Boyer S H, Dover G J, Serjeant G R, Smith K D, Antonarakis S E, Embury S H, Margolet L, Noyes A N, Boyer M L, Bias W B
Blood. 1984 Nov;64(5):1053-8.
Levels of fetal hemoglobin (HbF) bearing reticulocytes (F reticulocytes) range from 2% to 50% in patients with sickle cell (SS) anemia. To learn whether any portion of such variation in F cell production is regulated by loci genetically separable from the beta-globin gene cluster, percentages of F reticulocytes were compared in 59 sib pairs composed solely of SS members, including 40 pairs from Jamaica and 19 from the United States. We reasoned that differences in F reticulocyte levels might arise (1) from any of several kinds of artifact, (2) via half-sib status, or (3) because one or more genes regulating F cell production segregate separately from beta S. We minimized the role of artifact by assay of fresh samples from 84 SS individuals, including both members of 38 sib pairs. In 78 of the 84 subjects, serial values for percent F reticulocytes fell within 99.9% confidence limits or were alike by t test (P greater than or equal to .05). This left 32 sib pairs for which F reticulocyte levels in each member were reproducible. When sib-sib comparisons were limited to these 32 pairs, percentages of F reticulocytes were grossly dissimilar within 12 Jamaican and 3 American sibships. Within them, the probability that sibs were alike was always less than or equal to .005 and usually less than or equal to 10(-4). We next minimized the contribution of half-sibs among Jamaicans by a combination of paternity testing and sib-sib comparison of beta-globin region DNA restriction fragment length polymorphisms, especially among discordant pairs. We thereafter concluded that at least seven to eight Jamaican pairs were composed of reproducibly discordant full sibs. There is thus little doubt that there are genes regulating between-patient differences in F cell production that are separate from the beta-globin gene cluster. Still unanswered is (1) whether or not these genes are actually linked to beta S, (2) why F reticulocyte levels in Americans tend to be lower than in Jamaicans, and (3) whether or not differences in F cell production among SS patients are regulated by several major loci or by only one.
镰状细胞(SS)贫血患者中,携带胎儿血红蛋白(HbF)的网织红细胞(F网织红细胞)水平在2%至50%之间。为了了解F细胞生成的这种变化中是否有任何部分受与β-珠蛋白基因簇基因上可分离的位点调控,我们比较了59对仅由SS成员组成的同胞对中F网织红细胞的百分比,其中包括40对来自牙买加的和19对来自美国的。我们推断F网织红细胞水平的差异可能源于(1)几种假象中的任何一种,(2)同父异母或同母异父的关系,或者(3)因为一个或多个调控F细胞生成的基因与βS基因分开遗传。我们通过检测84名SS个体(包括38对同胞对中的双方)的新鲜样本,尽量减少假象的影响。在84名受试者中的78名,F网织红细胞百分比的系列值落在99.9%的置信区间内,或者经t检验无差异(P大于或等于0.05)。这样就剩下32对同胞对,其每个成员的F网织红细胞水平是可重复的。当同胞对比较仅限于这32对时,在12个牙买加同胞家族和3个美国同胞家族中,F网织红细胞的百分比差异很大。在这些家族中,同胞相似的概率总是小于或等于0.005,通常小于或等于10⁻⁴。接下来,我们通过亲子鉴定以及β-珠蛋白区域DNA限制性片段长度多态性的同胞对比较(尤其是在不一致的对中),尽量减少牙买加人中同父异母或同母异父关系的影响。此后我们得出结论,至少有7至8对牙买加同胞对是由可重复出现差异的全同胞组成。因此毫无疑问,存在与β-珠蛋白基因簇分开的调控患者间F细胞生成差异的基因。仍未解决的问题是:(1)这些基因是否真的与βS基因连锁,(2)为什么美国人的F网织红细胞水平往往低于牙买加人,以及(3)SS患者中F细胞生成的差异是由几个主要位点调控还是仅由一个位点调控。