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The role of X-inactivation in the gender bias of patients with acquired α-thalassaemia and myelodysplastic syndrome (ATMDS)
Authors:Peter S. Haas ,Noemi B. A. Roy ,Richard J. Gibbons ,Marie-Alice Deville,Chris Fisher,Michael Schwabe,Emmanuel Bissé  ,Alain van Dorsselaer,Douglas R. Higgs, Michael Lü  bbert
Affiliation:Division of Haematology and Oncology, University of Freiburg Medical Centre, Freiburg, Germany;, MRC Molecular Haematology Unit, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK;, Institute for Laboratory Diagnostics, University of Freiburg Medical Centre, Freiburg, Germany;, and Laboratoire de Spectrometrie de Masse Bio-Organique UMR 7178, CNRS/ULP, Institut Pluridisciplinaire Hubert Curien, UniversitéLouis Pasteur, Strasbourg, France
Abstract:Αlpha thalassaemia myelodysplastic syndrome (ATMDS) is an unusual complication of chronic myeloid malignancy that is associated with a striking red cell phenotype. It represents an acquired form of α-thalassaemia that most commonly arises in the context of myelodysplasia. It has recently been shown that this condition occurs in association with somatic mutations of a known X-encoded trans -acting regulator of α globin gene ( HBA ) expression, ATRX. There is an unexplained, strong male preponderance of individuals with the ATMDS phenotype with a >5:1 male–female ratio and furthermore, all the somatic ATRX mutations described to date have been in males. Here we report the identification, in a single centre, of two females with ATMDS and mutations in the ATRX gene, proving that ATMDS associated with such mutations may occur, albeit rarely, in females. It seemed possible that females might be less likely to develop ATMDS if the inactivated copy of the ATRX gene ( ATRX ) became progressively re-activated throughout life. This study ruled out this hypothesis by investigating the pattern of ATRX inactivation in a cross-sectional analysis of normal females at ages ranging from newborn to 90 years.
Keywords:chromatin    DNA methylation    epigenetic disorders    haemoglobin regulation
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