Restriction endonuclease analyses of DNA from one Black G gamma A gamma-HPFH homozygote and four Black and one Indian G gamma A gamma-HPFH heterozygotes have identified three different HPFH types which are the result of large deletions including the delta and beta genes. Two of the types are comparable to those characterized previously, but the third, which is present in the Indian heterozygote, shows a distinct difference in the size of the deletion. The 5' end point of the deletion in this type III G gamma A gamma-HPFH extends 0.5-1.0 kb beyond the 5' end point of one of the Black types of HPFH (type I). Each of the three types is associated with a distinct ratio between the G gamma and the A gamma chains, an observation supported by family data. The highest ratio is found in the heterozygote with the Indian type III G gamma A gamma-HPFH, with 69.3% G gamma chains, while the averages for the other types were 50.7% G gamma (type I) and 32.3% G gamma (type II).
Restriction endonuclease mapping with alpha and zeta-globin gene probes showed differences between the alpha-thalassemia-1 (alpha-thal-1) condition in two patients with HbH disease. One patient had the rare black type of alpha-thal-1 together with alpha-thal-2 and HbS heterozygosities. The second patient was a Laotian child with HbE, Hb Constant Spring (alpha-thal-2), and alpha-thal-1 heterozygosities. The diagnoses were based on clinical, hematologic, and biochemical data. Whereas DNA fragments hybridizing to a zeta-probe were obtained from the Laotian type of alpha-thal-1, neither alpha nor zeta-gene fragments could be identified deriving from the black type of alpha-thal-1. Therefore, the black type of alpha-thal-1 is associated with a deletion of the entire zeta 2-psi zeta-psi alpha-alpha 2-alpha 1 gene complex and can be considered a zeta alpha-thal-1. It is likely that homozygosity for such a condition will lead to embryonic wastage, explaining the absence of hydrops fetalis in blacks.
The hematology and pathophysiology of sickle cell disease during the postnatal development of younger hemoglobin (Hb) S homozygotes (SS) could be considerably affected by a variability of alpha globin gene numbers. We have documented longitudinal developmental changes of hematological values and hemoglobin composition on 147 patients with SS (alpha alpha/alpha alpha), 64 with SS (-alpha/alpha alpha), and 9 with SS (-alpha/-alpha) between the ages of 1 and 15 years. Non-steady-state data were excluded from these analyses. The number and organization of alpha globin genes was established by gene mapping. As anticipated, mean corpuscular volume and erythrocyte counts correlated with alpha globin gene numbers throughout the 15-year age interval. On the other hand, SS children with alpha alpha/alpha alpha, -alpha/alpha alpha, -alpha/-alpha had similar hemoglobin concentrations up to the ages of 5-10 years. Around the age of 7, the SS patients with -alpha/-alpha developed a higher Hb concentration than that of the SS (-alpha/alpha alpha), which in turn was higher than that of the SS (alpha alpha/alpha alpha). The emergence of this difference coincided with a developmental increase of the mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC) in patients with SS (alpha alpha/alpha alpha) and the decline of Hb F % under 15%. This newly observed developmental change of the MCHC could lead to increased hemolysis and anemia after the age of 5-10 years. It occurs to a smaller extent among SS (-alpha/alpha alpha) or not at all among SS (-alpha/-alpha) such that these two categories of patients have less severe hemolysis and higher hemoglobin levels at older ages. Although the proportion of Hb F was independent of alpha globin gene numbers, the absence of Hb Bart's suggested that alpha-thalassemia promotes the intracellular assembly of Hb F over Hb S tetramers. Thus, the interaction of alpha-thalassemia and Hb F in young SS patients may be more complex than revealed by Hb F levels in cell lysates. Among older SS children (greater than 7 years) alpha-thalassemia and Hb F levels exceeding 15% appear to have additive effects in diminishing the rate of hemolysis.
Four types of chromosomes with a deletion between the human embryonic zeta and psi zeta globin genes were identified among 2.8% of 321 Black Americans from Georgia. Two deletions of approximately 11 kb which differed by about 300 bp occurred on chromosomes with or without a polymorphic Xba I site 5' to the zeta globin gene [(X+) or (X-)]. The deletions are identifiable in Xba I digests of genomic DNA using an alpha or a zeta globin gene probe which yield fragments of 23 kb from (X+)-zeta alpha alpha chromosomes or 27 kb from (X-)-zeta alpha alpha chromosomes. Digestion with other enzymes and probing with both alpha and zeta probes gave fragments typical of the two zeta globin gene deletions previously identified in Polynesians. Among Black Americans, these zeta globin gene deletions have been found in combination with alpha globin gene deletions in trans but not in cis. Homozygotes have not been found. Hematologic data on carriers of the zeta globin gene deletions in association with Hb AS, SS, and SC suggest that these deletions have no effect on the function of the adult alpha globin genes.
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