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Human Prion Diseases
Ann Neurol 35:385-395, Prusiner,S.B.&Hsiao,K.K., 1994
See this aricle in Pubmed

Article Abstract
The prion diseases,sometimes referred to as the"transmittable spongiform encephalopathies"including kuru,Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease,and Gerstmann- Straussler-Scheinker disease of humans as well as scrapie and bovine spongiform encephalopathy of animals.For many years,the prion diseases were thought to be caused by viruses despite intriguing evidence to the contrary.The unique characteristic common to all of these disorders, whether sporadic,dominantly inherited,or acquired by infection,is that they involve aberrant metabolism of the prion protein(PrP).In many cases, the cellular prion protein is converted into the scrapie isoform by a posttranslational process that involves a conformational change.Often,the human prion diseases are transmissible to experimental animals and all of the inherited prion diseases segregate with PrP gene mutations.
 
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amyloid plaques
fatal familial insomnia
Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker disease
Jakob-Creutzfeldt disease
kuru
molecular genetics
neurologic disease,diagnoses of
prion disease
review article
spongy degeneration of brain

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