We have investigated the expression, using immunohistochemistry, of beta- and gamma-sarcoglycans in the muscles of 20 patients in whom previous screening had revealed a deficiency of alpha-sarcoglycan. alpha-, beta- and gamma-sarcoglycans were absent in 7 patients and variably reduced in 8 patients, in 2 of whom beta-sarcoglycan was more reduced than the alpha- and gamma-proteins. In 5 other patients with variably reduced alpha- and beta-sarcoglycans, gamma-sarcoglycan was completely absent. In all patients the distribution of hyposthenia at disease onset was similar, and predominantly involved pelvic girdle muscles; however, the age at onset and rate of disease progression were highly variable. In severely compromised patients, the onset of disease was before 10 years of age and gamma-sarcoglycan or all three sarcoglycans were absent from muscles. Immunohistochemical analysis of sarcoglycans should be part of routine screening for muscle dystrophies to identify patients with sarcoglycanopathy. Gene analysis is necessary to identify the primary defect; however, sarcoglycan immunohistochemistry may be useful for indicating which gene to investigate. Further biochemical characterization of the interactions between these proteins is required to fully elucidate their roles in causing severe, moderate or mild muscular dystrophy.
Desmopressin (DDAVP), an arginine vasopressin analogue, markedly stimulates ACTH secretion in patients with Cushing's disease, in contrast to its minimal effect in normal subjects. However, little is known about the mechanisms underlying this action and it appeared to be of interest to evaluate the effect of DDAVP on ACTHsecreting pituitary adenomas in vitro, in comparison with its effect in the same patients in vivo. Pituitary adenomas from 14 patients with Cushing's disease were incubated with DDAVP, corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH) and DDAVP together with vasopressin receptor antagonists or CRH. Incubation with DDAVP induced a modest dose-dependent increase in ACTH concentrations which appeared maximal at 10 nM. CRH stimulated ACTH to a greater extent compared with DDAVP and potentiated the effect of DDAVP alone. The DDAVP-induced ACTH increase appeared blunted by vasopressin V 2 and V 3 receptor antagonists. V 3 receptor gene expression was detected by RT-PCR in all adenoma samples except for two which were not responsive to DDAVP in vitro but responsive to the peptide in vivo. Surprisingly, no difference in the in vitro ACTH secretory response was observed between in vivo DDAVP-responsive (ACTH peak>150% baseline) and -unresponsive (ACTH peak<120% baseline) patients, suggesting that the pituitary adenoma is not the sole mediator of the ACTH-releasing effect of DDAVP. In conclusion, the marked stimulatory effect of DDAVP observed in patients with Cushing's disease appears to be mainly dependent on an extrapituitary action, possibly the inhibition of a corticotrophin release-inhibitory factor.
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