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Studies of the Incubation Times of Prionic Diseases by Dynamical Monte Carlo Method

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Author(s):
Náira Rezende Maciel
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Master's Dissertation
Press: Ribeirão Preto.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Faculdade de Ciências Farmacêuticas de Ribeirão Preto (PCARP/BC)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Marco Antonio Alves da Silva; Antonio Caliri; Alexandre Souto Martinez
Advisor: Marco Antonio Alves da Silva
Abstract

Prions are infectious agents responsible for a group of fatal neurodegenerative disorders. A pathogenic isoform of the prion protein (PrPSc) generated by a posttranslational process involving the conversion of alpha helices into beta sheets of the normal cellular prion protein (PrPC) is believed to be the main component of these infectious agents. The conversion of a normal PrPC into an abnormal isoform PrPSc, kinetically follows through an autocatalytic process. For better understanding of this kind of abnormal protein propagation, many analytical models have been proposed. Thus, we studied, using the Monte Carlo method, the distribution of the incubation periods in some of these neurodegenerative disorders, such as: bovine spongiform encephalopathy well known as mad cow disease (BSE), Variant Creutzfeldt Jakob disease (vCJD) and murine scrapie, an experimental murine prionic disease. The distribution of the incubation times of these diseases were considered lognormal. The aim of this study was to investigate some aspects of toxicity and replication of the prionic diseases, by comparing the results of computational simulations with the incubation times of BSE, vCJD and murine scrapie, previously established. Computational simulations, using a Dynamical Monte Carlo method (DMC) and the diffusion limited aggregation model (DLA), were worked out. At first, we evaluate the Eigen model through computational simulations using the DMC to verify the essential parameters in the kinetic of the prionic diseases. Following the results, we studied the toxicity of the prionic diseases using the DMC and the DLA model; by considering that PrPC converting in PrPSc just when exists contact (autocatalysis) and free PrPCs are allowed to diffuse randomly to their nearest neighbour sites in a square lattice, while isolated PrPScs or aggregate of PrPScs are fixed. Confirming the Eigen suspicion, the most important parameter in the equation of the prionic kinetic is the Michaelis Menten term (or the autocatalytic term). The results obtained through simulations using DMC and DLA model were compared with the time distribution profiles of the prionic diseases already established (BSE, vCJD and murine Scrapie). We get the fitting in different profiles of the distribution of the incubation periods (lognormal to BSE and vCJD and lognormal with a second peak to murine scrapie). It is concluded that autocatalysis is an essential mechanism for the prionic kinetics and the spontaneous conversion of PrPC in PrPSc can be neglected. Starting from the DLA model, is reinforced that the hypothesis for BSE and vCJD, prionic diseases of natural occurrence, the toxicity is caused, mainly, by the formation of amyloid plaques. For Scrapie murina, an experimentally induced infection, the toxicity is, possibly, caused by two mechanisms: formation of amyloid plaques and depletion of PrPC. Just with the change of the initial and final parameters, we fitted all studied prionic diseases, in spite of the model to be quite simple. The lognormality from the model, is resulting of a diffusive process. Concentrations of PrPC should be low, smaller than 1% and the number of PrPScs should be smaller than 10 for the lognormality take place without the depletion of PrPC. (AU)