Adult beta-thalassemia major patients have gallbladder dysmotility associated with delayed small intestinal transit and autonomic dysfunction. These abnormalities apparently contribute together with haemolytic hyperbilirubinemia to the pathogenesis of pigment gallstones/sludge in beta-thalassemia major.
We have assessed a new technique for the isolation of fetal erythroblasts from maternal blood for the non-invasive prenatal diagnosis of pregnancies at risk of beta-thalassaemia. This method relies on the separation of erythroblasts from maternal nucleated cells by a novel step gradient and high speed centrifugation. In four of the six cases examined, single erythroblasts were identified by immunohistochemistry for zeta (zeta) globin. These were individually micromanipulated and analysed by single cell polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and subsequent sequencing of the region of beta-globin locus where the mutations most common to the region of Puglia, Italy, are clustered. In each of the four instances where fetal erythroblasts were identified by antibody staining, the fetal beta-globin genotype was correctly determined. To date, this represents the largest series of non-invasive prenatal diagnoses performed for this haemoglobinopathy.
We have studied four unrelated Italian patients with chronic hemolytic anemia associated with glucose phosphate isomerase (GPI) deficiency. Using intronic primers, we were able to detect the gene alterations on the genomic DNA of the patients. Five different mutations were identified among the eight mutated alleles found: three missense mutations (301A,584T,1028G), one nonsense mutation (286T), and a four nucleotides deletion [Del 1473-IVS16(+2)]. All of these were new except for mutation 1028G, which was previously identified in a Japanese variant (GPI Narita). Two patients were homozygotes (301A/301A and 1028G/1028G), whereas the other two were compound heterozygotes sharing a common mutation [286T/584T and Del 1473-IVS16(+2)/584T]. The missense mutations were found to involve highly conserved amino acids, suggesting that these residues are crucial for the maintenance of the enzyme function. The mutation 286T results in a truncated protein of 95 amino acids in comparison with the 558 of the normal one. The four nucleotides deletion located at the junction of exon/intron 16(5′- TTGGTCGgtgagt-3′) is the first GPI mutation affecting a splice site. Moreover one difference from the published sequence (473T-->G) was found in exon five in all of the eight alleles studied and in 30 normal subjects. Correlation was made between mutations, biochemical characteristics of the enzyme, and clinical course of the disease.
In this study we have investigated the molecular basis for a mild form of beta-thalassaemia in three patients of Italian descent. In two, belonging to different families and affected by a mild and late-presenting form of thalassaemia major, direct sequencing of amplified DNA detected a C----T substitution at position -87 of the beta-globin gene in the compound heterozygous state either with codon 39 nonsense mutation or beta +IVSI, nt 110 mutation. The -87 (C----T) mutation has been previously described, in combination with the beta +IVSI, nt 110 mutation, in a single patient with thalassaemia intermedia. Both our patients showed a more severe phenotype as compared to that resulting from compound heterozygosity for a severe beta-thalassaemia mutation and another promoter mutation (-87, C----G) at the same position. In the third patient with the thalassaemia intermedia phenotype, we detected a novel promoter mutation, consisting in a C----A substitution at position -86, in combination with the codon 39 nonsense mutation. The results of this study indicate that different nucleotide substitutions affecting the proximal CACCC box of the beta-globin gene in combination with severe beta-thalassaemia, produce a mild form of thalassaemia ranging in severity from thalassaemia intermedia to late-presenting thalassaemia major.
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