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  • Alsuliman, Ahmed  (3)
  • Steinberg, Martin H.  (3)
  • 1
    In: American Journal of Hematology, Wiley, Vol. 87, No. 8 ( 2012-08), p. 824-826
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0361-8609
    URL: Issue
    Language: English
    Publisher: Wiley
    Publication Date: 2012
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1492749-4
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  • 2
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 124, No. 21 ( 2014-12-06), p. 4066-4066
    Abstract: Fetal hemoglobin (HbF) modulates the phenotype of sickle cell anemia. In the Middle East and India the HbS gene is often on an Arab-Indian HBB haplotype that is associated with high HbF levels. HbF is “normally” distributed in this population with a mean ~20%. In African HbS haplotypes, HbF levels are much lower (mean value ~6%) with a highly skewed distribution. BCL11A is an important modulator of γ-globin gene (HBG2 and HBG1) expression and BCL11A is regulated by erythroid specific enhancers in its 2nd intron. The enhancers consist of 3 DNase hypersensitive sites (HS) +62, +58 and +55 kb from the transcription initiation site of this gene. Polymorphisms (SNPs) in these enhancers are associated with HbF. The strongest association with HbF levels in African Americans with sickle cell anemia was with rs1427407 in HS +62 and to a lesser extent, rs7606173 in HS+55. Using the results of whole genome sequencing of 14 AI haplotype patients—half with HbF 〈 10%, half with HbF 〉 20%—6 SNPs in the BCL11A enhancer region, rs1427407, rs7599488, rs6706648, rs6738440, rs7565301, rs7606173 and 2 indels rs3028027 and rs142027584 (CCT, CCTCT and AAAAC respectively), were detected as possibly associated with HbF level. There were no novel polymorphisms detected. We genotyped the 6 SNPs and studied their associated haplotypes in 137 Saudi (HbF18.0±7.0%) and 44 Indian patients (HbF23.0±4.8%) with the Arab-Indian HBB haplotype; 50 African Americans with diverse African haplotypes, including 4 Senegal haplotype heterozygotes, (20 with HbF 17.2±4.6% and 30 with HbF 5.0±2.5%) and imputed genotypes for these SNPs in 847 African Americans with sickle cell anemia and diverse haplotypes (HbF 6.6±5.5%). Four SNPs (rs1427407, rs6706648, rs6738440, and rs7606173) in the HS sites showed consistent associations with HbF levels in all 4 cohorts. Haplotype analysis of these 4 SNPs showed that there were 4 common and 10 rare haplotypes. The most common, GCAG, was found in ~54% of Arab-Indian haplotype carriers (HbF, ~20%) and in ~33% of African origin haplotype carriers (HbF, ~5.5%). Two haplotypes, GTAC and GTGC, were carried by ~40% of African American patients and were associated with lower levels of HbF (3.6%-4%). These same haplotypes were carried by 18% of Arab-Indian haplotype carriers and their average HbF level was 17%. These differences were significant. Haplotype TCAG was present in 20% of Arab-Indian and 25% of African haplotype cases, and carriers had on average higher HbF levels (~22% in the Arab-Indian haplotype, ~8% in African Americans). The analysis shows that: BCL11A enhancer haplotypes are differentially distributed among patients with the HbS gene on Arab-Indian or African origin haplotypes; haplotype pairs TCAG/TCAG and GTAC/GTGC are associated with the highest and lowest HbF levels in all the studied groups; the population-specific prevalence of HbF BCL11A enhancer haplotypes are likely to explain the different distributions of HbF in African origin and Arab-Indian haplotypes but do not account for the differences in average population levels of HbF or the high HbF of the Arab-Indian haplotype. Novel SNPs in BCL11A do not explain the high HbF of the Arab-Indian haplotype. Other important loci must have a predominant role in the differential expression of HbF among HbS Arab-Indian haplotype carriers. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
    RVK:
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2014
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1468538-3
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 80069-7
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  • 3
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 118, No. 21 ( 2011-11-18), p. 1056-1056
    Abstract: Abstract 1056 Most sickle cell anemia patients (HBB glu6val homozygotes) indigenous to the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia have a fetal hemoglobin (HbF) level of about 20% that is associated with a mild clinical phenotype. Their HbS gene is on the Saudi-Indian (SI) haplotype characterized by an Xmn1 restriction site at position −158 5' to HBG2 (rs7482144), a Hinc2 site 5' to HBE (rs3834466) and other polymorphisms in the HBB gene-like cluster. However, the functional elements within the HBB gene-like cluster and elsewhere in the genome causing high HbF are yet to be determined. In a previous study we found that Saudi HbS homozygotes with the SI haplotype had a common region of autozygosity that spanned about 126 kb and included the complete HBB cluster. We have sequenced 13.6 kb in the HBD-HBG1 intergenic region (chr11:5255683-5269326, HG19), the region of the Corfu deletion. We found a SNP at position −68 bp 5' to HBD (c.-118 C 〉 T) only in individuals with a SI haplotype. This SNP was not present in dbSNP build 132 or the 1000 Genomes databases. No other mutation in HBD was identified. This same SNP was recently associated with δ thalassemia (Phylipsen et al. Int. J. Lab. Hematol. 2011, 33: 85–91). Homozygotes for the −68 HBD SNP, who were not on hydroxyurea, had a mean HbF of 23%, range 12.1%-33.4% and mean HbA2 of 2.1%, range 1.2%-3%. We did not find the −68 HBD SNP in 15 African Americans with sickle cell anemia selected because of their unusually high HbF (mean HbF 17.2%, range 11%-28.9%). Parents and sickle cell trait carriers from the families of Saudi Eastern Province patients were heterozygous for the −68 HBD mutation (mean HbF 1.6%, range 0–4.2% and mean HbA2 2.7%, range 2.4%-3.2%) and one normal sibling did not carry this mutation (HbF 0 and HbA2 2.9%). Thirty patients with sickle cell disease indigenous to the Southwestern Province of Saudi Arabia, with the HbS gene on an African origin haplotype, (mean HbF 15.5%, range 4.5%-23% and mean HbA2 2.9%, range 2.1%-3.4% in HbS homozygotes) and 13 normal Saudi controls were examined and none carried the −68 HBD mutation. We also sequenced HBD and its promoter in 8 Southwestern Province HbS homozygotes with a Benin haplotype, 4 with HbF 〈 5% and 4 with HbF 〉 15%, and none had the −68 HBD SNP or any other mutation in HBD. Inverse relationships between percent HbF level and percent HbA2 was seen in 3 groups of HbS homozygotes:1) SI haplotype homozygotes; 2) Benin haplotype homozygotes from the Southwestern Province; 3) African Americans with diverse HbS haplotypes. The increased HbF in sickle cell anemia with δ thalassemia might involve both post-translational and transcriptional mechanisms. Increased HbF levels might in part be due to the preferential post-translational assembly of αγ dimers compared with αδ and αβS dimers. When δ thalassemia reduces available δ-globin chains, this might further favor preferential binding of less positively charged γ-globin subunits to positively charged α-globin compared with more positively charged δ-globin subunits. Perhaps more importantly, at the transcriptional level, the −68 HBD δ+-thalassemia promoter mutation might favor the interactions of transcription complexes with HBG promoters. The stimulus of hemolytic anemia and expanded erythropoiesis might be required before the favorable genetic milieu for increased HbF production can be fully utilized with the achievement of clinically significant increases in HbF that modulates the course of disease. For example, increased HbF levels of only 3.3%-4.7% have been reported in some hematologically normal individuals with homozygous δ0 thalassemia (Ohta et al. Hemoglobin 1980, 4: 417–425). High HbF levels in SI haplotype HbS homozygotes might involve the interactions of one or more HBG regulatory regions linked to the HBB gene-like cluster, like the −68 HBD SNP, perhaps with trans acting elements. Although the −68 HBD δ+-thalassemia mutation is associated with the SI haplotype and high HbF, functional studies are needed to establish causation. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2011
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1468538-3
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 80069-7
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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