Abstract
To date, all of the chromosomal deletions that cause α-thalassemia remove the structural α genes and/or their regulatory element (HS -40). A unique deletion occurs in a single family that juxtaposes a region that normally lies approximately 18-kilobase downstream of the human α cluster, next to a structurally normal α-globin gene, and silences its expression. During development, the CpG island associated with the α-globin promoter in the rearranged chromosome becomes densely methylated and insensitive to endonucleases, demonstrating that the normal chromatin structure around the α-globin gene is perturbed by this mutation and that the gene is inactivated by a negative chromosomal position effect. These findings highlight the importance of the chromosomal environment in regulating globin gene expression. (C) 2000 by The American Society of Hematology.
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CITATION STYLE
Barbour, V. M., Tufarelli, C., Sharpe, J. A., Smith, Z. E., Ayyub, H., Heinlein, C. A., … Higgs, D. R. (2000). α-Thalassemia resulting from a negative chromosornal position effect. Blood, 96(3), 800–807. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v96.3.800
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