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Three Negro kindreds with hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin (HPFH) alone and in combination with various other hemoglobin abnormalities including beta thalassemia are presented. Among 11 offspring of two women heterozygous for both HPFH and the delta chain mutation Hb B2, five inherited the HPFH gene and six inherited the Hb B2 gene. In another kindred, a man inferred to be heterozygous for both HPFH and Hb C had six children; three offsprivg obtained the Hb C gene and three the HPFH gene. Similarly, a woman heterozygous for both Hb S and HPFH transmitted the Hb S gene to one of her two children and the HPFH gene to the other. Thus among 19 offspring, no crossovers between the HPFH locus or the Hb delta-beta locus were observed. These and earlier data are compatible with deletion of the Hb beta and delta loci as the primary event to explain the genetic origin of HPFH. Genetic considerations indicate that the finding of a single person with a hematologically normal phenotype among offspring of heterozygotes for both the African type of HPFH and a Hb beta or Hb delta structural abnormality would invalidate the deletion model.

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The gamma-chain in a Ghanain homozygous for hereditary persistence of fetal haemoglobin was considered to be of the Ggamma type on the basis of the amino acid analysis of gammaTp XIV (gamma133-144) of the Hb F of this subject [1]. Recently, the sequence of residues gamma134-137 of the gamma-chain of this subject was determined and found to contain some alanine at position gamma136. It is therefore of the Ggamma + Agamma type. A rapid technique for the isolation of gammaCB-3 (gamma134-146) peptides in human fetal haemoglobin for Ggamma:Agamma ratio determination is described.
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2012-05-24 05:56:58 © BioInfoBank Institute