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)

A mutation that produces an absolute deficiency of normal beta-major globin polypeptides has been recovered from a DBA/2J male mouse. Most mice homozygous for the deficiency survived to adulthood and reproduced but were smaller at birth than their littermates and demonstrated a hypochromic, microcytic anemia with severe anisocytosis, poikilocytosis, and reticulocytosis and the presence of inclusion bodies in a high proportion of circulating erythrocytes. Mice heterozygous for the deficiency demonstrated a mild reticulocytosis but were not clinically anemic. Analysis of globin chain synthesis in vitro by 3H-leucine incorporation revealed that beta-globin synthesis was nearly normal (95%) in heterozygotes and about 75% of normal in deficiency homozygotes. Molecular characterization of the mutation by restriction analysis revealed a deletion of about 3.3 kb of DNA, including regulatory sequences and all coding blocks for beta-major globin. Based on genetic and hematological criteria, mice homozygous for the mutant allele, designated Hbbth-1, represent the first animal model of beta-thalassemia (Cooley's anemia), a severe genetic disease of humans.
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PMID:A mouse model for beta-thalassemia. 631 5

Repeated injections of large doses of erythropoietin (Epo) have been shown to be of benefit in the treatment of murine and human beta-thalassemia. To determine whether Epo gene therapy could replace this treatment for long-term periods, lethally irradiated beta-thalassemic (Hbbd3th haplotype) and normal DBA/2J (Hbbd haplotype) mice were grafted with syngeneic bone marrow cells infected with a retroviral vector carrying the Epo cDNA. In normal mice, dysregulated Epo production induced elevated serum Epo levels (176 +/- 68 mU/mL), high hematocrit levels (73% +/- 8%), and elevated beta-minor globin chain synthesis. In contrast, in thalassemic mice, moderate increases in the hematocrit levels (from 33% +/- 1% to 43% +/- 9%), associated with limited increases in the initially elevated Epo levels (from 83 +/- 22 to 190 +/- 230 mU/mL), were recorded 2 months after transplantation. In mice in which the hematocrit increased most, from 33% +/- 1% before transplantation to 49% +/- 10%, the retroviral Epo gene expression induced a striking improvement of the beta-thalassemic syndrome. These mice exhibited normal or near-normal beta/alpha-globin chain synthesis ratios, induced by the activation of the beta-minor chain. This led to the elimination of the high amounts of unpaired alpha chains in erythrocytes and finally reduced the reticulocyte count despite the permanent Epo stimulation. These results show that efficient Epo gene expression corrects the erythrocyte phenotype of the mouse beta-thalassemic syndrome. However, the incidence of lethal polycythemia or of transient improvements indicates that the present strategy is only the first step toward such indirect gene therapy.
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PMID:Retrovirus-mediated transfer of the erythropoietin gene in hematopoietic cells improves the erythrocyte phenotype in murine beta-thalassemia. 804 75

In order to study the effects of acclimatization of Plasmodium in beta-thalassaemic mice, we used a mouse model of beta-thalassaemia (DBA/2J/beta-thal/beta-thal), similar to that observed in humans. We acclimatized 3 rodent malarias (P. berghei, P. chabaudi and P. yoelii) in DBA/2J and DBA/2J/beta-thal mice lines, by 4 intraperitoneal serial transfers. All 3 rodent malarias developed in red blood cells of beta-thalassaemic mice without losing their virulence. There was no delay in infection and peaks of parasitaemia were similar in beta-thalassaemic and normal mice. The mortality occurred earlier in beta-thalassaemic mice than in control mice for P. berghei and P. chabaudi. The difference was more pronounced for P. yoelii NS where normal mice did not die. These results could be explained by a failure of erythropoiesis in beta-thalassaemic mice, which are unable to compensate for the destruction of red blood cells by the parasites, and the mice died of anaemia. Ultrastructural examination of the rodent malaria parasites in beta-thalassaemic RBC showed a normal development even in the presence of Heinz bodies. In conclusion, no effective protection against malaria was provided by the beta-thalassaemia in this mouse model.
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PMID:The course of Plasmodium berghei, P. chabaudi and P. yoelii infections in beta-thalassaemic mice. 872 90