Abstract
We have disrupted the 5′ locus of the duplicated adult alpha-globin genes by gene targeting in the mouse embryonic stem cells and created mice with alpha-thalassemia syndromes. The heterozygous knockout mice (.alpha/alpha alpha) are asymptomatic like the silent carriers in humans whereas the homozygous knockout mice (.alpha/.alpha) show hemolytic anemia. Mice with three dysfunctional alpha-globin genes generated by breeding the 5′ alpha-globin knockouts (.alpha/alpha alpha) and the deletion type alpha-thalassemia mice (../alpha alpha) produce severe hemoglobin H disease and they die in utero. These results indicate that the 5′ alpha-globin gene is the predominant locus in mice, and suggest that it is even more dominant than its human homologue.
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CITATION STYLE
Chang, J., Lu, R., Xu, S., Meneses, J., Chan, K., Pedersen, R., & Kan, Y. (1996). Inactivation of mouse alpha-globin gene by homologous recombination: mouse model of hemoglobin H disease. Blood, 88(5), 1846–1851. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v88.5.1846.bloodjournal8851846
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