Frequency of intron 1 and 22 inversions offactor VIII gene in Mexican patients with severe hemophilia A

2007 ◽  
Vol 82 (4) ◽  
pp. 283-287 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johanna Milena Mantilla-Capacho ◽  
Claudia Patricia Beltrán-Miranda ◽  
Hilda Luna-Záizar ◽  
Lilia Aguilar-López ◽  
María Amparo Esparza-Flores ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Maysoon Mohammed Hassan

The background:One of the prevalent main concerns in the medical world is the identification of Intron22 mutations in the Factor VIII gene carried by Iraqi patient in Wasit town, in Iraq suffering Hemophilia A (classical hemophilia) which is related to a X-chromosome recessive haemorrhage afflictions as the result of a flaw in the coagulation factor VIII (FVIII). It is essentially related with F8 mutations of Intron22 in version which forms the most typical kind of mutations of blood afflictions worldwide involving half the patients suffering from severe Hemophilia A that possesses mutations, in addition to Intron 1 inversion suffered by 5% of severe Hemophilia A patients.All of the inversion mutations are suffered mainly by males,and uncommonly by females due to the intra chromosomal recombination among the homologous areas, in inversion 1 or 22, with extragenic copy posited the telomeric to the Factor VIII gene. Unfortunately, there is an absence in Iraq on researches pertaining blood affliction gene identification in persons who carries the Intron22 mutations exception in the current research.Aims of study:The objectives of the research is to to analyze through the detection mechanisms, the existence of Intron 22 mutations in the Factor VIII gene of 10 Hemophilia A Iraqi carriers cohort families. The hypothesis and anticipated result is that there will be a minimal margin of hazardous possibility for the recurrence. The hereditary F8 mutation is unknown to be present on the maternal side of the patient sufferer due to the possibilty of germline mosaics that exists within the community.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 379-379
Author(s):  
Marsha M Wheeler ◽  
Barbara A Konkle ◽  
Crystal Watson ◽  
Glenn F. Pierce ◽  
Deborah A Nickerson ◽  
...  

Abstract Background. Hemophilia A is a rare X-linked bleeding disorder resulting from deficiency in coagulation factor VIII. Numerous genetic variants (>2000) affecting the F8 gene have been implicated as causative of hemophilia A, including structural variants (SVs) such as copy number variants (CNVs) and large intra-chromosomal inversions caused by recombination between distant regions with high homology to sequences within F8 intron 1 or intron 22. SVs detected in patients with hemophilia are associated with more severe disease, and different types of SVs may inform inhibitor risk. For the vast majority of patients, causative variants can be identified using targeted DNA sequencing of F8 coding regions and/or the use of methods which detect known SVs (e.g. inverse shifting PCR, long-range PCR, MLPA). However, these approaches fail to explain 1-3% of hemophilia A cases. We hypothesized that a dedicated structural variant analysis at the F8 locus using whole genome sequencing data could identify previously undetected deleterious F8 gene variants in unsolved cases of hemophilia A. Methods. Cases were selected from the My Life, Our Future (MLOF) hemophilia study cohort recently whole genome sequenced by the NHLBI TOPMed program. In this study, we performed a custom SV analyses using whole genome sequencing (WGS) data from 11 cases of severe hemophilia A (factor VIII activity level < 1%) that remained genetically unexplained after exhausting all available laboratory testing methods. Two of the eleven unsolved severe hemophilia A cases (18%) were reported to have had an inhibitor. Results. SV analyses of the F8 genomic region revealed previously undetected deletions and inversions in 6 out of the 11 cases. In these 6 samples, SV calls were supported by multiple sequencing reads (> 25 reads) and multiple types of read evidence (read depth, paired-end and/or split read evidence). Two deletions within intron 6 were detected in a single hemophilia A case, a finding which suggests F8 intron 6 may contain one or more regulatory elements critical for F8 expression. Three distinct large inversions predicted to disrupt the F8 structural gene were detected in five other cases; a 720Kb inversion with breakpoints in F8 intron 6 and SPRY3 intron 1 (n=1), a 20Mb inversion with breakpoints in F8 intron 1 and INTS6L intron 8 (n=1), and a 7.4Kb inversion with breakpoints in F8 intron 25 and the SMIM9 intron 1 (n=3). These events are novel in hemophilia and were also not present in the larger, sequenced My Life, Our Future dataset (N=2186), supporting these SVs as likely causative of severe hemophilia A. Both cases with inhibitors had the F8 intron 25-SMIM9 inversion. Conclusions. This work demonstrates that dedicated analyses of WGS for SVs originating in non-coding regions can identify novel variants in previously unsolved cases of hemophilia A. We conclude that any genetic studies of diseases caused by loss-of-function variants should consider dedicated analyses for SVs. We predict additional deleterious SVs remain to be discovered in rare unexplained cases of hemophilia. Disclosures Konkle: BioMarin: Consultancy; Bioverativ: Research Funding; CSL Behring: Consultancy; Genentech: Consultancy; Spark: Consultancy, Research Funding; Pfizer: Research Funding; Gilead: Consultancy; Sangamo: Research Funding; Shire: Research Funding. Johnsen:CSL Behring: Consultancy; Octapharma: Consultancy.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 5033-5033
Author(s):  
Nathalie Lannoy ◽  
Marie Ravoet ◽  
Bernard Grisart ◽  
Mathilde Fretigny ◽  
Cedric R. Hermans

Abstract Introduction F8 intron22 inversion is the causative gene defect in up to 45% of severe hemophilia A (HA) patients mediated by recombination between three highly homologous copies located in intron 22 (int22h-1) and two other extragenic copies (int22h-2 and int22h-3) positioned more telomerically outside the gene. Intrachromosomal rearrangement between int22h-1 and int22h-3 provide the F8 type 1 inversion while the F8 type 2 inversion could be explained by the participation of the int22-h2 sequence in the homologous recombination. However, a third type, known since 1993*, was explained by the existence of a duplicated copy of int22h-3 or int22h-2 in case of intron22 inversion type 3A or 3B respectively. Methods Three unrelated HA patients with intron22 type 3A/3B were identified by southern blotting. To appreciate the length of the int22h extragenic duplicated, genomic hybridisation was performed using Affimetrix CytoScan High-Density array. Results Breakpoint analyses by CGH-array in all patients show same duplication of approximately 180kb delimited between intron 1 of CLIC2 gene and distal repeat int22h-3reflecting the presence of five genomic int22 copies. A fourth non-hemophiliac case was added since analysis by CGH technique identified duplication delineated by same boundaries. Conclusion This study suggests the existence of genotypes harboring five int22h copies mediated by 180 kb duplication at Xq28 locus probably not associated with HA. We propose that this duplication has happened by tandem inversed duplication. Such genotype is to be considered as polymorphism and could be associated with the two kinds of F8 intron22 inversion type 3 when intrachromosomal recombination has occurred between homologous copies. *Antonarakis SE and the international consortium study. Factor VIII gene inversions in severe hemophilia A: results of an international consortium study. Blood 1995; 86: 2206-2212 Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2013 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 195-197 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. SANNA ◽  
C. CEGLIA ◽  
M. TARSITANO ◽  
B. LOMBARDO ◽  
A. COPPOLA ◽  
...  

Hematology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-57
Author(s):  
Xiong Wang ◽  
Hongmei Wang ◽  
Haowen Tan ◽  
Xiu-Ping Liu ◽  
Huijun Li

Blood ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 99 (1) ◽  
pp. 168-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard D. Bagnall ◽  
Naushin Waseem ◽  
Peter M. Green ◽  
Francesco Giannelli

The messenger RNA (mRNA) from 5 of 69 patients with severe hemophilia A did not support amplification of complementary DNA containing the first few exons of the factor VIII (F8) gene but supported amplification of mRNA containing exon 1 ofF8 plus exons of the VBP1 gene. This chimeric mRNA signals an inversion breaking intron 1 of the F8 gene. Using an inversion patient, one deleted for F8 exons 1 to 6, and cosmids mapped 70 to 100 kb telomeric of the F8gene, this study shows that this break strictly affects a sequence (int1h-1) repeated (int1h-2) about 140 kb more telomerically, between the C6.1A andVBP1 genes. The 1041-base pair repeats differ at a single nucleotide (although int1h-2 also showed one polymorphism) and are in opposite orientation. The results demonstrate that they cause inversions by intrachromosome or intrachromatid homologous recombination. The genomic structure of the inversion region shows that transcription traverses intergenic spaces to produce the 2 chimeric mRNAs containing the F8 sequences and characteristic of the inversion. This observation prompts the suggestion that nature may use such extended transcription to test whether the addition of novel domains from neighboring genes creates desirable new genes. A rapid polymerase chain reaction test was developed for the inversion in both patients and carriers. This has identified 10 inversions, affectingF8 genes with 5 different haplotypes for the BclI, introns 13 and 22 VNTR polymorphism, among 209 unrelated families with severe hemophilia A. This indicates a prevalence of 4.8% and frequent recurrence of the inversion. This should result in absence ofF8, and one inversion patient is known to have inhibitors.


2018 ◽  
Vol 71 ◽  
pp. 45-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hilda Luna-Záizar ◽  
José Ángel González-Alcázar ◽  
Natalia Evangelista-Castro ◽  
Lilia Beatriz Aguilar-López ◽  
Sandra Luz Ruiz-Quezada ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 1149-1149
Author(s):  
Christine Vinciguerra ◽  
Jenny Goudemand ◽  
Christophe Zawadzki ◽  
Dorothee Pellecchia ◽  
Claude Negrier

Abstract Hemophilia A is a common inherited bleeding disorder, caused by factor VIII (FVIII) deficiency as a result of mutations in the factor VIII gene (F8 gene). Intron 1 and 22 inversions, small insertions/deletions and point mutations are the most common genetic defects responsible for severe hemophilia A. However, a F8 gene mutation is not found in 2–5% of patients with severe hemophilia A (FVIII:C<1IU/dL). Large rearrangements are frequent in other genetic disorders and only one case of exon 13 duplication was described in a patient with mild hemophilia (Casula et al, Blood 1990). We described here a large duplication in F8 gene in a CRM− patient with severe hemophilia A: (FVIII:C < 1 UI/dL, FVIII:Ag < 1%) who developed a high-titer inhibitor (peak 10 BU). A previous investigation did not find intron 1 and 22 inversion or exons /splice sites sequencing abnormalities. The promoter region was also sequenced, but no genetic mutation was then characterized. The duplication was detected by MP/LC (Multiplex PCR/Liquid chromatography) which is a quantitative method able to detect large rearrangements. Initially described by Dehainault et al (Nucl Acids Res 2004) in retinoblastoma patients, this method showed that a duplication affected a large part of F8 gene, e.g. the 3′ part of intron 10, exons 11 to 14 and a part of intron 14. To our knowledge, this is the first duplication responsible for severe hemophila A described so far. This finding suggests that the detection of large rearrangements with quantitative method as MP/LC, QMPSF or MLPA would be useful in hemophilic patients where the screening for inversions or genetic events in the coding regions are unsuccessful. This kind of large gene modifications may indeed account for at least some of the 2–5% cases where the coding sequence does not appeared to be altered. In this case, the truncation of the primary polypeptide sequence did not result in any secretion of the FVIII protein, that may have increased the risk of inhibitor development.


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