Von Willebrand disease (vWD) is a common inherited bleeding disorder in humans, and can be divided into a mild (type 1) and severe (type 3) form. Previous linkage studies identified one subject with vWD type 1 who transmitted different alleles of the von Willebrand factor (vWF) gene to his two affected children, one having vWD type 3 and the other having type 1. By screening the promoter and coding sequence (52 exons) of the vWF gene, three missense mutations were detected in this family. The type 1 individual who transmitted different alleles of the gene to his two sick children carries two substitutions, one in exon 5 and the other in exon 18 on the respective alleles. The relationship between the genotype (mutations) and the phenotype in this family is complex. In order further to correlate the relationship in vWD type 1 individuals, fifty-five subjects who carry one null allele of the vWF gene were collected. All these subjects are from vWD type 3 families with known mutations. Biochemical data of these 55 subjects indicate that gene dosage and other factors, such as blood group, age, and environment factors, play a critical role in the development of the phenotype of the disease.
The study indicates that home-based cognitive training improves some attentional and memory functions and facilitates learning of strategies. Future controlled studies are needed to confirm the results and analyse the efficacy of different aspects of home-based training.
A female whose father had severe hemophilia B was found to have a factor IX activity of about 1%. No chromosomal abnormality could be detected and DNA analysis gave no indications of deletions or mutations of Taq I cleavage sites in the factor IX gene. Analysis of the methylation pattern of locus DXS255 indicates that the expression of hemophilia B in this patient is caused by non‐random X inactivation.
Twenty-five patients with von Willebrand's disease (vWD) type III were analysed with regard to blood coagulation variables and possible deletions. Nine of the probands and their families were further investigated with DNA linkage analyses. Different patterns of heredity can be suggested in our families with vWD type III, on the basis of blood coagulation analyses. The findings suggest homozygosity in five families and the possibility of compound heterozygosity or a new mutation in the proband in three families. The linkage analyses confirm the results of the coagulation analyses. The segregation of the von Willebrand factor (vWF) gene can be followed in the families, and carrier diagnosis can be made in several of the probands' relatives. The possibility of large deletions in the vWF gene of the probands and their parents was investigated with probes representing the whole vWF cDNA. No deletions were found.
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