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Research Notes: Genes - Secretogranin V (SCG5/7B2)Endocrinology. 2002 Jun. The neuroendocrine-specific protein 7B2, which serves as a molecular escort for proPC2 in the secretory pathway, promotes the production of enzymatically active PC2 and may have non-PC2 related endocrine roles. Mice null for 7B2 exhibit a lethal phenotype with a complex Cushing's-like pathology, which develops from intermediate lobe ACTH hypersecretion as a consequences of interruption of PC2-mediated peptide processing as well as undefined consequences of the loss of 7B2. In this study we investigated the endocrine and metabolic alterations of 7B2 null mice from pathological and biochemical points of view. Our results show that 7B2 nulls exhibit a multisystem disorder that includes severe pathoanatomical and histopathologic alterations of vital organs, including the heart and spleen but most notably the liver, in which massive steatosis and necrosis are observed. Metabolic derangements in glucose metabolism result in glycogen and fat deposition in liver under conditions of chronic hypoglycemia. Liver failure is also likely to contribute to abnormalities in blood coagulation and blood chemistry, such as lactic acidosis. A hypoglycemic crisis coupled with respiratory distress and intensive internal thrombosis most likely results in rapid deterioration and death of the 7B2 null. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1998 Feb. 7B2 is a neuroendocrine chaperone interacting with the prohormone convertase PC2 in the regulated secretory pathway. Its gene is located near the Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) region on chromosome 15. In a previous study we were able to show 7B2 immunoreactivity in the supraoptic nucleus (SON) or the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) in only three of five PWS patients. Here we report that in contrast with five other PWS patients, the neurons in the hypothalamic SON and PVN of the two 7B2-immunonegative PWS patients also failed to show any reaction using two antibodies directed against processed vasopressin (VP). On the other hand, even these two cases reacted normally with five antibodies that recognize different parts of the VP precursor. This finding pointed to a processing defect. Indeed, the same patients had no PC2 immunoreactivity in the SON or PVN, whereas PC1 immunoreactivity was only slightly diminished. In conclusion, in the VP neurons of two PWS patients, greatly reduced amounts of 7B2 and PC2 are present, resulting in diminished VP precursor processing. Brain Res. 1994 Sep 19. Prader-(Labhart-)Willi syndrome (PWS) is characterized by infantile hypotonia, early childhood obesity, mental deficiency, short stature, small hands and feet and hypogonadism. In 70% of the cases this syndrome is associated with a defect of chromosome 15 at 15q11-q13, close to the location of the 7B2 gene (15q13-q14). The majority of the remaining PWS patients display maternal uniparental disomy on chromosome 15. Since the 7B2 gene products are expressed in neuroendocrine cells that are probably affected in PWS, e.g. by a pleiotrophic influence of the neighboring deletion, the presence of 7B2 was studied in the supraoptic and paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus of five subjects clinically diagnosed as PWS patients using five antibodies against various parts of the 7B2 precursor polypeptide. Three of the five PWS patients studied showed no reaction to the 7B2 antibody MON-102, whereas all 30 control patients did. However, one of the three MON-102 non-reacting PWS patients reacted to other 7B2 antibodies. In conclusion, the vanishing of 7B2 gene products is not obligatory for PWS, possibly due to the variable genetic background of PWS patients. However, in most patients there is a clear modification of 7B2 expression, pointing to altered neuroendocrine functions. Aust N Z J Med. 1992 Oct. 7B2 is a neuroendocrine polypeptide of unknown function, the gene for which is sited near or within the chromosomal region deleted in Prader-Willi syndrome and Angelman's syndrome. Plasma immunoreactive 7B2 levels were measured in 26 individuals with Prader-Willi syndrome, and appropriate controls. Plasma 7B2 levels were within normal limits compared to the control groups, in adults with Prader-Willi syndrome. 7B2 levels in children with Prader-Willi syndrome were higher, this age-dependent variation having been previously reported in normal children. Genomics. 1990 Mar. The gene for 7B2, a protein found in the secretory granules of neural and endocrine cells (gene symbol SGNE1) was localized to the E3-F3 region of mouse chromosome 2 and to the q11-q15 region of human chromosome 15. This was determined by in situ hybridization, using a mouse 7B2 cDNA and an intronic fragment of the corresponding human gene as probes. The respective locations of SGNE1 in the two species correlate with the conservation of loci between these subregions of mouse chromosome 2 and human chromosome 15. Clinically, the human SGNE1 DNA fragment may serve as a molecular probe of this locus in both the Prader-Willi and the Angelman syndromes, which are often accompanied by submicroscopic chromosomal deletions in the 15q11-15q13 region. |