Literature DB >> 11224685

Pleiotropic and epistatic effects in sickle cell anemia.

R L Nagel1.   

Abstract

Sickle cell anemia is the first monogenic disease ever described, and it became the paradigm for a disease traceable to a single mutation in a single gene. Pauling's concept of "molecular disease," based on this discovery, opened a new chapter in the history of medicine. Nevertheless, at the phenotypic level, sickle cell anemia is not a monogenic disease; it is a multigenic disease. The latter is the product of pleiotropic genes (involved in secondary pathophysiologic events) and epistatic genes (same gene but with significant pathophysiologic consequences among individual=polymorphism). These secondary events are an important part of the phenotype and explain the intense interindividual differences in the severity of the disease, in spite of all the patients having the same sickle globin gene in the homozygote form. In the last decade a number of epistatic genes and pleiotropic genes have been defined, and many others are potential candidates. CHIP technology and high-throughput sequencing promise to accelerate our full multigenic understanding of this disease, contributing to a more individualized concept of disease in conjunction as we enter the new millennium.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11224685     DOI: 10.1097/00062752-200103000-00008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Opin Hematol        ISSN: 1065-6251            Impact factor:   3.284


  6 in total

Review 1.  Altered phosphorylation of cytoskeleton proteins in sickle red blood cells: the role of protein kinase C, Rac GTPases, and reactive oxygen species.

Authors:  Alex George; Suvarnamala Pushkaran; Lina Li; Xiuli An; Yi Zheng; Narla Mohandas; Clinton H Joiner; Theodosia A Kalfa
Journal:  Blood Cells Mol Dis       Date:  2010-03-15       Impact factor: 3.039

2.  Implementation of Indigenous Electronic Medical Record System to Facilitate Care of Sickle Cell Disease Patients in Chhattisgarh.

Authors:  Mona Choubey; Hrishikesh Mishra; Khushboo Soni; Pradeep Kumar Patra
Journal:  J Clin Diagn Res       Date:  2016-02-01

3.  Natural and orthogonal model for estimating gene-gene interactions applied to cutaneous melanoma.

Authors:  Feifei Xiao; Jianzhong Ma; Guoshuai Cai; Shenying Fang; Jeffrey E Lee; Qingyi Wei; Christopher I Amos
Journal:  Hum Genet       Date:  2013-11-17       Impact factor: 4.132

4.  Nutritional status, hospitalization and mortality among patients with sickle cell anemia in Tanzania.

Authors:  Sharon E Cox; Julie Makani; Anthony J Fulford; Albert N Komba; Deogratius Soka; Thomas N Williams; Charles R Newton; Kevin Marsh; Andrew M Prentice
Journal:  Haematologica       Date:  2011-04-01       Impact factor: 9.941

Review 5.  Genomics in Personalized Nutrition: Can You "Eat for Your Genes"?

Authors:  Veronica A Mullins; William Bresette; Laurel Johnstone; Brian Hallmark; Floyd H Chilton
Journal:  Nutrients       Date:  2020-10-13       Impact factor: 5.717

6.  Hereditary elliptocytosis-associated alpha-spectrin mutation p.L155dup as a modifier of sickle cell disease severity.

Authors:  Mary Risinger; Georgios E Christakopoulos; Corinna L Schultz; Patrick T McGann; Wenying Zhang; Theodosia A Kalfa
Journal:  Pediatr Blood Cancer       Date:  2018-11-04       Impact factor: 3.167

  6 in total

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