Mad cow disease is one of a class of neurodegenerative illnesses caused
by misshapen proteins known as prions. Recent outbreaks of the ailment
in European cattle and an increase in occurrences of the related Creutzfeldt-Jacob
disease (CJD) in humans have turned prion diseases into growing public
health threats.
Although the international medical community has made impressive advances
in understanding the deviant proteins, new work by physicists at the
University of California, Davis (D. Cox, cox@rilke.ucdavis.edu,
530-752-1789; R. Singh, singh@physics.ucdavis.edu,
530-752-4710), suggests that a fairly simple statistical mechanics model
may help explain prion disease progression. Among other things, the
researchers found motivation for their model in the statistically uniform,
low-level incidence of CJD worldwide, and in the highly reproducible
incubation time relative to infection dose, both characteristics consistent
with the physical and chemical processes described by statistical mechanics.
Through a simulation of the infection on a two-dimensional lattice,
the researchers discovered that a handful of prions can serve as seeds
for the growth of more prions on infected neurons. Once the prion aggregates
are big enough, various processes can break them up and cause the prions
to leap to other neurons, thus seeding new crops of prions as the diseases
progresses---ultimately leading to death of the infected victim.
The model, however, offers much more than a bleak image of a prion
disease death march through the neurological system. The researchers
found cause for hope in their attempt to incorporate an asymmetry in
the cross-species virulence of prion infections. For example, prions
that normally infect mouse neurons can also effectively attack hamster
neurons, but related prions that are deadly to hamsters are ineffective
in mice. The new model suggests that an injection of harmless hamster
prions into an infected mouse might lead to competition between the
mouse and hamster prions that could dramatically slow the progress of
the disease.
It is a startling concept: fighting prions with prions. Although such
a treatment doesn't promise a cure for prion diseases, it could extend
the incubation time to the point that the onset of an ailment like CJD
is imperceptible in a human lifetime.
In addition to suggesting novel prion disease therapies, a statistical
mechanics model of the infections might aid in predicting the course
of outbreaks such as the string of CJD cases that struck England in
the late 1990s. (A. Slepoy et al., Physical Review Letters, 30
July 2001; text at Physics
News Select)