Literature DB >> 17430077

Chimerism and mosaicism are important causes of ABO phenotype and genotype discrepancies.

D Cho1, J S Lee, M H Yazer, J W Song, M G Shin, J H Shin, S P Suh, M J Jeon, J Y Kim, J T Park, D W Ryang.   

Abstract

Discrepancies between blood group genotype and RBC phenotype are important to recognize when implementing DNA-based blood grouping techniques. This report describes two such cases involving the ABO blood group in the Korean population. Propositus #1 was a 22-year-old healthy man undergoing pretransfusion testing for minor surgery. Propositus #2 was a 23- year-old male blood donor. RBCs from both propositi were determined to be group AB and demonstrated unusual agglutination patterns on forward typing, which were inconsistent with their ABO genotype determined by allele-specific (AS) PCR. RBCs from propositus #1 demonstrated mixed field agglutination with both anti-A and -B, while RBCs from propositus #2 demonstrated mixed field only with anti-A reagents. Both had B/O genotypes by AS-PCR. Cloning and sequencing of ABO exons 6 and 7 revealed three alleles in both propositi: propositus #1: A102/B101/O04; propositus #2: A102/B101/O01. A panel of nine short-tandem repeat (STR) loci was tested on DNA extracted from blood, buccal mucosal cells, and hair from the propositi and on DNA isolated from their parents' blood. In all tissues tested from propositus #1, three loci demonstrated a double paternal and a single maternal DNA contribution, indicating that he was a chimera or a mosaic; in those from propositus # 2, one STR locus demonstrated a double paternal DNA contribution, indicating that he was a tetragametic chimera. Chimerism and mosaicism are uncommon but important causes of ABO genotype and phenotype discrepancies. The evaluation of patients and donors with unusual or unexpected serology in pretransfusion testing and consensus ABO alleles may include the evaluation of STR loci to detect these phenomena.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17430077

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Immunohematology        ISSN: 0894-203X


  5 in total

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2.  Hematopoietic Chimera in a Male Blood Donor and His Dizygotic Twin Sister.

Authors:  Marcos P Miola; Alessandro G Lopes; Alessandra P Silva; Edney G C Gomes; Leticia A F Machado; Wanessa A Veloso; Carlos A Costa; Roberta M Fachini; Octávio Ricci Junior; Cinara C Brandão de Mattos; Luiz Carlos de Mattos
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3.  Mixed field reactions in ABO and Rh typing chimerism likely resulting from twin haematopoiesis.

Authors:  Christopher Sharpe; Debra Lane; Jacqueline Cote; Bahram Hosseini-Maaf; Mindy Goldman; Martin L Olsson; Annika K Hult
Journal:  Blood Transfus       Date:  2014-03-19       Impact factor: 3.443

4.  ABO chimerism with a minor allele detected by the peptide nucleic acid-mediated polymerase chain reaction clamping method.

Authors:  Rie Sano; Yoichiro Takahashi; Tamiko Nakajima; Mayumi Yoshii; Rieko Kubo; Keiko Takahashi; Yoshihiko Kominato; Haruo Takeshita; Toshihiro Yasuda; Hatsue Tsuneyama; Makoto Uchikawa; Kazumi Isa; Kenichi Ogasawara
Journal:  Blood Transfus       Date:  2014-01-02       Impact factor: 3.443

5.  The first known case of blood group chimerism in monochorionic dizygotic twins in Korea.

Authors:  O-Jin Lee; Duck Cho; Myung-Geun Shin; Sun-Ouck Kim; Jong-Tae Park; Hee Kyung Kim; Dong-Wook Ryang
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  5 in total

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