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The Priority position paper: Protecting Europe's food chain from prions
ISSN
1933-690X
1933-6896
Date Issued
2016
Author(s)
Requena, Jesus R.
Kristensson, Krister
Korth, Carsten
Zurzolo, Chiara
Simmons, Marion
Aguilar-Calvo, Patricia
Aguzzi, Adriano
Andreoletti, Olivier
Benestad, Sylvie L.
Boehm, Reinhard
Brown, Karen
Calgua, Byron
Antonio del Rio, Jose
Carlos Espinosa, Juan
Girones, Rosina
Godsave, Sue
Hoelzle, Ludwig E.
Knittler, Michael R.
Kuhn, Franziska
Legname, Giuseppe
Laeven, Paul
Mabbott, Neil
Mitrova, Eva
Mueller-Schiffmann, Andreas
Nuvolone, Mario
Peters, Peter J.
Raeber, Alex
Roth, Klaus
Schroeder, Bjorn
Sonati, Tiziana
Stitz, Lothar
Taraboulos, Albert
Maria Torres, Juan
Yan, Zheng-Xin
DOI
10.1080/19336896.2016.1175801
Abstract
Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) created a global European crisis in the 1980s and 90s, with very serious health and economic implications. Classical BSE now appears to be under control, to a great extent as a result of a global research effort that identified the sources of prions in meat and bone meal (MBM) and developed new animal-testing tools that guided policy. Priority (www.prionpriority.eu) was a European Union (EU) Framework Program 7 (FP7)-funded project through which 21 European research institutions and small and medium enterprises (SMEs) joined efforts between 2009 and 2014, to conduct coordinated basic and applied research on prions and prion diseases. At the end of the project, the Priority consortium drafted a position paper (www.prionpriority.eu/Priority position paper) with its main conclusions. In the present opinion paper, we summarize these conclusions. With respect to the issue of re-introducing ruminant protein into the feed-chain, our opinion is that sus taining an absolute ban on feeding ruminant protein to ruminants is essential. In particular, the spread and impact of non-classical forms of scrapie and BSE in ruminants is not fully understood and the risks cannot be estimated. Atypical prion agents will probably continue to represent the dominant form of prion diseases in the near future in Europe. Atypical L-type BSE has clear zoonotic potential, as demonstrated in experimental models. Similarly, there are now data indicating that the atypical scrapie agent can cross various species barriers. More epidemiological data from large cohorts are nec essary to reach any conclusion on the impact of its transmissibility on public health. Re-evaluations of safety precautions may become necessary depending on the outcome of these studies. Intensified searching for molecular determinants of the species barrier is recommended, since this bar rier is key for important policy areas and risk assessment. Understanding the structural basis for strains and the basis for adaptation of a strain to a new host will require continued fundamental research, also needed to understand mechanisms of prion transmission, replication and how they cause nervous system dysfunction and death. Early detection of prion infection, ideally at a preclini cal stage, also remains crucial for development of effective treatment strategies.
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