Abstract

IntroductionTo date, numerous mutations resulting in haemophilia A are known and recorded at HAMSTeRS. We identified a new splice site mutation in intron 6 of the F8 gene (T to G transition at position −14; c.788-14T>G) in seven not knowingly related patients, who all suffer from mild haemophilia A. RNA analysis of blood cells indicated that this mutation leads to the preferred generation of a transcript lacking the complete exon 7 (without frameshift). MethodsTo determine whether the mutation represented a founder mutation we analyzed intragenic (intronic) and extragenic short tandem repeat (STR) regions and constructed haplotypes in the 7 patients and 128 apparently healthy male control individuals. ResultsIn the 128 healthy control individuals, 109 different haplotypes were found. Surprisingly, also the 7 patients carried 3 different haplotypes. However, by genealogy reconstruction using BATWING we could identify an ancestral haplotype on which the mutation apparently occurred. This haplotype - DXS9897:12-DXS1073:21-HA472:64-DXS1108:26 - was frequent and was found in three patients, but was also present in four control individuals who did not carry the splice site mutation. ConclusionOur data indicate that the splice site mutation occurred in an individual carrying a relatively common haplotype. While the mutation was passed on through generations, the haplotypes identified in the seven patients derived from this founder haplotype but were changed by later mutations in the STR regions.

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