DECREASED ALPHA-GLOBIN MESSENGER-RNA IN NUCLEATED RED-CELL PRECURSORS IN ALPHA-THALASSEMIA
- 1 January 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 47 (6) , 899-907
Abstract
The .alpha. thalassemias are associated with a decrease in .alpha. chain synthesis. HbH disease is a moderately severe form of .alpha. thalassemia characterized by the production of 5%-20% of HbH, while .alpha. thalassemia trait is a milder form of .alpha. thalassemia. In 2 patients with HbH disease, the ratio of .alpha. chain synthesis to .beta. chain synthesis (.alpha./.beta. ratio) was decreased in both bone marrow cells and reticulocytes. When isolated m[messenger]RNA from bone marrow cells and reticulocytes was translated in a heterologous cell-free system, the .alpha./.beta. ratios were lower than the intact cell ratios. These findings were confirmed by hybridization of the mRNA of both marrow cells and reticulocytes using purified .alpha. and .beta. c[complimentary]DNA probes. In the intact cells of 2 patients with .alpha. thalassemia trait, the .alpha./.beta. ratios were also decreased and were similar in marrow cells and reticulocytes. Cell-free studies of translatable mRNA also demonstrated decreased .alpha./.beta. ratios, but, unlike the HbH studies, the cell-free .alpha./.beta. ratios were similar to the intact cell ratios. One hybridization study utilizing peripheral blood mRNA had an .alpha./.beta. ratio consistent with the cell-free ratios. In both HbH disease and .alpha. thalassemia trait, there apparently was decreased .alpha. globin mRNA present in both nucleated red cell precursors and reticulocytes. In addition, there may be translational mechanisms that operate in intact HbH cells which attempt to balance globin chain production. In .alpha. thalassemia trait cells, no such controls appeared to be active and globin chain synthesis was directly proportional to the amount of .alpha. and .beta. globin mRNA in the cells.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Haemoglobin Synthesis in α-Thalassaemia (Haemoglobin H Disease)Nature, 1967
- Excess α Chain Synthesis Relative to β Chain Synthesis in Thalassaemia Major and MinorNature, 1966
- Normal and Abnormal Human HemoglobinsPublished by Elsevier ,1963