Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5913553 | Blood Cells, Molecules, and Diseases | 2013 | 4 Pages |
Genetic recombination has been implicated as a mechanism that drives mutagenesis in the human globin gene clusters, either as a result of unequal crossover or gene conversion. In this paper, a novel fusion gene was identified in a Chinese girl with hemoglobin H disease. The proband's father was a compound heterozygote for the common â α4.2 deletion and this fusion gene, and her mother was heterozygous for the common ââSEA deletion (ââSEA/αα). Both her parents had a hypochromic and microcytic red cell phenotype and a normal hemoglobin level. Molecular studies revealed a compound heterozygote for the ââSEA deletion and this novel fusion gene and the patient had the clinical features of classic hemoglobin H disease. Sequence analysis revealed that the mutant gene was the result of a fusion between the α2 and Ïα1 genes. The recombination began at exon 3 of α2 gene, crossing with exon 3 of the Ïα1 gene. With this recombination, the conservative 3â²UTR of the α2 gene was changed, and an extensive transcript with a new signal 1048 bp 3â² to the terminating codon was found. The abnormal transcripts of the fusion gene read through the intergenic sequence.