Abstract

Congenital Dyserythropoietic Anemia type II is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by unique abnormalities in the differentiation of cells of the erythroid lineage. The vast majority of CDA II cases result from mutations in the SEC23B gene. To date, 53 different causative mutations have been reported in 86 unrelated cases (from the CDA II European Registry), 47 of them Italian. We have now identified SEC23B mutations in 23 additional patients, 17 Italians and 6 non-Italian Europeans. The relative allelic frequency of the mutations was then reassessed in a total of 64 Italian and 45 non-Italian unrelated patients. Two mutations, E109K and R14W, account for over one-half of the cases of CDA II in Italy. Whereas the relative frequency of E109K is similar in Italy and in the rest of Europe (and is also prevalent in Moroccan Jews), the relative frequency of R14W is significantly higher in Italy (26.3% vs. 10.7%). By haplotype analysis we demonstrated that both are founder mutations in the Italian population. By using the DMLE+ program our estimate for the age of the E109K mutation in Italian population is ≈2,200 years; whereas for the R14W mutation it is ≈3,000 years. We hypothesize that E109K may have originated in the Middle East and may have spread in the heyday of the Roman Empire. Instead, R14W may have originated in Southern Italy. The relatively high frequency of the R14W mutation may account for the known increased prevalence of CDA II in Italy. Am. J. Hematol. 86:727–732, 2011. © 2011 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Highlights

  • Congenital dyserythropoietic anemia (CDA) was first described in 1968 as a condition characterized by a paradoxical association of anemia and reticulocytopenia with erythroid hyperplasia in the bone marrow [1,2]

  • By extensive haplotype analysis we show that the recurrent SEC23BR14W mutation found in most of the Italian families with CDA II is likely due to a founder effect, with the founder mutation having occurred probably in Southern Italy

  • We expanded the cohort of CDA II patients of European Registry (109 CDA II cases) including 17 Italian and 6 non-Italian European (NIE) unrelated cases still unpublished

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Summary

Introduction

Congenital dyserythropoietic anemia (CDA) was first described in 1968 as a condition characterized by a paradoxical association of anemia and reticulocytopenia with erythroid hyperplasia in the bone marrow [1,2]. It soon became clear that the condition was heterogeneous, and three forms became well known [1], with Type II being the most frequent. The prevalence of CDAs in Europe has been recently assessed. The combined prevalence of CDA I and CDA II (based on all cases reported in the last 42 years) has the highest value in Italy (2.49/million). Bone marrow of CDA II patients is characterized by presence of bi-nucleated or multinucleated normoblasts. Hypoglycosylation of erythrocyte anion exchanger 1 represents a key for the diagnosis [6] and suggests a defect in vesicles trafficking

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