The universal neonatal screening programme was effective because no case of major haemoglobinopathy was identified after the neonatal period. The affected children received dedicated medical care from birth. The screening programme, and specifically the reporting of minor haemoglobinopathies, has been an excellent health education tool in Belgium for more than 12 years.
Eighteen bone marrows collected from patients without haematological diseases and from normal subjects were tested for the effects of 4 d storage at 4 degrees C on CFU-C growth. Results indicate that unfractionated bone marrow cells may be stored at 4 degrees C for 4 d with 97% +/- 8 SEM recovery of the CFU-C evaluated by the agar culture assay. On the other hand, the same preservation procedure on peripheral blood CFU-C of 13 normal subjects yielded only 5% +/- 2 SEM recovery of in vitro growth capacity. The present results have practical implications. They might be exploited to preserve bone marrow CFU-C for transplantation therapy or laboratory investigation. In contrast this single preservation procedure seems not appropriate for preserving blood CFU-C.
Lactoferrin has been proposed recently as a physiological regulator of the granulocyte-monocyte progenitor (CFU-GM). This glycoprotein, when saturated with iron, has been said to limit the CFU-GM growth by decreasing production and release of colony stimulating activity by monocytes and macrophages. Human milk lactoferrin saturated with iron, at concentrations ranging from 10(-8) M, was added either to endogenously stimulated bone marrow cells or to mononucleated cells used as feeder layers for adherent cell-depleted marrow. Irrespective of the concentration of lactoferrin within the culture system used, no significant inhibition of the CFU-GM growth was observed. Moreover, the CFU-GM stimulating activity of medium conditioned by a 4 day incubation of 1 X 10(6) mononucleated blood cells in the presence or in the absence of lactoferrin was the same. Various possible explanations for not confirming the reported inhibiting activity of iron-saturated lactoferrin were explored: (a) masking inhibition of the system by prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), (b) masking inhibition of the system by bovine lactoferrin present in the fetal calf serum, (c) preinhibition of the system by leukemic-associated inhibitory activity possibly present in the culture system, (d) the iron and calcium content of the culture medium used, (e) the fixation of lactoferrin to plastic compounds, (f) the source of the human lactoferrin used, and (g) the marrow cell separation methods used. None of these factors was shown to play a role in vitro in the activity of lactoferrin and thus no evidence was found for a significant role of lactoferrin in the regulation of human granulopoiesis.
In approximately 90% of mild haemophilia A (HA) patients, a missense mutation can be identified using complete gene sequencing. In this study, multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification analysis was performed as a second step in 10 French-speaking Belgian with mild HA presenting no detectable causal mutation by complete sequencing of the factor VIII (FVIII) (F8) gene's 26 exons and its 1.2 kb of contiguous promoter sequence. This gene dosage technique enabled the detection of exon 1 duplications of F8 in three apparently unrelated subjects. Using array-comparative genomic hybridization, breakpoint analysis delimited the duplication extent to 210 kb in the F8 intron 1 and VBP1 gene intragenic position. We postulated that the rearrangement responsible for this duplication, never before reported, could be attributed to a symmetrical tandem inversion duplication, resulting in a large 233 kb rearrangement of F8 intron 1. This rearranged intron should lead to the production of a small number of normal mRNA transcripts in relation to the mild HA phenotype. Our analysis of the entire F8 mRNA from index case 1, particularly the segment containing exons 1-9, revealed normal amplification and sequencing. Reduced plasma FVIII antigen levels caused by cross-reacting material is associated with a quantitative deficiency of plasma FVIII. Male patients were unresponsive to desmopressin (1-deamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin). All patients displayed identical F8 haplotypes, despite not being related, which suggests a possible founder effect caused by a 210 kb duplication involving F8 exon 1.
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