Islamabad, Jan 15 : Airborne prions are also infectious and can induce mad cow disease
or Creutzfeldt-Jakob disorder, new findings suggest.
This is the
surprising conclusion of researchers at the University of Zurich, the University
Hospital Zurich and the University of Tübingen. They recommend precautionary
measures for scientific labs, slaughterhouses and animal feed
plants.
The prion is the infectious agent that caused the epidemic of
mad cow disease, also termed bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), and claimed
the life of over 280,000 cows in the past decades. Transmission of BSE to
humans, e.g. by ingesting food derived from BSE-infected cows, causes variant
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease which is characterized by a progressive and invariably
lethal break-down of brain cells.
It is known that prions can be
transmitted through contaminated surgical instruments and, more rarely, through
blood transfusions. The consumption of food products made from BSE-infected cows
can also induce the disease that is responsible for the death of almost 300
people. However, prions are not generally considered to be airborne -- in
contrast to many viruses including influenza and chicken pox.
Prof.
Adriano Aguzzi's team of scientists at the universities of Zurich and Tübingen
and the University Hospital Zurich have now challenged the notion that airborne
prions are innocuous. In a study, mice were housed in special inhalation
chambers and exposed to aerosols containing prions. Unexpectedly, it was found
that inhalation of prion-tainted aerosols induced disease with frightening
efficiency. Just a single minute of exposure to the aerosols was sufficient to
infect 100% of the mice, according to Prof. Aguzzi who published the findings in
the Open-Access-Journal "PLoS Pathogens." The longer expo-sure lasted, the
shorter the time of incubation in the recipient mice and the sooner clinical
signs of a prion disease occurred. Prof. Aguzzi says the findings are entirely
unexpected and appear to contra-dict the widely held view that prions are not
airborne.
The prions appear to transfer from the airways and colonize the
brain directly because immune system defects -- known to prevent the passage of
prions from the digestive tract to the brain -- did not prevent
infection.
Precautionary measures against prion infections in scientific
laboratories, slaughterhouses and animal feed plants do not typically include
stringent protection against aerosols. The new findings suggest that it may be
advisable to reconsider regulations in light of a possible airborne transmission
of prions.
Prof. Aguzzi recommends precautionary measures to minimize
the risk of a prion infection in humans and animals. He does, however, emphasize
that the findings stem from the production of aerosols in laboratory conditions
and that Creutzfeldt-Jakob patients do not exhale
prisons.
Ends
SA/EN
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Airborne pathogens can induce mad cow disease
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