An elongated C-terminal hemoglobin variant, due to the deletion of nucleotide A in codon 144 (nucleotide 63600 GenBank entry UO1317) was found in a 31-year-old woman from Trento (northeastern Italy). This deletion led to the replacement of lysine at beta144 by a serine residue, the disappearance of the stop codon at position 147, and the presence of 12 additional residues, identical to those observed in Hbs Saveme, Tak and Cranston, which result from a similar mechanism. Hb Trento, amounting to 29% of the total hemoglobin, was unstable and had, as the other variants of this group, an increased oxygen affinity. It led to a mild compensated hemolytic anemia with red cell inclusion bodies. Functional studies of the isolated abnormal hemoglobin were difficult to perform because of autoxidation, precipitation, and formation of hybrids with Hb A.
Nine carriers of β-abnormal haemoglobins with increased oxygen affinity (Hb X) were examined. Their oxygen dissociation curves from whole blood were more or less left-shifted, with six of nine also characterized by biphasism. This refers to an ‘inflection point’ usually positioned at about 50–60% of Hb O2 saturation, commonly believed to be a limit between oxygenation of the normal and abnormal components. In effect, the inflection does not always correspond to the Hb X level, which sometimes is much lower than 50% of the total Hb. Moreover, the upper half segment of the dissociation curve could not only be an expression of Hb A oxygenation, since it is always left-shifted. However, a high Hb A level is commonly believed to be the main compensatory factor of these subjects, but many indications suggest that often they have at least three, and not only two, main haemoglobin species: Hb A, Hb X plus hybrids of the type α2βAβX. These would oxygenate after Hb X, but before Hb A. Finally, the interaction of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate with Hb X and/or hybrid tetramers must be altered, and the releasing of oxygen from both is more or less reduced. Unfortunately, it is difficult to demonstrate the presence of hybrids directly, i.e. with amino acid analysis of the abnormal β-globin.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.