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Publication : Chromogranins A and B are key proteins in amine accumulation, but the catecholamine secretory pathway is conserved without them.

First Author  Díaz-Vera J Year  2012
Journal  FASEB J Volume  26
Issue  1 Pages  430-8
PubMed ID  21990378 Mgi Jnum  J:248851
Mgi Id  MGI:6092596 Doi  10.1096/fj.11-181941
Citation  Diaz-Vera J, et al. (2012) Chromogranins A and B are key proteins in amine accumulation, but the catecholamine secretory pathway is conserved without them. FASEB J 26(1):430-8
abstractText  Chromogranins are the main soluble proteins in the large dense core secretory vesicles (LDCVs) found in aminergic neurons and chromaffin cells. We recently demonstrated that chromogranins A and B each regulate the concentration of adrenaline in chromaffin granules and its exocytosis. Here we have further studied the role played by these proteins by generating mice lacking both chromogranins. Surprisingly, these animals are both viable and fertile. Although chromogranins are thought to be essential for their biogenesis, LDCVs were evident in these mice. These vesicles do have a somewhat atypical appearance and larger size. Despite their increased size, single-cell amperometry recordings from chromaffin cells showed that the amine content in these vesicles is reduced by half. These data demonstrate that although chromogranins regulate the amine concentration in LDCVs, they are not completely essential, and other proteins unrelated to neurosecretion, such as fibrinogen, might compensate for their loss to ensure that vesicles are generated and the secretory pathway conserved.
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