Abstract
To determine the molecular basis in a Greek child suspected of having HbH disease and β-thalassemia trait. Standard hematology, Hb electrophoresis, and HPLC. Multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA), direct sequencing, and breakpoint characterization by NimbleGen fine-tiling array analysis. The index patient showed a moderate microcytic hypochromic anemia with normal ZPP and elevated HbA(2) , indicative for β-thalassemia trait. However, the moderate microcytic hypochromic anemia along with the observation of HbH inclusions in occasional red blood cells suggested a coexisting α-thalassemia. Molecular analysis indicated that the propositus inherited the β(+) -thalassemia mutation IVS2-745 (c>g) and a novel α(0) -thalassemia deletion from the mother, and the common non-deletion α-thalassemia allele α(2) (-5nt)α from the father. The α(0) -thalassemia deletion, named - -(BGS) , is approximately 131.6 kb in length. It removes the major regulatory elements along with the functional α-globin genes but leaves the theta-gene intact. The compound interaction of a β-thalassemia defect along with a single functional α-globin gene is quite rare. Although patients with HbH/β-thal and simple HbH disease have comparable levels of Hb, the absence of free β-globin chains and thus detectable non-functional HbH means that in HbH/β-thal, the levels of functional Hb are higher, resulting in a better compensated functional anemia. Rare large deletions as the one described here remain undetected by gap-PCR in routine molecular screening. The introduction of MLPA as a diagnostic screening tool may improve laboratory diagnostics for these defects. The use of NimbleGen fine-tiling arrays may give additional information about the precise location of breakpoints.
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