Literature DB >> 11675327

Discrepancies between genotype and phenotype in hematology: an important frontier.

E Beutler1.   

Abstract

An African American male infant with sickle cell disease has a devastating stroke; an African American soldier is surprised when he is informed that he has sickle cell disease. They are both homozygous for the same mutation. An Ashkenazi Jewish woman with Gaucher disease has a huge spleen and severe thrombocytopenia; her older brother, homozygous for the same 1226G glucocerebrosidase mutation, is found on routine examination to have a barely palpable spleen tip. The fact that clinical manifestations of genetic diseases can vary widely among patients has been recognized for many decades. In the past, however, it could often be attributed to the pleomorphic nature of mutations of the same gene: the patient with severe disease, it was averred, must have a different mutation than the one with mild disease. Even before a precise definition of mutations could be achieved at the DNA level, such an explanation did not serve to clarify the differences that existed between siblings with the same autosomal recessive disease. Such siblings must surely be carrying the same 2 disease-producing alleles. With the advent of sequence analysis of genes, the great extent of phenotype variation in patients with the same genotype has come to be more fully appreciated, but understanding of why it occurs continues to be meager. It is the purpose of this review to explore some of the variations in phenotype seen by hematologists in patients with identical mutations, to indicate where some progress has been made, and to suggest how understanding in this important area may be expanded.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11675327     DOI: 10.1182/blood.v98.9.2597

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Blood        ISSN: 0006-4971            Impact factor:   22.113


  18 in total

1.  Gaucher disease: variability in phenotype among siblings.

Authors:  D Amato; T Stachiw; J T R Clarke; G E Rivard
Journal:  J Inherit Metab Dis       Date:  2004       Impact factor: 4.982

Review 2.  Behavior matters.

Authors:  Edwin B Fisher; Marian L Fitzgibbon; Russell E Glasgow; Debra Haire-Joshu; Laura L Hayman; Robert M Kaplan; Marilyn S Nanney; Judith K Ockene
Journal:  Am J Prev Med       Date:  2011-05       Impact factor: 5.043

3.  Seeking Genomic Knowledge: The Case for Clinical Restraint.

Authors:  Wylie Burke; Susan Brown Trinidad; Ellen Wright Clayton
Journal:  Hastings Law J       Date:  2013-08-01

4.  Mutation Spectrum and Genotype-Phenotype Analyses in a Pakistani Cohort With Hemophilia B.

Authors:  Muhammad Tariq Masood Khan; Arshi Naz; Jawad Ahmed; Tahir Shamsi; Shariq Ahmed; Nisar Ahmed; Ayisha Imran; Nazish Farooq; Muhammad Tariq Hamayun Khan; Abid Sohail Taj
Journal:  Clin Appl Thromb Hemost       Date:  2017-07-28       Impact factor: 2.389

5.  Premature Identical Twin Neonates With Sleep Apnea.

Authors:  Anirudh Ramesh; Johanna Diaz; Lawrence Nogee; Jessica Duis; Dae Song Jang; Cathleen Lawson; Gustavo Maegawa
Journal:  Clin Pediatr (Phila)       Date:  2017-03-20       Impact factor: 1.168

6.  How Can Law and Policy Advance Quality in Genomic Analysis and Interpretation for Clinical Care?

Authors:  Barbara J Evans; Gail Javitt; Ralph Hall; Megan Robertson; Pilar Ossorio; Susan M Wolf; Thomas Morgan; Ellen Wright Clayton
Journal:  J Law Med Ethics       Date:  2020-03       Impact factor: 1.718

7.  Inability to maintain GSH pool in G6PD-deficient red cells causes futile AMPK activation and irreversible metabolic disturbance.

Authors:  Hsiang-Yu Tang; Hung-Yao Ho; Pei-Ru Wu; Shih-Hsiang Chen; Frans A Kuypers; Mei-Ling Cheng; Daniel Tsun-Yee Chiu
Journal:  Antioxid Redox Signal       Date:  2015-02-10       Impact factor: 8.401

8.  Biological impact of α genes, β haplotypes, and G6PD activity in sickle cell anemia at baseline and with hydroxyurea.

Authors:  Françoise Bernaudin; Cécile Arnaud; Annie Kamdem; Isabelle Hau; Françoise Lelong; Ralph Epaud; Corinne Pondarré; Serge Pissard
Journal:  Blood Adv       Date:  2018-03-27

9.  Deoxygenation Reduces Sickle Cell Blood Flow at Arterial Oxygen Tension.

Authors:  Xinran Lu; David K Wood; John M Higgins
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2016-06-21       Impact factor: 4.033

10.  Impact of the method of G6PD deficiency assessment on genetic association studies of malaria susceptibility.

Authors:  Marla K Johnson; Tamara D Clark; Denise Njama-Meya; Philip J Rosenthal; Sunil Parikh
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2009-09-30       Impact factor: 3.240

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