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prion
1[ prahy-on ]
noun
- any of several petrels of the genus Pachyptila, located in the oceans of the Southern Hemisphere and having serrated edges on the bill.
prion
2[ pree-on, prahy‑ ]
noun
- a tiny proteinaceous particle, likened to viruses and viroids, but having no genetic component, thought to be an infectious agent in bovine spongiform encephalopathy, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, and similar encephalopathies.
prion
1/ ˈpriːɒn /
noun
- a protein in the brain, an abnormal form of which is thought to be the transmissable agent responsible for certain spongiform encephalopathies, such as BSE, scrapie, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, and kuru
prion
2/ ˈpraɪən /
noun
- any of various dovelike petrels of the genus Pachyptila of the southern oceans that have a serrated bill
prion
/ prē′ŏn,prī′- /
- A particle of protein that is thought to be able to self-replicate and to be the agent of infection in a variety of diseases of the nervous system, such as mad cow disease. Prion replication (in which strings of amino acids are reproduced) stands as an exception to a central tenet of biology stating that only nucleic acids, such as DNA, can self-replicate. The mechanism of prion replication is not clearly understood.
prion
- A protein that not only folds into an unusual shape itself, but also seems to have the ability to cause other proteins to change their shape as well. For a long time, scientists were skeptical that prions existed, but now most accept them.
Notes
Word History and Origins
Origin of prion1
Origin of prion2
Word History and Origins
Origin of prion1
Origin of prion2
A Closer Look
Example Sentences
According to the researchers, prion diseases have enormous public health implications from the safety of the blood supply to the proper decontamination of surgical tools used in neurosurgery.
The disease, which is caused by folded proteins known as prions, can transfer to people who eat the meat of infected cattle.
CJD is the most prominent of the handful of diseases, all fatal, that result when prions, proteins of uncertain function that are abundant in the brain, misfold into an infective form that spreads widely.
Gibison says while there is no evidence CWD can spread to humans, there is concern this could change, as other prion diseases -- such as Mad Cow Disease -- can spread through the consumption of infected meat.
However, the exact mechanisms by which disease-associated prion proteins trigger the death of nerve cells are only partially understood.
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