Lack of correspondence between mRNA expression for a putative cell death molecule (SGP‐2) and neuronal cell death in the central nervous system

Abstract
Neuronal death during nervous system development, a widely observed phenomenon, occurs through unknown mechanisms. Recent evidence suggests an active, destructive process requiring new gene expression. Sulfated glycoprotein-2 (SGP-2), a secretory product of testicular Sertoli cells has been shown to up-regulate in several nonneural tissues undergoing programmed cell death and in several types of neuronal degeneration. In order to determine if this message up-regulates in neurons undergoing developmentally determined cell death, we have studied the expression of SGP-2 mRNA in the developing and adult rat central nervous system (CNS) with in situ hybridization. We also report on the expression of this message in nonneural tissues from several regions of the developing embryo. The developing and adult rat central nervous system as well as widely varied tissues in the rat embryo express SGP-2 mRNA in a pattern that does not correlate with regions undergoing developmental cell death. In the nervous system, SGP-2 mRNA is expressed in neuronal populations including motor neurons, cortical neurons, and hypothalamic neurons at ages when the period of developmental cell death has passed. In a nonneural tissue (palatal shelve epithelium) for which a developmental cell death period has been described, SGP-2 mRNA was not present in the region where cell death occurs. We conclude that SGP-2 mRNA expression cannot be correlated with programmed cell death in neural or nonneural tissues. The results of this study as well as recently reported SGP-2 homologies indicate a possible role for this protein in secretion and lipid transport.

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