What cannibalism can teach us about dementia

File photo: Researchers use a microtome to cut sections from a brain preserved in paraffin wax. The researchers discovered the mutation after studying the genes of the Fore people of Papua New Guinea, who until recently had practised a form of cannibalism where a related disease was transmitted by eating the brain tissue of the dead.

File photo: Researchers use a microtome to cut sections from a brain preserved in paraffin wax. The researchers discovered the mutation after studying the genes of the Fore people of Papua New Guinea, who until recently had practised a form of cannibalism where a related disease was transmitted by eating the brain tissue of the dead.

Published Jun 13, 2015

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London - Scientists have found a genetic mutation that imparts complete protection against the human form of “mad cow” disease, which could lead to new ways of tackling similar incurable brain diseases.

The researchers discovered the mutation after studying the genes of the Fore people of Papua New Guinea, who until recently had practiced a form of cannibalism where a related disease was transmitted by eating the brain tissue of the dead.

The mutation occurs in the gene for the prion protein which is linked with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in cattle, and kuru, the brain disease that was once common among the Fore when they consumed their dead as a mark of respect.

Scientists funded by the Medical Research Council analysed the genetic sequence of the prion genes of Fore individuals who had survived for many years after they had participated in the funeral rituals, which were prohibited in the 1950s, in the hope of identifying mutations that might confer long-term resistance to kuru.

The researchers from the MRC Prion Unit in London identified a single change in the sequence of the 253 building blocks that make up the prion protein. When they made the same change in the prion gene of laboratory mice they found that they became 100 per cent resistant to kuru and all forms of CJD, including variant CJD - the human form of BSE.

“From the human genetic work the unit has carried out in Papua New Guinea, we were expecting the mice to show some resistance to disease,” said Emmanuel Asante, who led the work at the MRC Prion Unit in the Institute of Neurology at University College London.

“However, we were surprised that the mice were completely protected from all human prion strains. The result could not have been clearer or more dramatic.”

At the height of the kuru epidemic in the mid-20th century, the disease was killing about two percent of the Fore population every year. Some villages had become so severely depopulated they risked dying out, with few, if any, women of child-bearing age left alive.

However, the scientists believe that people who had been born with the resistance mutation may have helped to re-populate the Fore villages, leading to a rise in the number of individuals who were resistant to kuru.

“This is a striking example of Darwinian evolution in humans - the epidemic of prion disease selecting a single genetic change that provided complete protection against an invariably fatal dementia,” said professor John Collinge, director of the Prion Unit.

“Work is now on-going to understand the molecular basis of this effect which we expect to provide key insights into how seeds of other misshapen proteins develop in the brain and cause the common forms of dementia, thereby guiding us to new treatments in the years ahead.”

There have been 177 reported cases of variant CJD in Britain, which resulted from BSE-contaminated material entering the food chain.

The Independent

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