首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


A normal β-globin allele as a modifier gene ameliorating the severity of α-thalassemia in mice
Authors:Aya Leder   Edith Wiener   Matthew J. Lee   Sunitha N. Wickramasinghe     Philip Leder
Affiliation:Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Boston, MA 02115, USA. leder@rascal.med.harvard.edu
Abstract:Thalassemia is a heritable human anemia caused by a variety of mutations that affect expression of the alpha- or the beta-chain of hemoglobin. The expressivity of the phenotype is likely to be influenced by unlinked modifying genes. Indeed, by using a mouse model of alpha-thalassemia, we find that its phenotype is strongly influenced by the genetic background in which the alpha-thalassemia mutation resides [129(sv/ev)/129(sv/ev) (severe) or 129(sv/ev)/C57BL/6 (mild)]. Linkage mapping indicates that the modifying gene is very tightly linked to the beta-globin locus (Lod score = 13.3). Furthermore, the severity of the phenotype correlates with the size of beta-chain-containing inclusion bodies that accumulate in red blood cells and likely accelerate their destruction. The beta-major globin chains encoded by the two strains differ by three amino acids, one of which is a glycine-to-cysteine substitution at position 13. The Cys-13 should be available for interchain disulfide bridging and consequent aggregation between excess beta-chains. This normal polymorphic variation between murine beta-globin chains could account for the modifying action of the unlinked beta-globin locus. Here, the variation in severity of the phenotype would not depend on a change in the ratio between alpha- and beta-chains but on the chemical nature of the normal beta-chain, which is in excess. This work also indicates that modifying genes can be normal variants that-absent an apparent physiologic rationale-may be difficult to identify on the basis of structure alone.
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号