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

The alpha-thalassemias are common genetic disorders that arise from reduced synthesis of the alpha-globin chains. At present, large-scale carrier screening and clinically valuable antenatal detection programs have not been established for the congenital disorder alpha-thalassemia (alpha-thal). We have developed a simple nonradioactive polymerase chain reaction (PCR) approach that can detect and differentiate several common alpha-globin gene deletional alpha-thals regardless of the break points. When three primer sets were used--two gene-specific sets for the alpha1- and alpha2-globin genes and one set for the beta-actin gene (serving as an internal control)--PCR products from genomic DNA were simultaneously amplified and analyzed after coamplification and gel electrophoresis. The number of alpha-globin genes present in the subjects was determined by the intensity of alpha1 and alpha2 bands normalized with that of beta-actin when using densitometry. Our results demonstrate that five common genotypes of deletional alpha-thal are differentiated by the ratios of alpha1/beta-actin and alpha2/beta-actin. We also examined the feasibility of coupling this allele-specific amplification to a color-complementary assay. This easy and reproducible PCR assay is suitable for identifying alpha-thal carriers in screenings of large populations and improving genetic counseling.
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PMID:Rapid differentiation of five common alpha-thalassemia genotypes by polymerase chain reaction. 1128 24

A quantitative polymerase chain reaction (Q-PCR) method based on the TaqMan technology has been devised for the prenatal diagnosis of homozygous alpha*-thalassaemia (south-east Asian type deletion). Primers and TaqMan probes were designed to specifically amplify an alpha*-thal chromosomal fragment or a normal alpha-chromosomal fragment. Variations in input target DNA in individual sample wells were normalized by the simultaneous amplification of a beta-actin gene fragment and results expressed as a ratio to that of beta-actin. There was no overlap of the data between the homozygous alpha*-thal, alpha*-thal and normal subjects. Up to 5% maternal DNA (alpha*-thal) contamination did not affect the specificity of the result. In 31 prenatal diagnoses, the result using Q-PCR compared favourably with the gold standard of Southern hybridization of alpha-genes.
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PMID:Quantitative polymerase chain reaction for the rapid prenatal diagnosis of homozygous alpha-thalassaemia (Hb Barts hydrops fetalis). 1170 33

We report in this paper that the DNA-binding drug mithramycin is a potent inducer of gamma-globin mRNA accumulation and fetal hemoglobin (HbF) production in erythroid cells from healthy human subjects and beta-thalassemia patients. Erythroid precursors derived from peripheral blood were grown in 2-phase liquid culture. In this procedure, early erythroid progenitors proliferate and differentiate during phase 1 (in the absence of erythropoietin) into late progenitors. In phase 2, in the presence of erythropoietin, the latter cells continue their proliferation and mature into Hb-containing orthochromatic normoblasts. Compounds were added on days 4 to 5 of phase 2 (when cells started to synthesize Hb), and cells were harvested on day 12. Accumulation of mRNAs for gamma-globin, beta-globin, alpha-globin, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), and beta-actin were measured by real-time quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR); induction of HbF was analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and, at cellular level, by flow cytometry. We demonstrated that mithramycin was able to up-regulate preferentially gamma-globin mRNA production and to increase HbF accumulation, the percentage of HbF-containing cells, and their HbF content. Mithramycin was more effective than hydroxyurea, being, in addition, not cytotoxic. This was shown by the lack of cytotoxicity on erythroid and myeloid in vitro primary cell cultures treated with mithramycin at concentrations effective for HbF induction. These results are of potential clinical significance because an increase of HbF alleviates the symptoms underlying beta-thalassemia and sickle cell anemia. The results of this report suggest that mithramycin and its analogs warrant further evaluation as potential therapeutic drugs.
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PMID:Mithramycin induces fetal hemoglobin production in normal and thalassemic human erythroid precursor cells. 1273 78