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by nebopolis
1783 days ago
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Prions are essentially already denatured/unfolded. They are a more stable state of a normal protein that has biological function, and they interact with the "correctly" folded proteins to cause them to denature into additional prions. Often denaturing a prion means actually breaking apart the protein into fragments or amino acids, because it is already at the most stable/denatured state. This is also why they are so persistent in nature and so hard to remove from surfaces. Apparently gas plasma sterilization is a promising possibility. (this seems like an ok overview of the challenges: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21271212/). Current procedures include things like autoclaving in 121C sodium hydroxide for 30 minutes. Definitely not something that fully cooking will inactivate. |
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I haven't found a source for that, but according to my bio teacher mad cow disease started, because they decided to lower the temperature to pretreat animal waste (such as bones and brain matter...) which then ended up in what cows get fed with. Wikipedia mentioned nowadays they simply leave out the bones and brain from the food.