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NA09153 DNA from LCL

Description:

BETA-THALASSEMIA
HEMOGLOBIN--BETA LOCUS; HBB

Affected:

Yes

Sex:

Female

Age:

No Data

  • Overview
  • Characterizations
  • Phenotypic Data
  • External Links

Overview

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Repository NIGMS Human Genetic Cell Repository
Subcollection Heritable Diseases
Class Mutations of the Hemoglobin Loci
Quantity 25 µg
Quantitation Method Please see our FAQ
Biopsy Source Peripheral vein
Cell Type B-Lymphocyte
Tissue Type Blood
Transformant Epstein-Barr Virus
Sample Source DNA from LCL
Race White
Ethnicity ITALIAN
Relation to Proband proband
Confirmation Clinical summary/Case history
Species Homo sapiens
Common Name Human
Remarks Italian; B-thalassemia; homozygous for codon 39 C-T mutation

Characterizations

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IDENTIFICATION OF SPECIES OF ORIGIN Species of Origin Confirmed by Nucleoside Phosphorylase, Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase, and Lactate Dehydrogenase Isoenzyme Electrophoresis
 
Gene HBB
Chromosomal Location 11p15.5
Allelic Variant 1 141900.0312; BETA-ZERO-THALASSEMIA
Identified Mutation GLN39TER; Chehab et al. (1986) found evidence for new mutation in the codon at beta-39 from CAG (glutamine) to the stop codon TAG. The beta-39 nonsense mutation is the second most common beta-thalassemia lesion in Italy, accounting for a third of cases, and the most common in Sardinia, accounting for 90% of cases there. In Sardinia, the beta-39 mutation has been identified with 9 different haplotypes. All this suggested to Chehab et al. (1986) that beta-39 is a mutational hotspot. Trecartin et al. (1981) found that the form of beta-zero-thalassemia that is predominant in Sardinia is caused by a single nucleotide mutation at the position corresponding to amino acid number 39 and converting a glutamine codon (CAG) to an amber termination codon (UAG). (Epstein et al. (1963) described 'amber' mutants of phage T4 in a frequently cited paper in a Cold Spring Harbor Symposium on Quantitative Biology. The origin of the unusual name 'amber' is, as Witkowski (1990) called it, 'an interesting footnote in the history of molecular biology.' Edgar (1966) recounted that R. H. Epstein and C. M. Steinberg, then at the California Institute of Technology, had promised Harris Bernstein, then at Yale University, that the mutants, if any were found, would be named after his mother. They were found and were named 'amber,' the English equivalent of 'Bernstein.' The other 2 'stop' codons, UGA and UAA, are sometimes referred to as 'opal' and 'ochre,' respectively.) Rosatelli et al. (1992) used denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) followed by direct sequence analysis of amplified DNA to study 3,000 beta-thalassemia chromosomes in the Sardinian population. They confirmed that the predominant mutation, present in 95.7% of beta-thalassemia chromosomes, was gln39-to-ter.
 
Gene HBB
Chromosomal Location 11p15.5
Allelic Variant 2 141900.0312; BETA-ZERO-THALASSEMIA
Identified Mutation GLN39TER; Chehab et al. (1986) found evidence for new mutation in the codon at beta-39 from CAG (glutamine) to the stop codon TAG. The beta-39 nonsense mutation is the second most common beta-thalassemia lesion in Italy, accounting for a third of cases, and the most common in Sardinia, accounting for 90% of cases there. In Sardinia, the beta-39 mutation has been identified with 9 different haplotypes. All this suggested to Chehab et al. (1986) that beta-39 is a mutational hotspot. Trecartin et al. (1981) found that the form of beta-zero-thalassemia that is predominant in Sardinia is caused by a single nucleotide mutation at the position corresponding to amino acid number 39 and converting a glutamine codon (CAG) to an amber termination codon (UAG). (Epstein et al. (1963) described 'amber' mutants of phage T4 in a frequently cited paper in a Cold Spring Harbor Symposium on Quantitative Biology. The origin of the unusual name 'amber' is, as Witkowski (1990) called it, 'an interesting footnote in the history of molecular biology.' Edgar (1966) recounted that R. H. Epstein and C. M. Steinberg, then at the California Institute of Technology, had promised Harris Bernstein, then at Yale University, that the mutants, if any were found, would be named after his mother. They were found and were named 'amber,' the English equivalent of 'Bernstein.' The other 2 'stop' codons, UGA and UAA, are sometimes referred to as 'opal' and 'ochre,' respectively.) Rosatelli et al. (1992) used denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) followed by direct sequence analysis of amplified DNA to study 3,000 beta-thalassemia chromosomes in the Sardinian population. They confirmed that the predominant mutation, present in 95.7% of beta-thalassemia chromosomes, was gln39-to-ter.

Phenotypic Data

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Remarks Italian; B-thalassemia; homozygous for codon 39 C-T mutation

External Links

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dbSNP dbSNP ID: 11227
Gene Cards HBB
Gene Ontology GO:0005344 oxygen transporter activity
GO:0005833 hemoglobin complex
GO:0006810 transport
GO:0015671 oxygen transport
NCBI Gene Gene ID:3043
NCBI GTR 141900 HEMOGLOBIN--BETA LOCUS; HBB
613985 BETA-THALASSEMIA
OMIM 141900 HEMOGLOBIN--BETA LOCUS; HBB
613985 BETA-THALASSEMIA
Pricing
International/Commercial/For-profit:
$281.00USD
U.S. Academic/Non-profit/Government:
$139.00USD
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