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Cycline Efficacy on the Propagation of Human Prions in Primary Cultured Neurons is Strain-Specific
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Citations
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References
2013
Year
Creutzfeldt-jakob DiseaseNeurotransmitterPathologyNeurotransmissionCellular PhysiologyDrug ResistanceAntiprion EffectPrion DiseaseCycline EfficacyNervous SystemPharmacologyCell BiologyPrimary Cultured NeuronsPathogenesisNeuroscienceMolecular NeurobiologyMedicineScrapie ModelHuman Prions
In prion diseases, a major issue in therapeutic research is the variability of the effect between strains. Stimulated by the report of an antiprion effect in a scrapie model and by ongoing international clinical trials using doxycycline, we studied the efficacy of cyclines against the propagation of human prions. First, we successfully propagated various Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) isolates (sporadic, variant, and iatrogenic CJD) in neuronal cultures expressing the human prion protein. Then, we found that doxycycline was the most effective compound, with important variations between isolates. Isolates from sporadic CJD, the most common form of prion disease, showed the highest sensitivity.
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