We have analysed 201 beta-thalassaemia (beta-thal) genes from natives of the Punjab (156) and Maharashtra states of India and found the causative mutation in 200 of them. The most common beta-globin gene mutations differed significantly between these two groups and between these groups and Indian immigrants in the U.S.A. and the U.K. In the Punjabi Indians the IVS-1, nt 1 (G-T) mutation accounted for nearly one-quarter of beta-thal genes, whereas it was 5% or less in the other groups. Likewise, the cap + 1 mutation was much more prevalent in the Punjabis, whereas the nonsense codon 15 allele had a higher frequency in the Maharashtrans of the Bombay region. The common IVS-1, nt5 allele had a frequency of 60% of beta-thal genes in the Maharastrans, 35% in North American immigrants, and only 23% in the Punjabis. Two-thirds of all beta-thal genes in Punjab were found in the merchant caste (Khatri-Arora), whereas the menial caste (Shudra) was highly represented among those with beta-thal genes in Maharashtra. Two novel beta-globin alleles were each found once; a frameshift codon 55 (+A) in Maharashtrans and a frameshift codons 47-48 (+ATCT) in Punjabis. Of three Punjabi patients with beta-thal intermedia in whom only a single severe beta-globin gene mutation was found, two had six alpha-globin genes (homozygosity for a triplicated alpha-globin locus) instead of the normal alpha-globin gene number of four. Thus, these two individuals had a multilocus aetiology of beta-thal and their parents have the unusual recurrence risk of 1 in 8 for conceiving a third with beta-thal intermedia. Since 15% of 126 alpha-globin clusters studies in Punjabis contained either single (10%) or triplicated (5%) alpha-globin genes, the alpha-globin gene number is a frequent modifier of the phenotype of beta-thal in this ethnic group.
Chromosomal studies were performed in phytohaemagglutinin-stimulated cultures of lymphocytes and in bone marrow cells without culture from 115 patients with megaloblastic anaemia resulting from nutritional deficiency of folate and vitamin B12 Essentially similar chromosomal abnormalities were observed in the two cell lines. These were characterized by striking morphological aberrations such as elongation and despiralization (uncoiling or incomplete contraction), increased frequency of chromosome breakage and centromere spreading. Numerical abnormalities, chromatid exchanges and translocations were virtually absent. Autoradiographic studies of chromosomes after pulse-labelling with 3H-thymidine during the terminal 6 h of phytohaemagglutinin-stimulated lymphocyte cultures revealed a differential pattern of distribution of the radionucleotide in the chromosomes of megaloblastic lymphocytes as compared to those from normal lymphocytes. Repeated chromosomal studies were done in 65 of these patients at various intervals after starting therapy with the deficient vitamins. After 48 h of therapy, chromosomal abnormalities were remarkably reduced in the bone marrow; but many of these morphological chromosomal changes (i.e. despiralization and breaks) persisted in the lymphocytes of a significant proportion of patients for variable periods up to 6–12 months after haematological remission resulting from therapy with the deficient vitamins. These abnormalities did not, however, persist after remission in those patients who had repeated episodes of infections.
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