scholarly journals Spectrum of Alpha Thalassemia Alleles in Kuwait

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adekunle Adekile ◽  
Jalaja Sukumaran ◽  
Diana Thomas ◽  
Thomas De Souza ◽  
Mohammad Haider

Abstract Background: The frequency of alpha thalassemia trait is about 40% in the Kuwaiti population, but there has been no comprehensive study of the prevalent alleles. This is a report of the patients who were referred for molecular diagnosis over a 20-year period. Methods: Blood samples from suspected cases were sent to the Hemoglobin Research Laboratory of the Department of Pediatrics, Kuwait University. A retrospective study of the molecular characterization of samples from 1994 to 2015 was carried out. The alpha globin genotypes were determined by a combination of PCR, allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization and reverse dot-blot hybridization (Vienna Lab Strip Assay). Results: 400 samples were characterized and analyzed from individuals aged <1 month to 80 years, with a median of 6 years (~60% children and adolescents). Most (90.8%) were Kuwaiti nationals. The common genotype was homozygosity for the polyadenylation-1 mutation (αPA-1α/α PA-1α) in 33.3%, followed by heterozygosity (αα/α PA-1α) for the same mutation in 32.3%. The PA-1 was therefore the most frequent allele (0.733). The frequency of the α0, –MED was 0.19. Rare alleles that were found in very low frequencies included the α0 (--FIL) in a Filipino child, Hb Constant Spring, Hb Adana,and Hb Icaria. Conclusion: There is a wide variety of alpha thalassemia alleles among Kuwaitis, but the nondeletional PA-1 is by far the most common cause of moderate to severe HbH disease phenotype. The α0 (–MED) allele is also encountered, which has implications for pre-marital counselling especially the possibility of having babies with alpha thalassemia major (Barts hydrops fetalis).

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adekunle Adekile ◽  
Jalaja Sukumaran ◽  
Diana Thomas ◽  
Thomas De Souza ◽  
Mohammad Haider

Abstract Background: The frequency of alpha thalassemia trait is about 40% in the Kuwaiti population, but there has been no comprehensive study of the prevalent alleles. This is a report of the patients who were referred for molecular diagnosis over a 20-year period. Methods: Blood samples from suspected cases were sent to the Hemoglobin Research Laboratory of the Department of Pediatrics, Kuwait University. A retrospective study of the molecular characterization of samples from 1994 to 2015 was carried out. The alpha globin genotypes were determined by a combination of PCR, allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization and reverse dot-blot hybridization (Vienna Lab Strip Assay). Results: 400 samples were characterized and analyzed from individuals aged <1 month to 80 years, with a median of 6 years (~60% children and adolescents). Most (90.8%) were Kuwaiti nationals. The common genotype was homozygosity for the polyadenylation-1 mutation (αPA-1α/α PA-1α) in 33.3%, followed by heterozygosity (αα/α PA-1α) for the same mutation in 32.3%. The PA-1 was therefore the most frequent allele (0.733). The frequency of the α0, –MED was 0.19. Rare alleles that were found in very low frequencies included the α0 (--FIL) in a Filipino child, Hb Constant Spring, Hb Adana,and Hb Icaria. Conclusion: There is a wide variety of alpha thalassemia alleles among Kuwaitis, but the nondeletional PA-1 is by far the most common cause of moderate to severe HbH disease phenotype. The α0 (–MED) allele is also encountered, which has implications for pre-marital counselling especially the possibility of having babies with alpha thalassemia major (Barts hydrops fetalis).


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adekunle Adekile ◽  
Jalaja Sukumaran ◽  
Diana Thomas ◽  
Thomas D'Souza ◽  
Mohammad Haider

Abstract Background: The frequency of the alpha thalassemia trait is approximately 40% in the Kuwaiti population, but there has been no comprehensive study of the prevalent alleles. This is a report of patients who were referred for molecular diagnosis over a 20-year period.Methods: This is a retrospective study of the a-globin genotypes obtained in the Hemoglobin Research Laboratory of the Department of Pediatrics, Kuwait University from 1994 to 2015. Genotyping was performed by a combination of PCR, allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization and reverse dot blot hybridization (Vienna Lab Strip Assay).Results: Four hundred samples were characterized and analyzed from individuals aged <1 month to 80 years, with a median of 6 years from 283 unrelated families. Most (90.8%) were Kuwaiti nationals. The commonest genotype was homozygosity for the polyadenylation-1 mutation (αPA-1α/α PA-1α) in 33.3% of the samples, followed by heterozygosity (αα/α PA-1α) for the same mutation in 32.3%. PA-1 was therefore the most frequent allele (0.59). The frequency of the α0 (--MED) allele was 0.017. Rare alleles that were found in very low frequencies included α0 (--FIL) in a Filipino child, Hb Constant Spring, Hb Adana, and Hb Icaria.Conclusion: There is a wide variety of alpha thalassemia alleles among Kuwaitis, but nondeletional PA-1 is by far the most common cause of the moderate to severe HbH (β4 tetramer) disease phenotype. The α0 (–MED) allele is also encountered, which has implications for premarital counseling, especially for the possibility of having babies with alpha thalassemia major (Barts hydrops fetalis).


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adekunle Adekile ◽  
Jalaja Sukumaran ◽  
Diana Thomas ◽  
Thomas De Souza ◽  
Mohammad Haider

Abstract Background: The frequency of alpha thalassemia trait is about 40% in the Kuwaiti population, but there has been no comprehensive study of the prevalent alleles. This is a report of the patients who were referred for molecular diagnosis over a 20-year period.Methods: This is a retrospective study of the a-globin genotypes obtained in the Hemoglobin Research Laboratory of the Department of Pediatrics, Kuwait University from 1994 to 2015. Genotyping was by a combination of PCR, allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization and reverse dot-blot hybridization (Vienna Lab Strip Assay).Results: Four hundred samples were characterized and analyzed from individuals aged <1 month to 80 years, with a median of 6 years from 283 unrelated families.. Most (90.8%) were Kuwaiti nationals. The common genotype was homozygosity for the polyadenylation-1 mutation (αPA-1α/α PA-1α) in 33.3%, followed by heterozygosity (αα/α PA-1α) for the same mutation in 32.3%. The PA-1 was therefore the most frequent allele (0.59). The frequency of the α0, –MED was 0.017. Rare alleles that were found in very low frequencies included the α0 (--FIL) in a Filipino child, Hb Constant Spring, Hb Adana, and Hb Icaria.Conclusion: There is a wide variety of alpha thalassemia alleles among Kuwaitis, but the nondeletional PA-1 is by far the most common cause of moderate to severe HbH (β4 tetramer), disease phenotype. The α0 (–MED) allele is also encountered, which has implications for pre-marital counselling especially the possibility of having babies with alpha thalassemia major (Barts hydrops fetalis).


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adekunle Adekile ◽  
Jalaja Sukumaran ◽  
Diana Thomas ◽  
Thomas De Souza ◽  
Mohammad Haider

Abstract Background: The frequency of alpha thalassemia trait is about 40% in the Kuwaiti population, but there has been no comprehensive study of the prevalent alleles. This is a report of the patients who were referred for molecular diagnosis over a 20-year period. Methods: This is a retrospective study of the a-globin genotypes obtained in the Hemoglobin Research Laboratory of the Department of Pediatrics, Kuwait University from 1994 to 2015. Genotyping was by a combination of PCR, allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization and reverse dot-blot hybridization (Vienna Lab Strip Assay). Results: Four hundred samples were characterized and analyzed from individuals aged <1 month to 80 years, with a median of 6 years from 283 unrelated families.. Most (90.8%) were Kuwaiti nationals. The common genotype was homozygosity for the polyadenylation-1 mutation (α PA-1 α/α PA-1 α) in 33.3%, followed by heterozygosity (αα/α PA-1 α) for the same mutation in 32.3%. The PA-1 was therefore the most frequent allele (0.59). The frequency of the α 0 , – MED was 0.017. Rare alleles that were found in very low frequencies included the α 0 (-- FIL ) in a Filipino child, Hb Constant Spring, Hb Adana, and Hb Icaria. Conclusion : There is a wide variety of alpha thalassemia alleles among Kuwaitis, but the nondeletional PA-1 is by far the most common cause of moderate to severe HbH (β4 tetramer), disease phenotype. The α 0 (– MED ) allele is also encountered, which has implications for pre-marital counselling especially the possibility of having babies with alpha thalassemia major (Barts hydrops fetalis).


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 3-4
Author(s):  
Georgia L. Gregory ◽  
Beeke Wienert ◽  
Marisa Schwab ◽  
Billie Rachael Lianoglou ◽  
Roger P. Hollis ◽  
...  

Introduction: Alpha globin mutations are very common worldwide, and the severity of resulting anemia depends on the number and type of mutated alleles. While the 4 gene mutation (alpha thalassemia major, ATM) was previously deemed fatal except in rare cases, emerging evidence indicates that survival to birth and good postnatal outcomes are possible with in utero transfusions. We hypothesized that the embryonic zeta globin gene, which is expressed early in gestation prior to alpha globin, may compensate for the lack of alpha globin and that induction of zeta globin after it has naturally been silenced may become a new therapy for patients with ATM. Methods: We evaluated mutations in the UCSF international registry of patients with ATM to understand factors related to patient survival with and without in utero transfusions. We then engineered Human Umbilical Cord Derived Erythroid Progenitor Cells (HUDEP-2 cells) carrying the common SEA alpha globin deletion, in which zeta globin expression is preserved (H-SEA), as well as those on which the zeta globin genes were deleted (HBZ-/-) using CRISPR-Cas9. We evaluated the expression of alpha and zeta globins using qPCR, Western blot, and flow cytometry. We generated lentiviral vectors expressing zeta globin under the control of beta-globin promoters to examine changes in both zeta and alpha globin in a dynamic way. Results: None of the registry patients who survived to birth spontaneously (n=11) had a mutation that involves a concomitant deletion in zeta globin (such as the -FIL, -THAI, or -MEDII mutation), while alpha globin mutations extending into the zeta globin gene were found in 14 of 37 (38%) patients who were diagnosed prenatally, suggesting that the presence of zeta globin may play a role in the ability to survive to birth without fetal therapy. Interestingly, we found that H-SEA clones express higher levels of zeta globin than WT cells, as illustrated by quantitative real-time PCR (Fig 1A), Western blot (Fig 1B) and flow cytometry (Fig 1C). These cells also developed beta globin dimers due to excess unpaired beta-globin chains, as demonstrated by Western blotting with and without reducing agents, indicating that they are an appropriate cell model for ATM. We next generated HUDEP-2 clones lacking zeta globin (HBZ KO) and transduced these clones with lentiviral vectors expressing high levels of zeta globin (lenti-zeta) (Fig 1D). Western blotting revealed that increasing the levels of zeta globin in these cells resulted in decreased expression of alpha globin, suggesting reciprocal control between these genes (Fig 1E). Most importantly, we saw a reduction in toxic beta-globin dimers in H-SEA cells expressing high levels of zeta-globin after transduction with lenti-zeta, suggesting that zeta globin could functionally replace the missing alpha-globin (Fig 1 F,G). To understand transcriptomic differences in H-SEA cells that may result in increased zeta globin expression, we performed bulk RNA sequencing of wild type and H-SEA clones. We confirmed that zeta expression is significantly upregulated in H-SEA compared to wild type (log2 fold change of 4.25, p=2.24E-38). Pathway analysis of differentially expressed genes is ongoing. Conclusions: Our international patient registry suggests that expression of zeta globin may play a role in the spontaneous survival to birth in a subset of patients. Zeta globin expression is increased in the setting of H-SEA cells in vitro, and restoration of zeta expression by lentivirus results in a reduction of toxic beta globin dimers in these ATM cells. Furthermore, expressing zeta globin at high levels in H-WT cells decreased alpha globin expression, suggesting a reciprocal regulation of these two genes. This concept is similar to the relationship between fetal gamma and adult beta globins which has been exploited for therapeutic editing approaches in patients with beta-thalassemia. At this point, the natural repressor of zeta globin is not yet known, but our data suggests that a strategy of upregulating zeta globin could potentially be developed to mimic the ongoing trials of using the BCL11A repressor to induce gamma globin in patients with beta thalassemia and sickle cell disease. Disclosures Wienert: Integral Medicines: Current Employment. Kohn:Allogene Therapeutics: Consultancy, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Orchard Therapeutics: Consultancy, Patents & Royalties, Research Funding. MacKenzie:Acrigen: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Ultragenyx: Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 73 (8) ◽  
pp. 2196-2201 ◽  
Author(s):  
AF Roux ◽  
F Morle ◽  
D Guetarni ◽  
P Colonna ◽  
K Sahr ◽  
...  

Abstract Hereditary elliptocytosis in North Africa is frequently associated with the alpha I/65 spectrin variant, characterized by an abnormal alpha I 65-kD instead of the normal alpha I 80-kD peptide following limited trypsin digestion of whole spectrin. A similar variant (although it yielded a 68-kD fragment) has been shown recently, in two black patients, to result from the insertion of a leucyl residue at position 148 (Marchesi et al: J Clin Invest 80:191, 1987). In order to determine if the underlying molecular defect was the same in North Africans and blacks (who originate from both sides of the Sahara Desert), we performed analysis directly at the DNA level. Starting from the DNA of an Algerian alpha I/65 heterozygote in whom the mutation was associated with identifiable RFLPs, we cloned and sequenced the alpha-spectrin gene region, which includes the mutation. We thus identified an extra leucine codon (TTG) between codons 147 and 149, the coding sequence becoming CAG TTG TTG CTG instead of CAG TTG CTG. We then used the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method and dot-blot hybridization of the amplified DNA with mutant and normal allele-specific oligonucleotides to screen the DNA from four other unrelated North African subjects with Sp alpha I/65 hereditary elliptocytosis. In all families we studied, these subjects were heterozygous for the TTG insertion. These results demonstrate that Sp alpha I/65 hereditary elliptocytosis has the same molecular basis in North Africans and blacks.


Blood ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 75 (12) ◽  
pp. 2343-2348 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Lyman ◽  
RH Aster ◽  
GP Visentin ◽  
PJ Newman

Abstract The human Baka/Bakb alloantigen system has been implicated in the pathogenesis of post-transfusion purpura and neonatal alloimmune thrombocytopenic purpura. Human alloantisera specific for either the Baka or Bakb allele have been shown to react exclusively with the heavy chain of membrane glycoprotein (GP) IIb. To investigate the structure of the Bak epitopes, we used the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to amplify GPIIb cDNA synthesized from platelet RNA samples prepared from individuals of known serologic phenotype. Subsequent DNA sequence analysis of amplified GPIIb cDNAs derived from one Baka homozygous individual and one Bakb homozygous individual revealed a single nucleotide base difference near the 3′ end of the mRNA encoding the GPIIb heavy chain. Short 13 base allele-specific oligonucleotides (ASO) containing the putative phenotype-specific base in the middle were then synthesized, end-labeled with digoxigenin-11-dUTP using terminal transferase, and used as probes in subsequent dot-blot hybridization experiments. Platelet RNA was prepared from a panel made up of four Baka/a, three Bakb/b, and two Baka/b individuals, and the mRNA encoding GPIIb was amplified using PCR and spotted onto nylon membranes. ASO hybridization showed that the nucleotide base difference identified above segregated with Bak phenotype in all nine individuals examined (P = .002). The base pair substitution results in an amino acid polymorphism at residue 843 of the mature heavy chain. The Baka form of GPIIb encodes an isoleucine at this position, whereas the Bakb allele contains a serine. Identification of the polymorphism associated with this clinically important alloantigen system should permit new therapeutic and diagnostic approaches for treating and managing patients with alloimmune thrombocytopenic disorders.


Blood ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 73 (8) ◽  
pp. 2196-2201
Author(s):  
AF Roux ◽  
F Morle ◽  
D Guetarni ◽  
P Colonna ◽  
K Sahr ◽  
...  

Hereditary elliptocytosis in North Africa is frequently associated with the alpha I/65 spectrin variant, characterized by an abnormal alpha I 65-kD instead of the normal alpha I 80-kD peptide following limited trypsin digestion of whole spectrin. A similar variant (although it yielded a 68-kD fragment) has been shown recently, in two black patients, to result from the insertion of a leucyl residue at position 148 (Marchesi et al: J Clin Invest 80:191, 1987). In order to determine if the underlying molecular defect was the same in North Africans and blacks (who originate from both sides of the Sahara Desert), we performed analysis directly at the DNA level. Starting from the DNA of an Algerian alpha I/65 heterozygote in whom the mutation was associated with identifiable RFLPs, we cloned and sequenced the alpha-spectrin gene region, which includes the mutation. We thus identified an extra leucine codon (TTG) between codons 147 and 149, the coding sequence becoming CAG TTG TTG CTG instead of CAG TTG CTG. We then used the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method and dot-blot hybridization of the amplified DNA with mutant and normal allele-specific oligonucleotides to screen the DNA from four other unrelated North African subjects with Sp alpha I/65 hereditary elliptocytosis. In all families we studied, these subjects were heterozygous for the TTG insertion. These results demonstrate that Sp alpha I/65 hereditary elliptocytosis has the same molecular basis in North Africans and blacks.


Blood ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 75 (12) ◽  
pp. 2343-2348 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Lyman ◽  
RH Aster ◽  
GP Visentin ◽  
PJ Newman

The human Baka/Bakb alloantigen system has been implicated in the pathogenesis of post-transfusion purpura and neonatal alloimmune thrombocytopenic purpura. Human alloantisera specific for either the Baka or Bakb allele have been shown to react exclusively with the heavy chain of membrane glycoprotein (GP) IIb. To investigate the structure of the Bak epitopes, we used the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to amplify GPIIb cDNA synthesized from platelet RNA samples prepared from individuals of known serologic phenotype. Subsequent DNA sequence analysis of amplified GPIIb cDNAs derived from one Baka homozygous individual and one Bakb homozygous individual revealed a single nucleotide base difference near the 3′ end of the mRNA encoding the GPIIb heavy chain. Short 13 base allele-specific oligonucleotides (ASO) containing the putative phenotype-specific base in the middle were then synthesized, end-labeled with digoxigenin-11-dUTP using terminal transferase, and used as probes in subsequent dot-blot hybridization experiments. Platelet RNA was prepared from a panel made up of four Baka/a, three Bakb/b, and two Baka/b individuals, and the mRNA encoding GPIIb was amplified using PCR and spotted onto nylon membranes. ASO hybridization showed that the nucleotide base difference identified above segregated with Bak phenotype in all nine individuals examined (P = .002). The base pair substitution results in an amino acid polymorphism at residue 843 of the mature heavy chain. The Baka form of GPIIb encodes an isoleucine at this position, whereas the Bakb allele contains a serine. Identification of the polymorphism associated with this clinically important alloantigen system should permit new therapeutic and diagnostic approaches for treating and managing patients with alloimmune thrombocytopenic disorders.


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