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Research Notes - Genes - C15orf2Genomics. 2007 May. The Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) region contains several genes transcribed from the paternal chromosome only. We have previously identified a testis-specific gene, C15orf2, which maps between NDN and SNURF-SNRPN and is expressed from both alleles. Here we report on two novel genes (prader-willi region non-protein-coding RNA 1 and 2) located between NDN and C15orf2. By database search we found five partially duplicated copies, of which only one of each appears to be active. PWRN2 is expressed only in testis and is biallelic. PWRN1 is biallelically expressed in testis and kidney, but monoallelically in fetal brain. Methylation analysis of a CpG island 15 kb upstream of exon 1 showed absence of methylation in spermatozoa, but methylated and unmethylated alleles in fetal brain. Reinvestigation of C15orf2 revealed that this gene is also expressed in fetal brain and that expression in this tissue is monoallelic. We conclude that PWRN1 and C15orf2 may play a role in PWS. Genomics. 2000 Apr 15. Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) results from the loss of paternal contributions for a 2-Mb imprinted region on the proximal long arm of human chromosome 15. Hitherto, five paternally active genes have been identified in this region (ZNF127, NDN, MAGEL2, SNURF-SNRPN, and IPW). Here we report the identification of a novel gene in the PWS critical region, which has been designated "chromosome 15 open reading frame 2" (C15orf2). C15orf2 is an intronless gene located between MAGEL2 and SNURF-SNRPN. It is associated with a CpG island, which is methylated in all tissues tested except for germ cells. C15orf2 is transcribed as a 7.5-kb mRNA and contains an open reading frame encoding a predicted 1156-amino-acid protein of unknown function. Transcription of C15orf2 occurs exclusively in the testis, and in adult testis samples, we observed biallelic expression. By zoo-blot analysis, we found related sequences in DNA from other primates, but not in nonprimate DNA. We conclude that C15orf2 may play a role in primate spermatogenesis. |