Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019045 (hemoglobinopathies)
2,704 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Hb Q-Thailand [alpha 74(EF3)Asp-->His] is often found in Thailand, China, and other Southeast Asian countries. The alpha-Q-Thailand gene is strongly linked to an alpha gene deletion and has important implications in the identification and diagnosis of hemoglobinopathies and thalassemias. The alpha-Q-Thailand mutation was previously mapped to the alpha 1 gene in a study of Chinese patients. In this paper, a Thai patient with Hb Q-Thailand/Hb H disease and his mother were studied at the DNA level, and the gene organization of Hb Q-Thailand in the Thai patient was found to be the same as that of Chinese patients (i.e. the Hb Q-Thailand gene is located on the alpha 1 gene of chromosome #16, while the -4.2 kb or leftward deletion involves the alpha 2 gene). Also, the GAC-->CAC mutation proposed at codon 74, has been confirmed by DNA sequencing and a simple and accurate method for diagnosis of the Hb Q-Thailand variant has been developed based on restriction enzyme analysis. Since the GAC-->CAC mutation generates new cutting sites for both restriction enzymes Apa LI and Hgi AI, polymerase chain reaction amplification of a specific region around codon 74, followed by digestion with these enzymes and agarose gel electrophoresis of the digested products, permits rapid and accurate identification of Hb Q-Thailand.
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PMID:Hb Q-Thailand [alpha 74(EF3)Asp-->His]: gene organization, molecular structure, and DNA diagnosis. 148 19

Hemoglobinopathy was detected in a 72-year-old female with basal cell carcinoma of the genial region during high-performance liquid chromatography of hemolysate for the assay of HbA1c. Structural analysis demonstrated that this abnormal hemoglobin was identical to Hb Hope [beta 136(H14)Gly----Asp]. No clinical or hematological abnormality was observed. A study of the family revealed that a younger sister and two sons of the propositus had the same hemoglobin variant. This is the second observation of Hb Hope in a Japanese family.
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PMID:Hemoglobin Hope found in a patient with basal cell carcinoma of the genial region. 258 61

An abnormal hemoglobin was found in a young polycythemic man. Case study showed that the polycythemia was not due to hemoglobinopathy as the blood oxygen affinity was normal. Structural study of this variant permitted the characterization of a Hb Kokura alpha 2 47 (CE5) Asp----Gly beta 2 for the first time in France.
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PMID:Hb Kokura alpha 2 47 (CE5) Asp----Gly beta 2 in a French Jewish family. 380 42

During a survey for hemoglobinopathies in over 9000 residents of Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan, a fast moving hemoglobin was identified in eight members of three generations in a Japanese family. The abnormal hemoglobin, named Hb Hiroshima, constitutes about 50% of the total hemoglobin in hemolysates from the carriers who have a mild erythremia but are otherwise apparently clinically unaffected. All preparations of Hb Hiroshima have increased affinity for oxygen, by either tonometric or oxygen electrode determinations. At pH 7.0, the oxygen pressure, P(50) required to half saturate an unfractionated hemolysate from a carrier was one-half that of Hb A, and the P(50) of a purified sample containing no Hb A was one-fourth that of Hb A. The pH dependence of the oxygen equilibrium (Bohr effect) is below normal, as shown by the absolute value of the Bohr effect factor which is about half that of Hb A, in the pH range between 7.0 and 7.4. The Hill constant, n, for Hb Hiroshima between pH 7.0 and 7.4 is 2-2.4, compared to 2.8-3 for Hb A under the same conditions, indicating reduction of, but not complete abolition of heme-heme interaction. Urea dissociation and canine hybridization tests located the biochemical lesion in the beta chain. Fingerprints (Ingram), carboxypeptidase digestion, and amino acid analysis demonstrated that the substitution was at residue 143 in the beta chain, where histidine was replaced by aspartic acid.In contrast to other recently described high oxygen affinity mutants that show intact Bohr effects, all three of the major characteristics of the reversible combination of hemoglobin with oxygen (oxygen equilibrium, heme-heme interaction, and pH dependence) are affected in Hb Hiroshima. A tentative interpretation of these effects, relating structure to function, is offered in terms of recently developed models of normal hemoglobin.
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PMID:Hemoglobin Hiroshima (beta-143 histidine--aspartic acid): a newly identified fast moving beta chain variant associated with increased oxygen affinity and compensatory erythremia. 577 89

We have investigated the use of a high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) column packed with a unique weak cation exchanger prepared by coating silica with poly(aspartic acid) for hemoglobin analysis. The complete separation of hemoglobin Bart's F, A0, A2, S, C, D, E, G, SG, Winnipeg and Sealy was achieved by gradient elution within 30 min. The high resolution made it possible to distinguish hemoglobin variants such as Bart's, AC, AD, AE, AG, AS, ASG, CC, SC, SS, Winnipeg, Sealy and beta-chain variants with thalassemia such as S/beta +, S/beta 0 and S(C)-beta + thalassemia. Comparison of DEAE-cellulose column chromatography and our HPLC method for the quantitation of hemoglobin A2 yielded a good correlation. Hemoglobins A2, C and E are completely resolved on PolyCAT A columns in contrast to both cellulose acetate electrophoresis and DEAE-cellulose column chromatography. The high resolution of the system and the accuracy of the method combined with complete automation make this procedure useful for diagnosis of hemoglobin disorders in both a research and clinical laboratory environment.
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PMID:High-performance liquid chromatography of human hemoglobins on a new cation exchanger. 663 Mar 48

Abnormal human hemoglobins (HBs) with amino acid substitutions in the alpha 1 beta 2 interface have very high oxygen affinity and greatly reduced cooperativity in O2 binding compared to normal human Hb. In such abnormal Hbs with mutations at position beta 99, the intersubunit hydrogen bonds between Asp-beta 99 and Tyr-alpha 42 and between Asp-beta 99 and Asn-alpha 97 are broken, thus destabilizing the deoxyquaternary structure of these Hbs. A molecular dynamics method has been used to design compensatory amino acid substitutions in these Hbs that can restore their allosteric properties. We have designed a compensatory mutation in a naturally occurring mutant Hb, Hb Kempsey (Asp-beta 99-->Asn), and have produced it using our Escherichia coli expression plasmid pHE2. We have determined the O2 binding properties of this recombinant double mutant Hb, Hb(Asp-beta 99-->Asn and Tyr-alpha 42-->Asp) and have used 1H NMR spectroscopy to investigate the tertiary structures around the heme groups and the quaternary structure in the alpha 1 beta 2 subunit interface. Our results clearly show that the Tyr-alpha 42-->Asp replacement can substantially compensate for the functional defect of Hb Kempsey caused by the Asp-beta 99-->Asn substitution. The structural and functional information derived from this recombinant Hb provides insights into the structural basis of allosterism and the design of compensatory amino acid substitutions to restore the functional properties of other abnormal HBs associated with hemoglobinopathies.
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PMID:Restoring allosterism with compensatory mutations in hemoglobin. 797 99

A screening program was conducted to ascertain the incidence of hemoglobinopathies in the district of Antalya, Turkey. The survey sample was selected from the household registration forms of health centers by systematic random sampling. Heparinized blood samples were collected from 1,616 subjects from 884 families. The prevalence of beta thalassemia traits with increased Hb A2 was 10.2%. This is higher than that found in previous studies performed in Antalya. The prevalence of abnormal hemoglobins (Hbs) was found to be 0.8%. Four subjects had Hb AS; five had Hb D-Los Angeles (B 121 [GH4] Glu-Gln); one had Hb Ube-2 (68 [E1] Ans-Asp), one had Hb P-Nilotic (fusion between B 22 and) and two had Hb D-like variants.
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PMID:Hemoglobinopathies in the district of Antalya, Turkey. 821 48

We studied two members of an African American family with erythrocytosis. An abnormal hemoglobin variant with an electrophoretic pattern on cellulose acetate similar to Hb J was identified. The oxygen dissociation curve using whole blood was biphasic, dramatically left-shifted, and hyperbolic. Sequence analysis of DNA from the proband showed heterozygosity for a T-->A change at the first position of codon 145 in the beta-globin gene which results in the substitution of an asparagine residue for normal tyrosine. The second cycle of C-terminal amino acid sequence analysis of a mixture of alpha- and beta-globin chains showed tyrosine, aspartic acid, and small amounts of asparagine. Collectively, these results indicate the existence of a mutation at codon 145 of the beta-globin gene which encodes for asparagine instead of tyrosine, and that asparagine then undergoes a partial posttranslational deamidation to aspartic acid. This amino acid substitution corresponds to Hb Osler, which is a high oxygen affinity hemoglobin variant, initially described to be caused by a substitution of Tyr-->Asp at beta 145. Posttranslational amino acid modification may constitute an important component in the pathophysiology of hemoglobinopathies.
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PMID:Hb Osler [beta 145(HC2)Tyr-->Asp] results from posttranslational modification. 910 Dec 80

Thalassemia syndromes and unstable hemoglobins traditionally represent two phenotypically separate disorders of hemoglobin synthesis. Highly unstable hemoglobin variants, however, often have phenotypic characteristics associated with both ineffective erythropoiesis (thalassemias) and peripheral hemolysis (unstable hemoglobins). Many highly unstable beta chain variants cause a dominant thalassemia-like phenotype, in which simple heterozygotes for such mutations have a clinical expression similar to thalassemia intermedia. The phenotypic expression of highly unstable alpha-globin variants is usually less severe, due mainly to a gene dosage effect, and they are often only characterized on interaction with other alpha-thalassemia mutations, whence they are classified as nondeletional alpha-thalassemia determinants. This study reports the clinical and hematological findings in five cases with rare alpha-thalassemia genotypes: a single patient with the thalassemic alpha2-globin gene codon 59 Gly-->Asp hemoglobin variant in trans to an alpha(+)-thalassemia deletion, and four compound heterozygotes for the nondeletional alpha-thalassemia polyadenylation mutation (alpha2 gene AATAAA-->AATAAG or alpha(T-Saudi)alpha/-alpha) and an alpha(+)-thalassemia deletion. Evaluation of the clinical and hematological features in these two analogous genotypes clearly demonstrates the more severe clinical expression associated with the alpha-thalassemic unstable hemoglobin variant. In addition, the case in this study with the codon 59 alpha chain variant provides a further example illustrating the spectrum of phenotypes associated with the alpha-thalassemic hemoglobinopathies.
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PMID:Interaction of an alpha(+)-thalassemia deletion with either a highly unstable alpha-globin variant (alpha2, codon 59, GGC-->GAC) or a nondeletional alpha-thalassemia mutation (AATAAA-->AATAAG): comparison of phenotypes illustrating "dominant" alpha-thalassemia. 1056 21

Clinical phenotypes associated with abnormal globin chain biosynthesis may result in thalassemia (deficient quantity) or hemolytic anemia (abnormal hemoglobins). However, the phenotypic expression of hyperunstable hemoglobin variants often includes features of thalassemia, along with variable peripheral hemolysis. Hemoglobinopathies caused by highly unstable beta-chain variants have a dominant thalassemia-like phenotype, in which carriers have a clinical expression of thalassemia intermedia, but highly unstable alpha-globin variants are usually only phenotypically apparent when they interact with other alpha-thalassemia mutations. In a child with clinical and hematological features consistent with beta-thalassemia intermedia, DNA analysis excluded any beta-globin gene mutations but characterized a novel deletion cd37(C2)Pro>0 (Hb Heraklion) in the alpha1 globin gene, in trans to a common Mediterranean nondeletion alpha-thalassemia mutation (alpha(Hph)alpha). The deletion of proline at alpha37(C2) is predicted to result in severe instability of the variant hemoglobin, which on interaction with a synthesis-deficient alpha-thalassemia mutation causes a relatively severe dyserythropoietic anemia, representing an alternative phenotype associated with highly unstable alpha-chain variants. Hb Heraklion is the fourth highly unstable alpha-globin variant that we have observed in patients from Greece and Albania. Two variants involve the alpha2-globin gene: Hb Agrinio (alpha29(B10)Leu>Pro) and Hb Adana (alpha59(E8)Gly>Asp), and two the alpha1-gene: Hb Aghia Sophia (alpha62(E11)Val>0) and (Hb Heraklion a37(C2)Pro>0). Each has been observed on interaction with a different alpha-thalassemia mutation and the phenotypes associated with these highly unstable alpha-variants are presented.
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PMID:Distinct phenotypic expression associated with a new hyperunstable alpha globin variant (Hb heraklion, alpha1cd37(C2)Pro>0): comparison to other alpha-thalassemic hemoglobinopathies. 1104 28


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