The initial development of
scrapie lesions can be seen following intraocular
infection to be directly related to sequential
infection of connecting neuronal relays within the projections of the optic nerve. For example, intraocular
infection of VM mice with 22A virus produces lesions in the contralateral dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN) and superior colliculus around halfway through the incubation period of about 360 days; the next lesions appear in the visual cortex, presumably as a result of the transport of
infection through the geniculo-cortical tract.
Infection of the same strain of mouse with 87V virus produces similar lesions in the dLGN slightly later in the incubation period of about 440 days, although cortical lesions are never seen with this agent. Subsequent lesions with both strains of the virus occur symmetrically in sites which are recognised targets with other routes of
infection. Differences of this type provide the opportunity to relate levels of infectivity in sets of neurons directly to subsequent pathological changes. If the two murine
Sinc genotypes (
Sinc controls incubation period length) are compared after intraocular
infection with ME7 virus, the timing of the appearance of the first lesions is in proportion to the length of the incubation period; this may provide a means of identifying the action of
Sinc at a cellular level. Serial enucleation following
infection of the right eye with ME7 virus has shown that
infection takes between 7 and 14 days to reach the superior colliculus and initiate
infection via this pathway. This slow rate of spread of infectivity suggests that ME7 is carried in an anterograde direction by the slow rate of axonal transport.