scholarly journals Mapping the alpha-globin genes in an Algerian HbH patient and his family

Blood ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 511-516 ◽  
Author(s):  
E Whitelaw ◽  
J Pagnier ◽  
G Verdier ◽  
T Henni ◽  
J Godet ◽  
...  

Abstract The organization of alpha-globin genes in normal white European, normal Algerian, and alpha-thalassemic Algerian DNA was examined by restriction endonuclease mapping using HindIII, HpaI, Bamhi, EcoRI, BgIII, and PstI. The results for normal DNA confirm and add to the findings of Surrey et al. and Orkin; the two alpha-genes are approximately 3.0 kb apart. The restriction enzymes BgIII and HpaL cut between the two alpha-genes. Four PstL sites are located: two surrounding each alpha-gene. The physical maps for a number of Algerian controls (normal alpha- and beta-globin biosynthesis profiles) are identical to that of the European controls. The Algerian alpha- thalassemic presenting with HbH disease was found to be homozygous for a 3.5–3.7 kb deletion at the alpha-gene locus, leaving one alpha-gene per chromosome. The patient's mother and father are both found to be heterozygous for this deletion. An unaffected sibling carries both normal chromosomes. The deletion could be the result of a Lepore-like crossover fusion event between the two alpha-globin genes, or of a 3.7 kb deletion of either the entire 5′ alpha-gene or the entire 3′ alpha- gene. The Algerian case of HbH disease studied differs from Asian cases in both the mode of inheritance and the molecular pathology of the alpha-thalassemia mutation. If this type of deletion is the major cause of Algerian alpha-thalassemia, it would explain the apparent absence of Hydrops fetalis in this geographical area.

Blood ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 511-516
Author(s):  
E Whitelaw ◽  
J Pagnier ◽  
G Verdier ◽  
T Henni ◽  
J Godet ◽  
...  

The organization of alpha-globin genes in normal white European, normal Algerian, and alpha-thalassemic Algerian DNA was examined by restriction endonuclease mapping using HindIII, HpaI, Bamhi, EcoRI, BgIII, and PstI. The results for normal DNA confirm and add to the findings of Surrey et al. and Orkin; the two alpha-genes are approximately 3.0 kb apart. The restriction enzymes BgIII and HpaL cut between the two alpha-genes. Four PstL sites are located: two surrounding each alpha-gene. The physical maps for a number of Algerian controls (normal alpha- and beta-globin biosynthesis profiles) are identical to that of the European controls. The Algerian alpha- thalassemic presenting with HbH disease was found to be homozygous for a 3.5–3.7 kb deletion at the alpha-gene locus, leaving one alpha-gene per chromosome. The patient's mother and father are both found to be heterozygous for this deletion. An unaffected sibling carries both normal chromosomes. The deletion could be the result of a Lepore-like crossover fusion event between the two alpha-globin genes, or of a 3.7 kb deletion of either the entire 5′ alpha-gene or the entire 3′ alpha- gene. The Algerian case of HbH disease studied differs from Asian cases in both the mode of inheritance and the molecular pathology of the alpha-thalassemia mutation. If this type of deletion is the major cause of Algerian alpha-thalassemia, it would explain the apparent absence of Hydrops fetalis in this geographical area.


Blood ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 226-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
MA Melis ◽  
M Pirastu ◽  
R Galanello ◽  
M Furbetta ◽  
T Tuveri ◽  
...  

In this study, we carried out restriction endonuclease mapping in order to characterize the alpha-globin genotype of 10 Sardinian beta 0- thalassemia heterozygotes, all of whom presented with normal red blood cell indices and increased HbA2 levels. In 8 of these subjects, we found the deletion of two alpha-globin genes (-alpha/-alpha), and in the remaining two the deletion of a single alpha-globin gene (- alpha/alpha alpha). In three of these carriers with the (-alpha/-alpha) alpha-globin genotype and in one with the (-alpha/alpha alpha) genotype, we also found the glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) defect of the Mediterranean type. On the basis of these findings, we may conclude that the interaction of heterozygous beta 0-thalassemia with alpha-thalassemia, due to the deletion of either one or two alpha- globin genes, may lead to the production of red blood cells with normal indices. The association of the G6PD defect with this thalassemia gene complex may eventually contribute to this effect. We suggest, therefore, that screening programs for heterozygous beta-thalassemia in populations where alpha-thalassemia is also prevalent, should incorporate the determination of HbA2 in the first set of tests.


Blood ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 63 (5) ◽  
pp. 1253-1257
Author(s):  
AE Felice ◽  
MP Cleek ◽  
K McKie ◽  
V McKie ◽  
TH Huisman

Restriction endonuclease mapping with alpha and zeta-globin gene probes showed differences between the alpha-thalassemia-1 (alpha-thal-1) condition in two patients with HbH disease. One patient had the rare black type of alpha-thal-1 together with alpha-thal-2 and HbS heterozygosities. The second patient was a Laotian child with HbE, Hb Constant Spring (alpha-thal-2), and alpha-thal-1 heterozygosities. The diagnoses were based on clinical, hematologic, and biochemical data. Whereas DNA fragments hybridizing to a zeta-probe were obtained from the Laotian type of alpha-thal-1, neither alpha nor zeta-gene fragments could be identified deriving from the black type of alpha-thal-1. Therefore, the black type of alpha-thal-1 is associated with a deletion of the entire zeta 2-psi zeta-psi alpha-alpha 2-alpha 1 gene complex and can be considered a zeta alpha-thal-1. It is likely that homozygosity for such a condition will lead to embryonic wastage, explaining the absence of hydrops fetalis in blacks.


Blood ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 63 (5) ◽  
pp. 1253-1257 ◽  
Author(s):  
AE Felice ◽  
MP Cleek ◽  
K McKie ◽  
V McKie ◽  
TH Huisman

Abstract Restriction endonuclease mapping with alpha and zeta-globin gene probes showed differences between the alpha-thalassemia-1 (alpha-thal-1) condition in two patients with HbH disease. One patient had the rare black type of alpha-thal-1 together with alpha-thal-2 and HbS heterozygosities. The second patient was a Laotian child with HbE, Hb Constant Spring (alpha-thal-2), and alpha-thal-1 heterozygosities. The diagnoses were based on clinical, hematologic, and biochemical data. Whereas DNA fragments hybridizing to a zeta-probe were obtained from the Laotian type of alpha-thal-1, neither alpha nor zeta-gene fragments could be identified deriving from the black type of alpha-thal-1. Therefore, the black type of alpha-thal-1 is associated with a deletion of the entire zeta 2-psi zeta-psi alpha-alpha 2-alpha 1 gene complex and can be considered a zeta alpha-thal-1. It is likely that homozygosity for such a condition will lead to embryonic wastage, explaining the absence of hydrops fetalis in blacks.


Blood ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 226-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
MA Melis ◽  
M Pirastu ◽  
R Galanello ◽  
M Furbetta ◽  
T Tuveri ◽  
...  

Abstract In this study, we carried out restriction endonuclease mapping in order to characterize the alpha-globin genotype of 10 Sardinian beta 0- thalassemia heterozygotes, all of whom presented with normal red blood cell indices and increased HbA2 levels. In 8 of these subjects, we found the deletion of two alpha-globin genes (-alpha/-alpha), and in the remaining two the deletion of a single alpha-globin gene (- alpha/alpha alpha). In three of these carriers with the (-alpha/-alpha) alpha-globin genotype and in one with the (-alpha/alpha alpha) genotype, we also found the glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) defect of the Mediterranean type. On the basis of these findings, we may conclude that the interaction of heterozygous beta 0-thalassemia with alpha-thalassemia, due to the deletion of either one or two alpha- globin genes, may lead to the production of red blood cells with normal indices. The association of the G6PD defect with this thalassemia gene complex may eventually contribute to this effect. We suggest, therefore, that screening programs for heterozygous beta-thalassemia in populations where alpha-thalassemia is also prevalent, should incorporate the determination of HbA2 in the first set of tests.


Blood ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 88 (5) ◽  
pp. 1846-1851 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Chang ◽  
RH Lu ◽  
SM Xu ◽  
J Meneses ◽  
K Chan ◽  
...  

We have disrupted the 5′ locus of the duplicated adult alpha-globin genes by gene targeting in the mouse embryonic stem cells and created mice with alpha-thalassemia syndromes. The heterozygous knockout mice (.alpha/alpha alpha) are asymptomatic like the silent carriers in humans whereas the homozygous knockout mice (.alpha/.alpha) show hemolytic anemia. Mice with three dysfunctional alpha-globin genes generated by breeding the 5′ alpha-globin knockouts (.alpha/alpha alpha) and the deletion type alpha-thalassemia mice (../alpha alpha) produce severe hemoglobin H disease and they die in utero. These results indicate that the 5′ alpha-globin gene is the predominant locus in mice, and suggest that it is even more dominant than its human homologue.


Blood ◽  
1979 ◽  
Vol 54 (6) ◽  
pp. 1407-1416 ◽  
Author(s):  
LE Lie-Injo ◽  
AM Dozy ◽  
YW Kan ◽  
M Lopes ◽  
D Todd

Abstract Two Chinese patients with HbQ-alpha 2 74 Asp replaced by His beta 2- alpha-thalassemia, one HbQ-alpha 2 74 or 75 Asp replaced by His beta 2 carrier, and one HbG-alpha 2 30 Glu replaced by Gln beta 2 carrier were studied to determine the number of alpha-globin genes in their chromosomes. DNA was isolated from white blood cells and bone marrow cells and studied by liquid hybridization and by hybridization of DNA fragments obtained by restriction enzyme endonuclease digestion (Ecr to nitrocellulose filters. The liquid hybridization analysis showed that in HbQ-alpha 2 74 Asp replaced by His beta 2-alpha-thalassemia, as in HbH disease, only one-fourth of the usual number of alpha-globin genes is present. Hybridization patterns of DNA restriction enzyme fragments showed that in HbQ-alpha 2 74 Asp replaced by His beta 2-alpha- thalassemia one chromosome has both alpha-globin genes deleted and the other chromosome, which carries the alpha-mutant gene, has one alpha- globin gene deleted. Our results show that the HbQ-alpha 74 Asp replaced by His structural gene is located adjacent to a deleted alpha- globin gene, whereas the alpha-globin gene adjacent to HbG-alpha 30 Glu replaced by Gln gene is not deleted.


Blood ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 76 (1) ◽  
pp. 221-227
Author(s):  
CS Hatton ◽  
AO Wilkie ◽  
HC Drysdale ◽  
WG Wood ◽  
MA Vickers ◽  
...  

We describe a family in which alpha-thalassemia occurs in association with a deletion of 62 kilobases from a region upstream of the alpha globin genes. DNA sequence analysis has shown that the transcription units of both alpha genes downstream of this deletion are normal. Nevertheless, they fail to direct alpha globin synthesis in an interspecific hybrid containing the abnormal (alpha alpha)RA chromosome. It seems probable that previously unidentified positive regulatory sequences analogous to those detected in a corresponding position of the human beta globin cluster are removed by this deletion.


Blood ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 68 (5) ◽  
pp. 985-990 ◽  
Author(s):  
MH Steinberg ◽  
SH Embury

Recent advances in molecular genetics have permitted detailed study of the human alpha-globin genes and the causes of alpha-thalassemia. In this review, we examine the causes of alpha-thalassemia in the black population and the consequences of the interactions between alpha- thalassemia and structural hemoglobin variants.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 6-7
Author(s):  
Christopher C Denton ◽  
Payal Shah ◽  
Silvie Suriany ◽  
Honglei Liu ◽  
Wanwara Thuptimdang ◽  
...  

Introduction Absence of alpha globin genes has long been known to influence the physiology of sickle cell disease (SCD). Individuals with SCD who are missing one or two alpha globin genes have decreased rates of cerebral vasculopathy, stroke, acute chest syndrome, and leg ulcers (Bernaudin, Blood 2008; Flanagan, Blood 2011; Nolan, Br J Haematol 2006). Although there is laboratory evidence of decreased hemolytic rate in these patients (Higgs, N Engl J Med 1982), the mechanism for their improved clinical outcomes has not been identified. Recently, the alpha globin protein has been shown to be present in the endothelial wall of human arterioles, where it modulates nitric oxide (NO) scavenging during vasoconstriction (Straub, Nature 2012). In mice, pharmacological inhibition of alpha globin leads to increased endothelial NO activity, independently of NO production, and results in increased blood perfusion, reduced systemic hypertension, and increased pulmonary artery vasodilation (Keller, Hypertension 2016; Alvarez, Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol 2017). The relationship between absence of alpha globin and arterial vasodilation, and the role of alpha globin in NO-mediated vascular signaling are potential mechanisms that could explain the beneficial effect of missing alpha globin genes in SCD. Using alpha thalassemia as a naturally occurring human model of alpha globin gene knockout, we hypothesized that loss of alpha globin genes leads to improvement in microvascular blood flow in thalassemia trait subjects without hemolysis. Methods Alpha thalassemia trait subjects missing one or two alpha globin genes, and healthy controls were recruited to the study, which was approved by the Children's Hospital Los Angeles Institutional Review Board. Blood samples were obtained from all subjects to test for hemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume (MCV), reticulocyte count, plasma hemoglobin, lactate dehydrogenase, and alpha globin genotype. We assessed flow-mediated dilation (FMD) of the brachial artery following distal forearm occlusion (Detterich, Blood 2015) simultaneously with laser Doppler flowmetry (LDF) and photoplethysmography (PPG) in the fingertip. We also measured the increase in microvascular perfusion with a thermal stimulus. The maximal change in vascular perfusion after provocation indicates vasodilatory capacity. Statistical analysis was performed in JMP® version 14 (SAS Institute Inc., USA). Results Twenty-seven subjects were enrolled, including 12 controls (4 alpha globin genes), 10 patients with 3 alpha globin genes and 5 with 2. The mean MCV was lower in subjects missing alpha globin genes than in controls (p=0.0099). Importantly, hemoglobin levels and markers of hemolysis were normal in both groups. There was no detectable difference in FMD between individuals missing one and two alpha globin genes; thus, these groups were combined and labeled as alpha trait for further analyses. FMD was significantly higher in alpha trait subjects after adjusting for age (Figure 1, p=0.0357). Missing alpha globin genes had no effect on microvascular flow by LDF or PPG (data not shown). Discussion FMD is an established and specific predictor of NO bioavailability (Thijssen, Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 2011), and, in addition to shear-mediated NO circulation in conduit vessels, it reflects the sum of flow in multiple arteriolar networks downstream of the conduit artery. Using this method, a difference in endothelial function between control and alpha thalassemia trait was easily detected (Figure 1). Because endothelial alpha globin is present in arterioles rather than conduit vessels (Butcher, Free Radic Biol Med 2014), we measured microvascular flow in a 1-mm3 volume in the skin using a laser Doppler sensor, and in the fingertip by PPG, but were unable to detect an effect of alpha trait. As none of the subjects had anemia or evidence of hemolysis, the significantly increased FMD associated with loss of alpha globin genes is most likely due to increased NO as a result of decreased scavenging by alpha globin. The finding reported here that lower alpha globin gene number is associated with increased NO-related perfusion in humans may explain the beneficial effect of alpha thalassemia trait in SCD and suggests that the presence of alpha thalassemia trait may also play a role in other types of vascular disease. Disclosures Wood: BiomedInformatics: Consultancy; Imago Biosciences: Consultancy; BluebirdBio: Consultancy; Celgene: Consultancy; WorldcareClinical: Consultancy; Philips Medical Systems: Research Funding. Coates:apo pharma (Chiesi Pharma): Consultancy, Honoraria; Sangamo: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Agios pharma: Consultancy, Honoraria; Vifor Pharma: Consultancy, Honoraria; Celgene, BMS: Consultancy, Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Bluebird Pharma: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.


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