Suppression of scrapie infection in mice by heteropolyanion 23, dextran sulfate, and some other polyanions.

1986 
Studies of polyanions that suppress scrapie have been done to pinpoint the cell types in the lymphoreticular system which are important in pathogenesis and to suggest possible prophylactic or therapeutic strategies for the unconventional slow viruses. A regime of three daily injections of the inorganic heteropolyanion HPA-23 reduced the effective scrapie dose by more than 99%; i.e., some mice survived peripherally injected doses of 100 50% lethal dose units. The effect was greatest when the first dose of HPA-23 was given 4 h after injecting scrapie, but it declined rapidly as this interval was increased, and there was virtually no effect 2 days after infection. A single dose of high-molecular-weight organic polyanions such as carrageenan or dextran sulfate (DS-500) greatly reduced (i.e., greater than 99%) the efficiency of scrapie infection. In contrast to HPA-23, DS-500 was equally effective whether given 4 days before or 8 h after the time of infection. The antiscrapie effect of DS-500 appeared to be independent of its activity as a B-cell mitogen and of its ability to produce a cytotoxic blockade of phagocytic cells. DS-500 probably caused the aggregation and loss from blood of scrapie inoculum which was present immediately after injection, but it had additional effects on scrapie at later times.
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