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Query: UMLS:C0039730 (thalassemia)
10,305 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Using a method involving elution of hemoglobin bands from cellulose acetate strips following electrophoresis of hemolysates, hemoglobin A2 (Ab A2) was quantitated in bloods from 300 healthy individuals and 904 patients. The percentage of Hb A2 was elevated in beta-thalassemia heterozygotes and some patients who had megaloblastic anemia. In the latter, the highest Hb A2 levels were observed in patients with the most severe anemia. Low Hb A2 percentages were found in iron-deficiency anemia, hereditary persistance of fetal hemoglobin, and Hb H disease. In iron-deficiency anemia, the lowest levels of Hb A2 were observed in association with the most severe anemia. Iron and folate deficiency each suppressed Hb A2 levels in beta-thalassemia heterozygotes; however, vitamin B12 deficiency did not alter the percentage of Hb A2 in thalassemia. Malignant tumors, renal and hepatic insufficiency, chronic infections and inflammation, hemolytic disease, lead poisoning, aplastic anemia, leukemia, myelofibrosis, and hypothyroidism did not change Hb A2 levels. The pathogenesis of altered Hb A2 levels and their clinical significance in various diseases are discussed.
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PMID:Hemoglobin A2 levels in health and various hematologic disorders. 26 35

In a patient with homozygous betaO-thalassemia in whom studies of reticulocyte hemoglobin synthesis showed no beta-globin chain synthesis in vivo and in vitro, molecular hybridization studies revealed RNA sequences complementary to beta-globin cDNA. The fact that these sequences were authentic beta-globin mRNA was shown by fingerprint analysis of T1 ribonuclease-digested mRNA and by sequencing of oligonucleotides unique to beta-globin mRNA. The beta-mRNA that failed to direct beta-globin chain synthesis was not detectably shortened or degraded and contained poly(A) sequences.
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PMID:Authentic beta-globin mRNA sequences in homozygous betaO-thalassemia. 26 54

Human cellular DNA fragments from cells of normal subjects and patients with thalassemia obtained by restriction enzyme digestion were analyzed for their globin gene content. The fragments were separated on agarose gels, transferred to nitrocellulose filters, hybridized to globin [(32)P]cDNA, and radioautographed. One to ten picograms of globin gene sequences were detectable. With EcoRI digestion, eight to nine cellular DNA fragments were found to contain globin genes. Three of these contained beta-like gene sequences assayed with beta globin cDNA probe. One beta-like fragment was absent in DNA from a homozygous subject for hemoglobin Lepore. Two of the three beta gene-containing fragments present in normal DNA were absent in DNA from a patient with hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin. The same two fragments containing beta-like genes were absent from deltabeta thalassemic DNA and one new fragment containing beta-like genes was found. Together with results obtained by hybridization of these DNAs in solution, the data are consistent with deletion of specific restriction human DNA fragments in subjects with these disorders and a greater deletion of beta-like gene sequences in subjects with hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin than in those with deltabeta thalassemia.
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PMID:Changes in restricted human cellular DNA fragments containing globin gene sequences in thalassemias and related disorders. 27 14

Thalassemia is characterized by unequal rates of synthesis of the alpha and beta globin chains that are part of the hemoglobin tetramer. In the type of thalassemia due to a defect in beta-chain synthesis (beta-thalassemia), this imbalance results in a relative exoess of alpha-chains. We have studied the susceptibility of excess free alpha-chains to proteolysis. Incubation of isotopically labeled peripheral blood lysates from individuals with beta-thalassemia trait in the presence of bone marrow or normoblast lysates from thalassemic or hematologically normal individuals resulted in a decrease in the alpha/beta ratio and a loss of free alpha-chain radioactivity. Neither contamination with leukocytes nor higher ATP contents in young erythrocytes appeared to be responsible for this activity in normoblasts and bone marrow. We propose that erythroid precursor cells possess proteolytic activity that is markedly diminished in mature cells. This activity serves an important control function in the regulation of hemoglobin synthesis. It accounts at least in part for the more balanced synthesis of alpha- and beta-chains observed in bone marrow than in peripheral blood in heterozygous beta-thalassemia. It also plays a fine-tuning role in maintaining balanced synthesis in non-thalassemic erythrocytes.
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PMID:Proteolytic activity in erythrocyte precursors. 27 45

In 50 Kerema or Kairuku individuals of the Papuan Gulf Area, the amount of beta thalassaemia as indicated by the finding of a raised level of Hb A2 was found to be 6%, and of hereditary ovalocytosis 16%. There was one example of both conditions occurring together. No haemoglobin abnormalities apart from raised Hb A2 level were found.
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PMID:Abnormal haemoglobins, thalassaemias, and hereditary ovalocytosis in the Papuan Gulf area. 27 66

The organization of alpha globin genes in normal human DNA was examined by restriction endonuclease mapping, alpha globin-specific fragments in endonuclease digests of total cell DNA were identified after electrophoresis by hybridization with [32P]cDNA following the blotting procedure of Southern [(1975) J. Mol. Biol. 98, 503--517]. The data provide direct evidence for the duplication of alpha genes and further indicate that these loci are closely linked within a single restriction fragment. The HindIII sites (codons 90/91) of these duplicated genes lie approximately 3.7 kilobases apart in the physical map proposed for this region. This organization of alpha genes can be altered in DNA of individuals with alpha-thalassemia.
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PMID:The duplicated human alpha globin genes lie close together in cellular DNA. 28 16

We have used restriction endonuclease mapping of cell DNA to investigate the structure of the beta-globin gene in beta-thalassemias. Among 17 individuals with beta +- and beta 0-thalassemia, we observed three patients of Indian origin with beta 0-thalassemia whose DNA revealed a consistent mapping abnormality. In one beta allele in each diploid cell, 0.6 kilobase of DNA was deleted from beta-specific Pst I and Bgl II restriction fragments. This deletion involved 3' beta-globin gene sequences and eliminated the EcoRI site normally present at codons 121/122, but it did not extend to the BamHI site at codons 98--100 on the 5' side of the 0.90-kilobase intervening sequence normally present in beta-globin genes. Partial beta-globin gene deletion appears, therefore, to be a primary molecular defect seen in certain patients with beta 0-thalassemia.
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PMID:Partial deletion of beta-globin gene DNA in certain patients with beta 0-thalassemia. 28 80

A total of 267 blood samples from persons belonging to the Shrimali Vania Soni caste group in Gujarat State, Western India have been analyzed for 6 blood group, 4 serum protein and 19 red cell enzyme systems, for haemoglobin and beta-thalassaemia and for red-green colour blindness. A number of rare genetic variants were detected, including a unique electrophoretically fast variant of superoxide dismutase. Genetic distance comparisons with other caste groups in Gujarat State show that Vania Soni from Surat are a distinctive group clustering with another subdivision of the Vania. The remaining Vania Soni cluster together and are distinct from the other caste groups examined in Gujarat. However, on the basis of individual genetic markers the Vania Soni appear not to be genetically differentiated in any remarkable way from other Hindu populations in western and northern India.
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PMID:A population genetic study of the Vania Soni in Western India. 30 40

The prevalence of different haemoglobins and their interaction with malaria have been studied in Garki, Kano State, Nigeria. Sickle cell trait was present in 24% of newborn and 29% of those aged over five years. Hb.AC was present in 0.7%. Frequency of both haemoglobin variants was greater in Hausa than Fulani. Sickle cell anaemia was almost invariably fatal in early childhood. The distribution curve of percentage of Hb.S in sickle cell trait subjects was normal, and did not demonstrate any high frequency of a gene for alpha-thalassaemia. The presence of beta-thalassaemia minor could not be tested, but Hb.S/beta-thalassaemia was not detected. Hb.S gene frequency appears to have been maintained by a fitness in heterozygotes of 21% over normal homozygotes; increased fertility and high mutation rate did not make any apparent contribution. Hb.AS subjects had on average lower frequency and considerably lower densities of Plasmodium falciparum trophozoites than Hb.AA from the age of 30 to 59 weeks; density was less in sickle cell trait up to age three years in the dry season only. It is suggested that the survival advantage and hence the prevalence of sickle cell trait may be greatest in some hyperendemic areas and less where malaria transmission is extremely high or when it is high and unvaried.
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PMID:Abnormal haemoglobins in the Sudan savanna of Nigeria. I. Prevalence of haemoglobins and relationships between sickle cell trait, malaria and survival. 31 11

Lymphocyte subpopulations were studied in 20 hypertransfused patients with beta-thalassaemia major, some of whom had been splenectomised. B-lymphocytes were normal but T-lymphocytes were decreased in all patients. The T-cell count was lower in the splenectomised patients than in the nonsplenectomised ones. In the former, the active rosette-forming lymphocytes were also diminished, but the difference was not significant. In all patients the percentage of null cells was greater and the activity of K-cells increased compared with controls.
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PMID:Lymphocyte changes in beta-thalassaemia major. 31 91


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