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Query: UMLS:C0019045 (
hemoglobinopathies
)
2,704
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hb M Akita disease is a cyanotic
hemoglobinopathy
found in Akita Prefecture, Japan. The abnormal hemoglobin was found to be the same as Hb M Hyde Park (beta92
His
replaced by Tyr) by chemical analysis in 1967. In this disease signs of accelerated hemolysis (serum bilirubin, 2.4 mg/dl; splenomegaly, 2 finger breadths; Hb, 10.7 g/dl; reticulocyte index, 2.7) were noted, but the causes of its slight anemia were revealed to be fairly complex by ferrokinetic study, RBC life-span measurement, and 99mTc myeloscintigram. The anemia in this disease is caused not only by shortened erythrocyte survival (T 1/2 = 11.5 days by 51Cr-tagging method) and sequestration of red cells in the spleen (Spleen: liver ratio = 2.5 approximately 3.0 by 51Cr-surface counting), but also by slow supply of erythrocytes to the peripheral blood from the bone marrow, presumably, related to the existence of unstable Hb M Akita and its derivative (Hb Akita) in the erythroid cells. Both Carrell's isopropanol test and Heinz body formation test were positive. In spite of maximally increased total erythropoiesis (8 times as high as the normal level; M:E ratio = 0.22:1.0), supply of red cells from the bone marrow to the peripheral blood was significantly decreased. The distribution of hematopoietic sites throughout the body was reasonably uniform.
...
PMID:Altered erythropoiesis and increased hemolysis in hemoglobin M Akita (M Hyde Park beta92 His replaced by Tyr) disease. 105 75
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.
...
PMID:Hb Q-Thailand [alpha 74(EF3)Asp-->His]: gene organization, molecular structure, and DNA diagnosis. 148 19
The Committee on Infectious Diseases of the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices of the Center for Disease Control for many years have recommended the routine use of influenza vaccine in various
hemoglobinopathies
including sickle cell disease. This recommendation, however, has not been included in the patient care protocols of the Comprehensive Sickle Cell Centers program of NIHLB. Most clinicians have not used yearly influenza vaccine for their patients with sickle cell disease. This article reports a case of a 5-year-old boy with sickle cell disease who had not received influenza vaccine. He developed pneumonitis and acute myositis during a serologically confirmed influenza B virus infection. The incapacitating and protracted course of his illness presented diagnostic and management problems.
His
case strongly supports the recommendation of the two infectious disease committees.
...
PMID:Sickle cell disease with complicated influenza B virus infection. 160 65
A 73 year-old man suffering from marked anemia for several years admitted in our hospital. Diagnosis was immediately made of refractory anemia with ringed sideroblasts by the existence of ringed sideroblasts. Hemoglobin analysis revealed a high fetal hemoglobin, a low hemoglobin A2, a decreased beta/alpha synthetic ratio, and a decreased G gamma/A gamma synthetic ratio. This acquired
hemoglobinopathy
resembled delta beta-thalassemia.
His
anemia was remarkably improved because of the responsiveness to anabolic steroid hormone, and this abnormal globin synthetic pattern was identical as those of the normal adult. We consider this
hemoglobinopathy
may due to an abnormal expression of globin mRNA.
...
PMID:[Refractory anemia with ringed sideroblasts complicated with delta beta-thalassemia-like hemoglobinopathy]. 247 63
Point mutations alpha 58
His
----Tyr (Hb M Boston), beta 6 Glu--lys (Hb C) and beta 26 Glu----Lys (Hb E) have been identified in abnormal hemoglobins by means of tryptic hydrolysis of their alpha- and beta-chains followed by mass-spectrometry coupled with direct extraction of ions from solution. The abnormal hemoglobin Hb M Boston alpha 58 (E7)
His
----Tyr has been for the first time found in the blood of a patient from the USSR. This express-method is generally applicable for the identification of point mutation in proteins. The amount of protein necessary for the analysis is 100-1000 pmole. The stability, proteolytic degradation of the identified abnormal Hb's and Hb Bart's were investigated. The molecular pathogenesis of the
hemoglobinopathies
are discussed from the point of view of the observed properties.
...
PMID:[Location of amino acid substitutions in human hemoglobin. Mass spectrometric rapid analysis of tryptic peptides]. 273 43
Hemoglobin Pasadena [beta 75(E19)Leu----Arg] was found in a boy who had an acute episode of anemia and rapid splenic enlargement.
His
father was the only other member of a large family with this
hemoglobinopathy
. We have used gene mapping techniques for direct identification of the beta-globin gene mutation. To correlate the DNA findings with the structural identification of this variant, we have also performed globin chain separation and analysis of the tryptic peptides using high performance liquid chromatography and secondary ion mass spectral analysis.
...
PMID:Hemoglobin Pasadena: identification of the gene mutant by DNA analysis using synthetic DNA probes. 334 4
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.
...
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
Microscale analysis of a variant hemoglobin (Hb) has been achieved by combination of high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and electrospray mass spectrometry (ESMS) and the method should be almost universally applicable. We have eliminated preparative scale HPLC of globin chains and semi-preparative HPLC of proteolytic digests which had been used prior to mass spectrometry. Use of microbore HPLC columns reduced the time required for analysis substantially and solvent usage by 100x. Molecular masses of intact globins and masses and sequence information of tryptic peptides could be obtained without collecting and separately analyzing chromatographic fractions. As an example of the use of these methods, we report the characterization of an unknown
hemoglobinopathy
case that was finally authenticated as Hb P-Galveston [beta 117(G19)
His
-->Arg], using the following sequence of analyses: 1) ESMS of complete hemolysate, 2) analytical HPLC of globin chains, 3) combined microbore HPLC/ESMS of globin chains to determine their molecular masses, 4) cysteine derivatization and tryptic digestion of mixture of all globins, followed by microbore separation of the peptides, molecular mass determination, and generation of fragmentation patterns allowing confirmation of amino acid sequences. This four-part strategy should allow characterization of almost all variant Hbs. Exceptions would be mutations in regions of globin chains which give rise to small (< four residues) tryptic peptides, either normal or produced by addition of new tryptic sites and mutations that introduce only minute difference in molecular weight (MW) of tryptic peptides. Since only 10% of each separated peptides is mass analyzed, 90% is available for collection and further structural identification (e.g. by tandem MS or Edman sequencing) if the identity is still in doubt.
...
PMID:Expediting rare variant hemoglobin characterization by combined HPLC/electrospray mass spectrometry. 833 Sep 75
Twelve patients with anemias and their close relatives were examined: 8 adults (3 men and 5 women) and 4 children (3 boys and 1 girl). Six of them were Armenians, 1 woman was Russian, and the rest were of mixed origin: 3 Russian-Azerbaijan-Ukrainian, 1 child Russian-Ukrainian-African, and 1 woman Russian-Ukrainian.
Hemoglobinopathies
were detected in 10 subjects from 4 families (3 families from Donetsk and 1 from Moscow). Homozygotic beta-thalassemia major (Hb F 98.9%) was diagnosed in a 2-year-old Armenian girl from Donetsk. The girl lags behind in development and suffers from anemia with hepatosplenomegaly and jaundice. Heterozygotic beta-thalassemia minor with increased levels of Hb A2 and Hb F was diagnosed in her parents (Armenians from Azerbaijan). A 15-year-old Russian-Azerbaijan-Ukrainian boy from another family in Donetsk had beta-thalassemia with HbD (94%). The boy suffers from anemia with hepatosplenomegaly, jaundice, and chronic hepatitis. Heterozygotic beta-thalassemia with increased levels of Hb A2 and Hb F was revealed in proband's mother and brother; the father was not examined. alpha-Thalassemia is suspected in a 3-year-old boy from a Russian-Ukrainian-African family in Donetsk; he presented with a very small "fast" abnormal hemoglobin fraction. The boy suffers from anemia with splenomegaly and systolic murmur. Blurred form of thalassemia minor is diagnosed in the mother. The father, an African from Zaire, was not examined. Heterozygotic beta-thalassemia with increased Hb A2 level was revealed in a 20-year-old Armenian boy from Moscow. He presented with manifest splenomegaly, chronic gastritis, and mitral valve prolapse.
His
mother suffers from thalassemia minor, was anemic during pregnancy, and there are cases of anemia in the family. No hematologic disorders were found in the father. No
hemoglobinopathies
were detected in a 59-year-old Russian women from the town of Tver with very grave anemia; apparently, her condition was acquired, but not hereditary. Data on patients in the city of Donetsk are of special interest, for there are virtually no reports about
hemoglobinopathies
in the Ukraine.
...
PMID:[Beta-thalassemia and Hb D in patients with anemia]. 957 28
Blood from seven newborns, a 13-y-old, and seven adult family members with a suspected
hemoglobinopathy
because of unexplained cyanosis was obtained for analysis to determine Hb oxygen affinity and to characterize and quantify the Hb variants. Their oxygen saturation was 76 to 84%. The P(50) was 30.3 +/- 2.9 for the newborns and 32.5 +/- 2.6 mm Hg for their related adults. In the same order, the plasma erythropoietin was 7.4 +/- 2.9 and 15.9 +/- 3.7 mU/mL, whereas 2,3-diphosphoglycerate was 16.1. +/- 2.9 and 15.9 +/- 3.7 micromol/g Hb. In four of the newborns with increased P(50), the mother had a normal P(50) (27 mm Hg), which indicated a greater maternal oxygen affinity than the fetus with no adverse effects on the fetus. Genetic analysis of alpha-globin genes demonstrated a heterozygous mutation on the alpha2 gene [alpha94(G1)Asp-->
His
] for each of the newborns and their related adults. The same mutation was found on the alpha1 gene in an adolescent and her father. The mRNA measurements showed that the alpha2- to alpha1-globin mRNA mean ratio was 2.5, alpha2 mutant globin mRNA/total alpha2-globin mRNA was 45.0%, whereas the alpha1 mutant globin mRNA/total alpha1-globin mRNA was 37.8%. The level of alpha2 mutant globin/total alpha-globin was 27.3 +/- 1%, and alpha1 mutant globin/total alpha-globin was 23.8 +/- 1%. The percentage of synthesized alpha2 and alpha1 mutant globins was 27.5 +/- 2 and 26.1 +/- 1, respectively. The ratio of the alpha2/alpha1 mutant globins was 1.1, which corresponded to a ratio at the mRNA level of alpha2/alpha1 of 2.5 +/- 0.5, which suggested that there is a less efficient translation of the alpha2 mRNA than alpha1 mRNA. The reversal of the physiologic fetomaternal oxygen affinity had no effects on fetal development.
...
PMID:The biologic implications of a rare hemoglobin mutant that decreases oxygen affinity. 1113 94
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