Non-Inversion Factor VIII Mutations in 80 Hemophilia A Families Including 24 with Alloimmune Responses
- 1 January 2002
- journal article
- letter
- Published by Georg Thieme Verlag KG in Thrombosis and Haemostasis
- Vol. 87 (02) , 273-276
- https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0037-1612984
Abstract
Heteroduplex screening identified 74 small mutations in the factor VIII genes of 72 families with hemophilia A. In addition, patients from 3 families with high titer inhibitors had partial gene deletions and 5 unrelated families that were negative for heteroduplex formation had a mutation on direct sequencing. The latter had mild hemophilia A with an inhibitor, and sequencing their exon 23 fragments found a transition predicting a recurrent Arg2150 to His. Of 69 distinct mutations (including the 3 partial gene deletions), 47 are novel. Of small mutations, 51 were missense (one possibly a normal variant and two that could also alter splicing) at 39 sites, 13 were small deletions or insertions (3 inframe and one a normal variant in an intron), 13 were nonsense at 12 sites and 2 altered intron splice junctions. In 24 families, at least one affected member had evidence for an alloimmune response to factor VIII; of these, 11 were associated with missense mutations. In 14 families, de novo origin was demonstrated.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Rapid Hemophilia A Molecular Diagnosis by a Simple DNA Sequencing Procedure: Identification of 14 Novel MutationsThrombosis and Haemostasis, 2001
- Factor VIII Inhibitors in Two Families with Mild Haemophilia A: Structural Analysis of the MutationsPathophysiology of Haemostasis and Thrombosis, 2000
- A domain mutations in 65 haemophilia A families and molecular modelling of dysfunctional factor VIII proteinsBritish Journal of Haematology, 1998
- Consequences of factor IX mutations in 26 families with haemophilia BBritish Journal of Haematology, 1998
- Factor VIII Inhibitors in Mild and Moderate-severity Haemophilia AThrombosis and Haemostasis, 1998
- Clinical correlates among 49 families with hemophilia A and factor VIII gene inversionsAmerican Journal of Hematology, 1996
- Inversions disrupting the factor VIII gene are a common cause of severe haemophilia ANature Genetics, 1993
- Expression of active human factor VIII from recombinant DNA clonesNature, 1984
- Characterization of the human factor VIII geneNature, 1984