Presumptive Identification of Human Hemoglobin Variants by Combined Electrophoresis

Author(s):  
C. LACOMBE ◽  
F. GALACTEROS ◽  
Y. BEUZARD ◽  
F. BRACONNIER ◽  
N. AROUS ◽  
...  
2013 ◽  
Vol 42 (D1) ◽  
pp. D1063-D1069 ◽  
Author(s):  
Belinda Giardine ◽  
Joseph Borg ◽  
Emmanouil Viennas ◽  
Cristiana Pavlidis ◽  
Kamran Moradkhani ◽  
...  

1978 ◽  
Vol 157 (2) ◽  
pp. 250-252 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Kumpati ◽  
T. H. J. Huisman ◽  
G. D. Efremov

1989 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 425-430 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Paleari ◽  
C Arcelloni ◽  
R Paroni ◽  
I Fermo ◽  
A Mosca

Abstract We compared the performance of two highly resolving methods, chromatofocusing (CRF) and isoelectric focusing in immobilized pH gradients (IPGF), for the separation of human hemoglobin variants. Lysates containing 13 different hemoglobins, including variants of clinical and geographical importance, and four electrophoretically "silent" variants (Hb Brockton, Hb Cheverly, Hb Köln, and Hb Waco) were analyzed. Both techniques showed a good intrarun precision (CV = 0.87% for CRF, 0.27% for IPGF) and high and similar resolving power (0.010 pH units, with the pH gradients used in this work). The use of an ultranarrow IPGF range (pH 7.15-7.35; pH gradient = 0.019 pH/cm) allowed the resolution between Hb Brockton, Hb Köln, and Hb A. In some cases (Hb D-Los Angeles, Hb F, Hb Waco), the variants were separated from Hb A in different orders, depending on which technique was used, probably because of the different analytical principles of the two methods. As a second-level test, both procedures are informative for characterization of human hemoglobin variants.


Author(s):  
Y. Wada ◽  
A. Hayashi ◽  
T. Fujita ◽  
T. Matsuo ◽  
I. Katakuse ◽  
...  

2002 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 225-233 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ross C. Hardison ◽  
David H.K. Chui ◽  
Belinda Giardine ◽  
Cathy Riemer ◽  
George P. Patrinos ◽  
...  

Genetics ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 94 (1) ◽  
pp. 185-201
Author(s):  
Paul A Fuerst ◽  
Robert E Ferrell

ABSTRACT The stepwise mutation model of OHTA and KIMURA (1973) was proposed to explain patterns of genetic variability revealed by means of electrophoresis. The assumption that electrophoretic mobility was principally determined by unit changes in net molecular charge has been criticized by JOHNSON (1974, 1977). This assumption has been tested directly using hemoglobin. Twenty-seven human hemoglobin variants with known amino acid substitutions, and 26 nonhuman hemoglobins with known sequences were studied by starch gel electrophoresis. Of these hemoglobin% 60 to 70% had electrophoretic mobilities that could be predicted solely on the basis of net charge calculated from the amino acid composition alone, ignoring tertiary structure. Only four hemoglobins showed a mobility that was clearly different from an expected mobility calculated using only the net charge of the molecule. For the remaining 30% of hemoglobins studied, mobility was determined by a combination. of net charge and other unidentified components, probably reflecting changes in ionization of some amino acid residues as a result of small alterations in tertiary structure due to the amino acid substitution in the variant. For the nonhuman hemoglobins, the deviation of a sample from its expected mobility increased with increasing amino acid divergence from human hemoglobin A.—It is concluded that the net electrostatic charge of a molecule is the principal determinant of electrophoretic mobility under the conditions studied. However, because of the significant deviation from strict stepwise mobility detected for 30 to 40% of the variants studied, it is further concluded that the infinite-allele model of KIMURA and CROW (1964) or a "mixed model" such as that proposed by LI (1976) may be more appropriate than the stepwise mutation model for the analysis of much of the available electrophoretic data from natural populations.


Blood ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 52 (5) ◽  
pp. 1058-1064 ◽  

Abstract In order to determine if mutant hemoglobins can be identified by relatively simple methods, a Working Group of the ICSH Expert Panel on Abnormal Hemoglobins and Thalassemia analyzed 17 hemolysates containing 14 different mutant hemoglobins by four electrophoretic methods: (1) cellulose acetate in alkaline buffers, (2) citrate agar pH 6.0, (3) urea 2-mercaptoethanol buffer pH 8.9, and (4) urea 2-mercaptoethanol buffer pH 6.0. The examined mutants included several of great numerical and clinical importance as well as some rare ones, namely, HbS, C, D Los Angeles (Punjab), E, G Philadelphia, N Baltimore, and O Arab; also Hb Ft. Worth, Montgomery, Winnepeg, Rush, Q India, Bethesda, and Lepore. Comparative mobilities of these hemoglobins in all of the methods are presented here. The combined data permit their presumptive identification, often with a high degree of specificity. The system has been applied in Iran, where the four prevalent mutants can be differentiated by these methods, at considerable saving of time and resources previously expended on structural analyses. It is proposed as a basis for an ICSH Tentative Standard. There is little doubt that this presumptive identification of hemoglobin variants by simple electrophoresis will be improved or complemented by the introduction of newer techniques, such as immunologic analysis. However, for the present and for some time to come, the system outlined here should be found valuable. The present report does not concern itself with the numerous auxiliary techniques involved in the identification of abnormal hemoglobins-sickle-cell test, solubility tests, lability test-- and no claim is made that the simple system described here eliminates these other techniques from the diagnostic armamentarium of the laboratory.


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