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Dive into the research topics where Christina J. Sigurdson is active.

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Featured researches published by Christina J. Sigurdson.


Nature Medicine | 2004

Lymphoid follicle destruction and immunosuppression after repeated CpG oligodeoxynucleotide administration.

Mathias Heikenwalder; Magdalini Polymenidou; Tobias Junt; Christina J. Sigurdson; Hermann Wagner; Shizuo Akira; Rolf M. Zinkernagel; Adriano Aguzzi

DNA containing unmethylated cytidyl guanosyl (CpG) sequences, which are underrepresented in mammalian genomes but prevalent in prokaryotes, is endocytosed by cells of the innate immune system, including macrophages, monocytes and dendritic cells, and activates a pathway involving Toll-like receptor-9 (TLR9). CpG-containing oligodeoxynucleotides (CpG-ODN) are potent stimulators of innate immunity, and are currently being tested as adjuvants of antimicrobial, antiallergic, anticancer and antiprion immunotherapy. Little is known, however, about the consequences of repeated CpG-ODN administration, which is advocated for some of these applications. Here we report that daily injection of 60 μg CpG-ODN dramatically alters the morphology and functionality of mouse lymphoid organs. By day 7, lymphoid follicles were poorly defined; follicular dendritic cells (FDC) and germinal center B lymphocytes were suppressed. Accordingly, CpG-ODN treatment for ≥7 d strongly reduced primary humoral immune responses and immunoglobulin class switching. By day 20, mice developed multifocal liver necrosis and hemorrhagic ascites. All untoward effects were strictly dependent on CpG and TLR9, as neither the CpG-ODN treatment of Tlr9−/− mice nor the repetitive challenge of wild-type mice with nonstimulatory ODN (AT-ODN) or with the TLR3 agonist polyinosinic:cytidylic acid (polyI:C) were immunotoxic or hepatotoxic.


Annual Review of Pathology-mechanisms of Disease | 2008

Molecular Mechanisms of Prion Pathogenesis

Adriano Aguzzi; Christina J. Sigurdson; Mathias Heikenwaelder

Prion diseases are infectious neurodegenerative diseases occurring in humans and animals with an invariably lethal outcome. One fundamental mechanistic event in prion diseases is the aggregation of aberrantly folded prion protein into large amyloid plaques and fibrous structures associated with neurodegeneration. The cellular prion protein (PrPC) is absolutely required for disease development, and prion knockout mice are not susceptible to prion disease. Prions accumulate not only in the central nervous system but also in lymphoid organs, as shown for new variant and sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob patients and for some animals. To date it is largely accepted that prions consist primarily of PrPSc, a misfolded and aggregated beta-sheet-rich isoform of PrPC. However, PrPSc may or may not be completely congruent with the infectious moiety. Here, we discuss the molecular mechanisms leading to neurodegeneration, the role of the immune system in prion pathogenesis, and the existence of prion strains that appear to have different tropisms and biochemical characteristics.


Journal of General Virology | 1999

Oral transmission and early lymphoid tropism of chronic wasting disease PrPres in mule deer fawns (Odocoileus hemionus )

Christina J. Sigurdson; Elizabeth S. Williams; Michael W. Miller; Terry R. Spraker; Katherine I. O'Rourke; Edward A. Hoover

Mule deer fawns (Odocoileus hemionus) were inoculated orally with a brain homogenate prepared from mule deer with naturally occurring chronic wasting disease (CWD), a prion-induced transmissible spongiform encephalopathy. Fawns were necropsied and examined for PrPres, the abnormal prion protein isoform, at 10, 42, 53, 77, 78 and 80 days post-inoculation (p.i.) using an immunohistochemistry assay modified to enhance sensitivity. PrPres was detected in alimentary-tract-associated lymphoid tissues (one or more of the following: retropharyngeal lymph node, tonsil, Peyers patch and ileocaecal lymph node) as early as 42 days p.i. and in all fawns examined thereafter (53 to 80 days p.i.). No PrPres staining was detected in lymphoid tissue of three control fawns receiving a control brain inoculum, nor was PrPres detectable in neural tissue of any fawn. PrPres-specific staining was markedly enhanced by sequential tissue treatment with formic acid, proteinase K and hydrated autoclaving prior to immunohistochemical staining with monoclonal antibody F89/160.1.5. These results indicate that CWD PrPres can be detected in lymphoid tissues draining the alimentary tract within a few weeks after oral exposure to infectious prions and may reflect the initial pathway of CWD infection in deer. The rapid infection of deer fawns following exposure by the most plausible natural route is consistent with the efficient horizontal transmission of CWD in nature and enables accelerated studies of transmission and pathogenesis in the native species.


Nature Methods | 2007

Prion strain discrimination using luminescent conjugated polymers

Christina J. Sigurdson; K. Peter R. Nilsson; Simone Hornemann; Giuseppe Manco; Magdalini Polymenidou; Petra Schwarz; Mario Leclerc; Per Hammarström; Kurt Wüthrich; Adriano Aguzzi

The occurrence of multiple strains of prions may reflect conformational variability of PrPSc, a disease-associated, aggregated variant of the cellular prion protein, PrPC. Here we used luminescent conjugated polymers (LCPs), which emit conformation-dependent fluorescence spectra, for characterizing prion strains. LCP reactivity and emission spectra of brain sections discriminated among four immunohistochemically indistinguishable, serially mouse-passaged prion strains derived from sheep scrapie, chronic wasting disease (CWD), bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), and mouse-adapted Rocky Mountain Laboratory scrapie prions. Furthermore, using LCPs we differentiated between field isolates of BSE and bovine amyloidotic spongiform encephalopathy, and identified noncongophilic deposits in prion-infected deer and sheep. We found that fibrils with distinct morphologies generated from chemically identical recombinant PrP yielded unique LCP spectra, suggesting that spectral characteristic differences resulted from distinct supramolecular PrP structures. LCPs may help to detect structural differences among discrete protein aggregates and to link protein conformational features with disease phenotypes.


Nature Reviews Neurology | 2010

Cell-to-cell transmission of non-prion protein aggregates

Seung-Jae Lee; Paula Desplats; Christina J. Sigurdson; Igor Tsigelny; Eliezer Masliah

Neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer disease, Parkinson disease, frontotemporal dementia, Huntington disease and Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (CJD) are characterized by progressive accumulation of protein aggregates in selected brain regions. Protein misfolding and templated assembly into aggregates might result from an imbalance between protein synthesis, aggregation and clearance. Although protein misfolding and aggregation occur in most neurodegenerative disorders, the concept of spreading and infectivity of aggregates in the CNS has, until now, been confined to prion diseases such as CJD and bovine spongiform encephalopathy. Emerging evidence, however, suggests that prion-like spreading, involving secreted proteins such as amyloid-β and cytosolic proteins such as tau, huntingtin and α-synuclein, can occur in other neurodegenerative disorders. The underlying molecular mechanisms and the therapeutic implications of the new data are discussed in this article.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2009

Novel Pentameric Thiophene Derivatives for in Vitro and in Vivo Optical Imaging of a Plethora of Protein Aggregates in Cerebral Amyloidoses

Andreas Åslund; Christina J. Sigurdson; Therése Klingstedt; Stefan A. Grathwohl; Tristan Bolmont; Dara L. Dickstein; Eirik Glimsdal; Stefan Prokop; Mikael Lindgren; Peter Konradsson; David M. Holtzman; Patrick R. Hof; Frank L. Heppner; Samuel E. Gandy; Mathias Jucker; Adriano Aguzzi; Per Hammarström; K. Peter R. Nilsson

Molecular probes for selective identification of protein aggregates are important to advance our understanding of the molecular pathogenesis underlying cerebral amyloidoses. Here we report the chemical design of pentameric thiophene derivatives, denoted luminescent conjugated oligothiophenes (LCOs), which could be used for real-time visualization of cerebral protein aggregates in transgenic mouse models of neurodegenerative diseases by multiphoton microscopy. One of the LCOs, p-FTAA, could be utilized for ex vivo spectral assignment of distinct prion deposits from two mouse-adapted prion strains. p-FTAA also revealed staining of transient soluble pre-fibrillar non-thioflavinophilic Abeta-assemblies during in vitro fibrillation of Abeta peptides. In brain tissue samples, Abeta deposits and neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) were readily identified by a strong fluorescence from p-FTAA and the LCO staining showed complete co-localization with conventional antibodies (6E10 and AT8). In addition, a patchy islet-like staining of individual Abeta plaque was unveiled by the anti-oligomer A11 antibody during co-staining with p-FTAA. The major hallmarks of Alzheimers disease, namely, Abeta aggregates versus NFTs, could also be distinguished because of distinct emission spectra from p-FTAA. Overall, we demonstrate that LCOs can be utilized as powerful practical research tools for studying protein aggregation diseases and facilitate the study of amyloid origin, evolution and maturation, Abeta-tau interactions, and pathogenesis both ex vivo and in vivo.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

De novo generation of a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy by mouse transgenesis.

Christina J. Sigurdson; K. Peter R. Nilsson; Simone Hornemann; Mathias Heikenwalder; Giuseppe Manco; Petra Schwarz; David Ott; Thomas Rülicke; Pawel P. Liberski; Christian Julius; Jeppe Falsig; Lothar Stitz; Kurt Wüthrich; Adriano Aguzzi

Most transmissible spongiform encephalopathies arise either spontaneously or by infection. Mutations of PRNP, which encodes the prion protein, PrP, segregate with phenotypically similar diseases. Here we report that moderate overexpression in transgenic mice of mPrP(170N,174T), a mouse PrP with two point mutations that subtly affect the structure of its globular domain, causes a fully penetrant lethal spongiform encephalopathy with cerebral PrP plaques. This genetic disease was reproduced with 100% attack rate by intracerebral inoculation of brain homogenate to tga20 mice overexpressing WT PrP, and from the latter to WT mice, but not to PrP-deficient mice. Upon successive transmissions, the incubation periods decreased and PrP became more protease-resistant, indicating the presence of a strain barrier that was gradually overcome by repeated passaging. This shows that expression of a subtly altered prion protein, with known 3D structure, efficiently generates a prion disease.


Nature Medicine | 2005

PrPSc in mammary glands of sheep affected by scrapie and mastitis.

Ciriaco Ligios; Christina J. Sigurdson; Gabriella Carcassola; Giuseppe Manco; Massimo Basagni; Caterina Maestrale; Maria Giovanna Cancedda; Laura Madau; Adriano Aguzzi

To the editor: Besides colonizing the central nervous system, the infectious agent of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, termed prion, is predominantly associated with follicular dendritic cells (FDCs) of lymphoid tissues1,2. Accordingly, PrPSc, a protease-resistant isoform of the host protein PrPC representing the main prion constituent, is often detectable in spleen, tonsils, Peyer patches and lymph nodes of infected hosts. Chronic inflammatory states are accompanied by local extravasation of B cells and other inflammatory cells, which may induce lymphotoxin-dependent maturation of ectopic FDCs. Consequently, scrapie infection of mice suffering from nephritis, hepatitis or pancreatitis induces unexpected prion deposits at the sites of inflammation3. This has raised concerns that analogous phenomena might occur in farm animals. We have investigated this question in a flock of 818 Sarda sheep held in the Sassari region of Italy for production of wool and human foods. The European Surveillance Plan for Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies mandates the removal of all sheep of scrapie-susceptible genotypes in scrapie-infected flocks.Of the 818 sheep, 261 had Prnp alleles4 that conferred susceptibility to prion disease. Of the latter, seven had clinically overt scrapie with PrPSc in brain, lymph nodes and tonsil. All scrapie-sick sheep and 100 randomly chosen healthy sheep were killed, and mammary glands were analyzed histologically. Of these, 10 sheep had lymphocytic mastitis, and four had coincident mastitis and scrapie. Using western blots, immunohistochemistry and histoblots, we detected PrPSc in mammary glands of all four clinically scrapie-sick sheep with mastitis (Fig. 1a,b), but not in noninflamed mammary glands from presymptomatic or scrapie-sick sheep from the same (n = 14) or a different flock (n = 1), nor in inflamed mammary glands of scrapie-uninfected sheep (n = 2). Within the inflammatory mammary lesions, PrPSc was found to be associated with lymphoid follicles by immunofluorescent labeling and by paraffin-embedded tissue (PET) blotting (Fig. 1c). PrPSc colocalized predominantly with CD68+ macrophages and FDCs within inflamed mammary glands (Fig. 2a). We then surveyed a second Sarda flock (272 sheep) located 30 km away from the flock described above. One sheep was found to be


Veterinary Research | 2008

A prion disease of cervids: Chronic wasting disease

Christina J. Sigurdson

Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a prion disease of deer, elk, and moose, initially recognized in Colorado mule deer. The discovery of CWD beyond the borders of Colorado and Wyoming, in Canada and as far east as New York, has led to its emergence as a prion disease of international importance. Epidemiological studies indicate that CWD is horizontally transmitted among free-ranging animals, potentially indirectly by prion-containing secreta or excreta contaminating the environment. Experimental CWD transmission attempts to other wild and domestic mammals and to transgenic mice expressing the prion protein of cattle, sheep, and humans have shed light on CWD species barriers. Transgenic mice expressing the cervid prion protein have proven useful for assessing the genetic influences of Prnp polymorphisms on CWD susceptibility. Accumulating evidence of CWD pathogenesis indicates that the misfolded prion protein or prion infectivity seems to be widely disseminated in many nonneural organs and in blood. This review highlights contemporary research findings in this prion disease of free-ranging wildlife.


PLOS ONE | 2008

The POM Monoclonals: A Comprehensive Set of Antibodies to Non-Overlapping Prion Protein Epitopes

Magdalini Polymenidou; Rita Moos; Mike Scott; Christina J. Sigurdson; Yong-zhong Shi; Bill Yajima; Iva Hafner-Bratkovič; Roman Jerala; Simone Hornemann; Kurt Wüthrich; Anne Bellon; Martin Vey; Graciela Garen; Michael N. G. James; Nat N. V. Kav; Adriano Aguzzi

PrPSc, a misfolded and aggregated form of the cellular prion protein PrPC, is the only defined constituent of the transmissible agent causing prion diseases. Expression of PrPC in the host organism is necessary for prion replication and for prion neurotoxicity. Understanding prion diseases necessitates detailed structural insights into PrPC and PrPSc. Towards this goal, we have developed a comprehensive collection of monoclonal antibodies denoted POM1 to POM19 and directed against many different epitopes of mouse PrPC. Three epitopes are located within the N-terminal octarepeat region, one is situated within the central unstructured region, and four epitopes are discontinuous within the globular C-proximal domain of PrPC. Some of these antibodies recognize epitopes that are resilient to protease digestion in PrPSc. Other antibodies immunoprecipitate PrPC, but not PrPSc. A third group was found to immunoprecipitate both PrP isoforms. Some of the latter antibodies could be blocked with epitope-mimicking peptides, and incubation with an excess of these peptides allowed for immunochromatography of PrPC and PrPSc. Amino-proximal antibodies were found to react with repetitive PrPC epitopes, thereby vastly increasing their avidity. We have also created functional single-chain miniantibodies from selected POMs, which retained the binding characteristics despite their low molecular mass. The POM collection, thus, represents a unique set of reagents allowing for studies with a variety of techniques, including western blotting, ELISA, immunoprecipitation, conformation-dependent immunoassays, and plasmon surface plasmon resonance-based assays.

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Cyrus Bett

University of California

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Kurt Wüthrich

Scripps Research Institute

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