space (PNS), contributes to spongiform degeneration. To assess the significance of this phenotype for the etiology of prion diseases, we explored whether it can be functionally linked to other neuropathological hallmarks observed in these diseases, as this would indicate it to be a central event. Having surveyed the neuropathological record and other distant literature niches, we propose a model in which pathogenic forms of the prion protein poison raft domains, including essential Na+, K+-ATPases (NKAs) embedded within them, thereby triggering an…
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