Abstract

We investigated the molecular basis for haemoglobin H disease in 50 Sardinian patients by restriction endonuclease analysis. We found that the majority (78% of the cases) are due to gene deletion (- -/- alpha). Among those with a combination of deletion and nondeletion defects (- -/alpha alpha th), the most prevalent nondeletion lesion (70% of the nondeletion defects) was the initiation codon mutation of the alpha 2 gene (alpha Nco alpha), previously discovered in this population. Of the remaining patients with the (- -/alpha alpha th) genotype, two showed the IVS-1 splice junction lesion and one a mutation in the alpha 1 gene, removing the Nco I site within the 5' part of the alpha 1 gene, which may arise from a process of gene conversion from the initiation codon mutant of the alpha 2 gene. A single patient had the homozygous state for the initiation codon mutant of the alpha 2 gene. Study of genotype-phenotype correlations indicates that the (alpha Nco alpha) haplotype is associated with a more severe defect in the alpha-globin chain output than that resulting from the (-alpha) haplotype. We may conclude that restriction endonuclease analysis is a powerful method for the definition of the molecular heterogeneity of haemoglobin H disease.

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