Abstract

Prader-(Labhart-)Willi syndrome (PWS) is characterized by infattile 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 peiotrophic 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 backgroudd of PWS patients. However, in most patients there is a clear modification of 7B2 expression, pointing to altered neuroendocrine functions.

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