2009
DOI: 10.1159/000214853
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Laboratory Diagnosis of von Willebrand Disease Type 1/2E (2A Subtype IIE), Type 1 Vicenza and Mild Type 1 Caused by Mutations in the D3, D4, B1–B3 and C1–C2 Domains of the von Willebrand Factor Gene

Abstract: Autosomal dominant von Willebrand disease (VWD) type 1/2E is a quantitative/qualitative defect in the von Willebrand factor (VWF) caused by heterozygous cysteine and non-cysteine mutations in the D3 domain of the VWF gene and results in a secretion-multimerization-clearance defect in mutant VWF with the loss of large VWF multimers not due to proteolysis. The multimers of patients with dominant VWD type 1/2E due to mutations in the D3 domain show an aberrant triplet structure with lack of outer bands but with p… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…39 They also impact the ratio of VWF propeptide to mature VWF, which in turn affects the clearance of VWF in the circulation. 40 The D3 domain is important in VWF multimerization, which could impact VWF tertiary structure and ultimately circulating levels of VWF and its clearance. 39 It is also interesting to note that the rate of VWF clearance is found to be accelerated in patients with VWD Vicenza, which often have mutations, including intronic, in the D domains [41][42][43] (we did not find positive SNPs in the exon encoding D4 and flanking intronic sequence).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…39 They also impact the ratio of VWF propeptide to mature VWF, which in turn affects the clearance of VWF in the circulation. 40 The D3 domain is important in VWF multimerization, which could impact VWF tertiary structure and ultimately circulating levels of VWF and its clearance. 39 It is also interesting to note that the rate of VWF clearance is found to be accelerated in patients with VWD Vicenza, which often have mutations, including intronic, in the D domains [41][42][43] (we did not find positive SNPs in the exon encoding D4 and flanking intronic sequence).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Data were also analyzed according to the blood groups and, consistently with VWF:Ag, VWF:act was %40% higher in 'non-0' vs. '0' healthy controls (Fig. 1B), while blood groups did not [29][30][31][32][33][34][35][36][37][38][39][40][41][42][43][44][45][46][47][48] Values are expressed as medians, and IQR is reported in brackets. *P < 0.001 vs. controls; **P < 0.001 vs.…”
Section: Vwf:actmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…The concept in figures 6 and 7 points to the wide heterogeneity of mild VWD type 1 as a heterozygous disorder with variable penetrance of bleeding manifestations but clearly distinct from the autosomal dominant VWD phenotypes VWD type 1 Vicenza, type 1 clearance defect with 2E multimeric pattern (1C/2E) or 2M [27,28,29]. The DDAVP-induced response curves of FVIII:C, VWF:Ag, VWF:RCo and VWF:CB will clearly reveal typical diagnostic features to distinguish mild VWD type 1 with normal VWF function, clearance and multimers from those with abnormal multimers, clearance defects and/or VWF:RCo and RIPA defects in each of VWD type Vicenza, type 1C/2E, 2M, type 1 with smeary VWF multimers (1sm) or 1sm with faster moving band (1smf) [30,31,32,33,34].…”
Section: Molecular Basis Of Mild Vwd Type 1 With Normal or Abnormal Vmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The mutations in exon 26, D3 domain, R1130R/G/F, W1144G, Y1146C and C1190R, in figure 7 usually present with a laboratory phenotype of dominant VWD 1 but have abnormal VWF multimers with typical features of VWD 2E [30]. In the study by Gadisseur et al [27], this entity was classified as dominant VWD type 1/2E. Patients with dominant VWD type 1/2E due to missense mutations in the D3 domain are characterized by a multimerization defect and the secreted heterozygous mutant-normal VWF after DDAVP is rapidly cleared, a phenomenon very well known for many years and most prominent in VWD type 1 Vicenza, R1205H [34].…”
Section: Molecular Basis Of Mild Vwd Type 1 With Normal or Abnormal Vmentioning
confidence: 99%
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