The beta-thalassaemias represent a heterogenous group of diseases resulting from decreased erythroid beta-globin mRNA expression and imbalanced alpha/beta-globin chain synthesis which are manifest clinically by ineffective erythropoiesis and excessive haemolysis. Increasing levels of haemoglobin F (HbF) by pharmacological agents has been proposed to ameliorate the severity of the disease by improving the balance in globin chain synthesis. Hydroxyurea (HU), as an effective agent with low toxicity for activating gamma-globin gene, has been shown to enhance HbF synthesis in experimental animals and in patients with sickle cell anaemia. However, previous trials of HU in beta-thalassaemia patients are ambiguous, with a small number having increased HbF synthesis. In a recent study of HU effects in Chinese beta-thalassaemia patients we unexpectedly found that two unrelated patients with beta-thalassaemia intermedia demonstrated an improvement in the effectiveness of erythropoiesis reflected by an increase in haemoglobin concentration (from 4.1 to 6.3 g/dl, patient 1; from 6.5 to 9.7 g/dl, patient 2) and in red cell volume (from 68 to 104 fl, patient 1; from 68 to 85 fl, patient 2) after a period of excess of 300d of low-dosage HU treatment. These effects, however, appear to be due to increased beta-globin biosynthesis, because the percentage of HbF decreased in each patient as total Hb increased. This was reflected by changes in the beta/alpha ratio (from 0.301 to 0.581, patient 1; from 0.348 to 0.487, patient 2) with minimal changes in gamma-globin biosynthesis. We conclude that in addition to its known effects in stimulating gamma-globin production, hydroxyurea may have a more general role in augmenting globin synthesis, including beta-globin in some thalassaemia intermedia patients who maintain the capacity to express normal beta-globin chains.
SUMMARY A large scale survey of haemoglobinopathies and thalassaemia has been carried out in China, involving 900 000 people in 28 provinces. It has resulted in the finding of many new variants and some interesting cases of thalassaemia, and in a study on the chemical structure of abnormal haemoglobins and DNA analysis of thalassaemia. We report here data on haemoglobin disorders in the Chinese, mainly the characterisation of the geographical distribution of haemoglobin variants, the analysis of globin genes of a, I, y, or b(3 thalassaemia, and the progress in prenatal diagnosis of a and ,1 thalassaemia conducted in the authors' laboratory.
Multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) is widely used to screen genes of interest for deletions and duplications. Since MLPA is usually based on size-separation of the amplification products, the maximum number of target sequences that can be screened in parallel is usually limited to approximately 40. We report the design of a robust array-based MLPA format that uses amplification products of essentially uniform size (100-120 bp) and distinguishes between them by virtue of incorporated tag sequences. We were thus able to increase probe complexity to 124, with very uniform product yields and signals that have a low coefficient of variance. The assay designed was used to screen the largest set studied so far (249 patients) of unrelated Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) cases from the Chinese population. In a blind study we correctly assigned 98% of the genotypes and detected rearrangements in 181 cases (73%); i.e., 163 deletions (65%), 13 duplications (5%), and five complex rearrangements (2%). Although this value is significantly higher for Chinese patients than previously reported, it is similar to that found for other populations. The location of the rearrangements (76% in the major deletion hotspot) is also in agreement with other findings. The 96-well flow-through microarray system used in this research provides high-throughput and speed; hybridization can be completed in 5 to 30 minutes. Since array processing and data analysis are fully automated, array-MLPA should be easy to implement in a standard diagnostic laboratory. The universal array can be used to analyze any tag-modified MLPA probe set.
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