Semantics/terminology question here.
Prion diseases such as BSE/vCJD (Mad Cow Disease) and Kuru can be transmitted between individuals, primarily via consumption of diseased neural tissue where the ingested prions themselves are what trigger the runaway protien-misfolding process.
Does that make prions a type of pathogen? Or is there a different more fitting blanket term?
My layman's understanding of the definition of "pathogen" is something as follows: pathogens are living agents (including viruses) causing disease which can be transmitted between individuals.
In that sense, bacteria, viruses, and things like transmissible cancer cells are pathogens, but things like heavy metals (i.e. mercury in fish) are not included even though they cause illness and are transmissible. Prions are in the grey area here: they are certainly more "biological" than heavy metals, but they are less "alive" than viruses (which at least have a genome). What side of the line does a misfolded protein complex fall on?