Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0039730 (thalassemia)
10,305 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In Sardinia, the beta-39 nonsense mutation is the primary cause of beta 0-thalassaemia. This mutation is found mainly on beta-globin gene cluster haplotypes I and II, which differ in their A gamma globin types (A gamma I and A gamma T, respectively). This report presents data on G gamma, A gamma I and A gamma T levels, and the presence or absence of a 4 base pair (bp) deletion at -225 to -222 of the A gamma globin promoter, in 55 poly-transfused beta 0-thalassaemia major patients. Six patients were homozygotes for the normal (N) A gamma promoter lacking the 4 bp deletion, had no A gamma T globin, and their mean G gamma:A gamma I: A gamma T ratio was 52.9:47.1:0. Twenty-five patients were homozygotes for the mutant (M) A gamma promoter with the 4 bp deletion, had no A gamma I globin, and the mean G gamma:A gamma I: A gamma T ratio was 62.1:0:37.9. For M/M compared to N/N, the lower A gamma T than A gamma I was significant by the t-test (P less than 0.001). Twenty-four N/M cases had mean G gamma:A gamma I:A gamma T of 56:24.4:19.6, and the lower A gamma T than A gamma I was also significant (P less than 0.001). Partial haplotype analysis on these and 17 other beta 0-thalassaemia patients suggested that the 4 bp deletion was strongly associated with haplotype II. Of 33 M/M, 32 were haplotype II/II and one was II/5a; of 31 N/M, 29 were I/II and two were II/IX; of eight N/N, seven were haplotype I/I and one was I/IX. These data show a strong association of the 4 bp promoter deletion with decreased expression of the A gamma T globin gene on haplotype II.
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PMID:Diminished A gamma T fetal globin levels in Sardinian haplotype II beta 0-thalassaemia patients are associated with a four base pair deletion in the A gamma T promoter. 171 Apr 78

This study concerned the gamma chain composition of Hb F and the haplotypes of 44 patients with beta-thalassemia major or intermedia and many of their relatives. Seventeen patients came from Northern (Turkish) Cyprus, 12 from the Istanbul area, and 15 from Macedonia and Bulgaria. Analysis of the A gamma T-G gamma-A gamma I ratio was made by HPLC, while haplotyping involved seven restriction sites. Specific haplotypes were present in certain populations; haplotype I [1] is the dominant type among North Cypriot thalassemia patients. Numerous types were seen in the patients from the Balkan countries. A direct relationship between the A gamma to G gamma ratios and the haplotypes, which exists among black beta-thalassemia heterozygotes [3], was also observed among these Mediterranean patients, although such analyses were considerably complicated by extensive blood transfusion therapy. Haplotypes without the Hinc II restriction site within the psi beta gene were associated with lower G gamma values than those that had this polymorphic site. The A gamma T chain was observed in a small number of beta-thalassemia homozygotes and heterozygotes. Three thalassemia chromosomes with slightly different haplotypes and one normal chromosome with a related haplotype were associated with the gamma 75 Ile----Thr substitution. A few patients with a thalassemia intermedia were heterozygotes for beta-thalassemia with either haplotypes V or VII [1] while the "nonthalassemic" chromosome had a haplotype I, which is the most common "beta-thalassemic" haplotype among the Mediterranean population(s). Detailed analyses of this chromosome have not been completed.
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PMID:Haplotypes and levels of fetal hemoglobin and G gamma to A gamma ratios in Mediterranean patients with thalassemia minor and major. 241 Nov 30

A simple thin-layer isoelectric focusing technique was used to separate Hb F-Sardinia, containing the A gamma T-globin chain, from the Hb F containing the G gamma- and the A gamma I-globin chains. The identity of the slow-moving Hb F fraction as Hb F-Sardinia was verified by PAGE. A negative correlation (R2 = 0.747, p less than 0.001) was found between the percent Hb F-Sardinia and percent G gamma-chain in homozygotes for beta-thalassemia. Of 31 Sardinian beta-thalassemic patients studied, 21 were homozygous and eight heterozygous for the A gamma T polymorphism with a gene frequency of 0.823. The mean values of Hb F-Sardinia were 39.1 +/- 5.9% for the homozygotes and 17.1 +/- 3.6% for the heterozygotes. The percentage of Hb F-Sardinia found in beta o-thalassemic newborns was similar to that of corresponding normal newborns who also had the A gamma T polymorphism. No measurable differences in the percent Hb F-Sardinia level were observed among beta o-thal patients who were polytransfused, beta o-thal patients studied before transfusion, and beta o-thal patients exhibiting the intermediate form of the disease who had never been transfused.
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PMID:The level of Hb F-Sardinia (alpha 2A gamma 2(75)Ile----Thr) in the fetal hemoglobin of Sardinian beta-thalassemic homozygotes determined by isoelectric focusing. 242 Jan 71

The relative proportions of gamma chains of human fetal haemoglobin G gamma, A gamma 75 Ileu (A gamma I) and A gamma 75 Thr (A gamma T) were investigated in homogeneous populations of patients in Algeria exhibiting sickle cell disease and in patients in Algeria and Sardinia with beta-thalassaemia. The restriction site haplotypes within the beta gene cluster were known. The results suggest a tight genetic regulation of the G gamma/A gamma + G gamma ratio (G gamma ratio) which is associated with the G gamma Hind III site of polymorphism (p less than 0.0001). From the present results and those in the literature the high G gamma ratio is associated with the presence of 3 polymorphic restriction sites: Xmn1 5' to the G gamma gene, Hind III in the G gamma IVS II and Hinc II in the psi beta gene. Familial studies showed that the expression of the A gamma alleles is genetically determined. The wide variation of the A gamma T/A gamma T + A gamma I ratio (A gamma ratio) between families is most probably related to the various haplotypes bearing the A gamma I alleles.
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PMID:Genetic control of the proportion of gamma chains of human fetal haemoglobin. 243 Feb 59

Members of a Black family from Georgia who were investigated for the first time in 1960 and several times thereafter were reinvestigated through DNA restriction endonuclease analyses and haplotyping, while the gamma chain heterogeneity of the Hb F was reevaluated using a newly developed HPLC procedure. Four different abnormalities were present. (a) Heterozygosity for G gamma A gamma-HPFH type II characterized by a large deletion involving the delta and beta globin genes with a 5' end within the psi beta gene. (b) Heterozygosity for an -epsilon-G gamma-G gamma-psi beta-delta-beta S-chromosome, thus carrying a beta S globin gene and two G gamma genes instead of one G gamma and one A gamma gene. (c) Heterozygosity for an -epsilon-G gamma-A gamma T-psi beta-delta-beta S-chromosome, carrying the beta S globin gene and an allele of the A gamma (or A gamma I) gene. These three chromosomes occurred in combination with each other, resulting in SS and S-HPFH conditions, and with a normal -epsilon-G gamma-A gamma-psi beta-delta-beta A-chromosome resulting in the HPFH and Hb S heterozygosities. The presence of the -G gamma-G gamma- and -G gamma-A gamma T-chromosomes in the one SS patient was responsible for the high G gamma value (average 75%), 25% A gamma T chain, and for the absence of the A gamma I chain. (d) An alpha-thalassemia-2 heterozygosity in one member.
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PMID:Hemoglobin abnormalities in a black family with HB S, hereditary persistence of HB F, and a gamma chain variant; a reevaluation through gene mapping. 608 52

The gamma chain compositions of the fetal hemoglobins of 2453 newborn babies from East Asian countries (1350 babies), from Italy, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, and Georgia (417 Caucasian babies), and 686 black babies from Georgia were determined by high pressure liquid chromatography. Unusual results for a limited number of babies were confirmed by chemical analyses, and were evaluated further by family studies. Statistical analyses indicated high gene frequencies for the A gamma T chain in Italian (f = 0.237), Yugoslavian and Bulgarian (f = 0.238), and white Georgia babies (f = 0.224), a lower frequency in Japan (f = 0.178), and India (f = 0.173), and particularly in mainland China (f = 0.079). The A gamma T gene frequency in normal (AA) Black babies was 0.102. When a beta S or beta C mutation was also present this frequency was greatly decreased, particularly in babies with the AC condition (f = 0.036). These results suggest the near absence of the A gamma T mutation on the chromosome also carrying the beta C determinant. Most babies had the expected G gamma values which vary between 60 and 80%, but several (mainly black) babies had higher values (between 80 and 90%), while one normal black baby had a G gamma value of (nearly) 100%. This condition may be a form of A gamma +1-thalassemia and has been discussed in detail elsewhere (Blood 58:491-500, 1981). Thirty-five clinically normal (mainly Chinese, Indian, and Japanese) babies had G gamma values of about 40%. Twenty-six babies had A gamma I values of about 60%, while the remaining nine babies had A gamma T and A gamma I chains in a ratio of either 1 to 2 or 1 to 1. Two additional newborns did not produce any G gamma chains, but had only A gamma I chains or A gamma T chains. Family studies failed to indicate a specific hematological abnormality. These unusual ratios between the G gamma and A gamma (either A gamma I or A gamma T) chains have led to speculations regarding possible genetic abnormalities present in these infants.
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PMID:The occurrence of different levels of G gamma chain and of the A gamma T variant of fetal hemoglobin in newborn babies from several countries. 618 75

The beta zero-thalassemia codon 39 nonsense mutation predominant in Sardinia is severe, and homozygotes are transfusion dependent. Two-thirds of beta zero 39 alleles are linked to A gamma T (haplotype II). One-fourth are linked to A gamma I (haplotypes I and IX), as is the mild beta +-thalassemia -87 C-->G mutation (haplotype VIII). beta +/beta zero-Thalassemia VIII/II compound heterozygotes have significantly higher A gamma I:A gamma T (23:7) than beta zero-thalassemia I/II (24:20) or IX/II (16:17) cases. This suggests that the beta + -87 mutation is associated with elevated gamma expression in cis, which may contribute to the lack of transfusion-dependence in beta +/beta zero cases.
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PMID:Mild beta+(-87)-thalassemia CACCC box mutation is associated with elevated fetal hemoglobin expression in cis. 750 41

In beta zero-thalassemia and sickle cell patients, a 4 bp deletion at -222 to -225 of the A gamma globin promoter was associated with low expression of the A gamma T variant (threonine at codon 75 of A gamma), whereas A gamma I (isoleucine at 75) had the normal A gamma promoter and higher expression. However, it has been reported that the beta A chromosomes of sickle cell trait cases have the 4 bp deletion as a common polymorphism unlinked to the A gamma T allele. We now present data demonstrating the association of the A gamma T allele with the 4 bp deletion in beta A chromosomes of sickle cell traits.
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PMID:Direct demonstration that the A gamma T globin gene is linked to the 4 bp promoter deletion in the beta A chromosome of sickle cell traits. 837 15