| Literature DB >> 26301094 |
Yasufumi Endo1, Shoichi Ito2, Yoshiko Ogiyama2.
Abstract
Most cases of hemolytic disease of the newborn associated with anti-Jra are mild. However, rare cases of hydrops fetalis and severe anemia have been reported. We treated a neonate with anemia who was born with maternal anti-Jra, which were detected in the umbilical cord plasma. The Jra antigens in the neonate core blood red blood cells (RBCs) exhibited extremely weak reactivity to PEG-IAT, an anti-Jra reagent. However, upon re-examination of Jra antigen using PEG-IAT at 3 months postpartum, positivity was observed. Thereafter, upon performing PCR-SSP analysis of blood relatives targeting ABCG2 at positions 376 and 421, we found that the mother was Jr(a-) with 376 T homozygosity, whereas the father was Jr(a+) with 376 C homozygosity and a carrier of a 421 C > A mutation. The first sibling, like the propositus, was Jr(a+), exhibiting 376 CT heterozygosity. However, the first sibling carried a 421 C > A mutation, whereas the propositus had no mutation at position 421. Setting the normal Jra (a+) type (376 C, 421 C) to 100 %, we identified the amount of Jra in RBC using FCM to be 82 % in the father, 31 % in the first sibling, and 69 % in the propositus. Furthermore, upon comparing peripheral blood and myelograms of the neonate at the time of birth, we found a low myeloid cells/erythroid cells ratio, undifferentiated erythroblasts, and reduced megakaryocytes. On the basis of these findings, we suggest that cell surface antigen is involved in the HDN caused by anti-Jra, and that a cytodifferentiation abnormality is present in the hematopoietic system.Entities:
Keywords: ATP-binding cassette; ATP-binding cassette G2 [ABCG2(CD338)]; Anti-Jra; Irregular antibodies; Transporter
Year: 2015 PMID: 26301094 PMCID: PMC4546206 DOI: 10.1186/s40364-015-0048-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomark Res ISSN: 2050-7771
Fig. 1Changes in hemoglobin, hematocrit, haptoglobin, and reticulocytes from birth to 4 months postpartum. Hemoglobin and hematocrit levels as well as haptoglobin were increased after 3 months
Oligonucleotide primers used for PCR
| PCR (target) | Primer name | Nucleotide sequence (5′–3′) |
|---|---|---|
| JRA337/376/1515-SSP | ||
| PCR-1 (Exon 13) | JRA1515-F4 | AAGTCAAAGGCAGATGCTTC |
| PCR-2 (Exon 13) | JRA1515-R2 | CCTTATCAGAGCAAACAGAG |
| PCR-3 (Exon 4) | JRA376-F4 | CCAAGTGGATTATCTGGAGATG |
| PCR-4 (Exon 4) | JRA376-R6 | TTGTCTCCTTTGTCTTTTACCAAACCCACTAATACTTTCTTG |
| PCR-5 (Exon 4) | JRA376-R1 | CAAACCCACTAATACTTACTTA |
| PCR-6 (Exon 4) | JRA337-R10 | TACATTTGAAATTGCCAGGTCA |
| PCR-7 (Exon 4) | GPC4-3 | TGTGGCATTGTATCTTGTCCT |
| PCR-8 (Exon 4) | GPC4-4 | GTGGCTATCTCGGGAAGAAT |
| JRA34/421-SSP | ||
| PCR-9 (Exon 2) | JRA34-F2 | TGGTATGGGCCATTCATTG |
| PCR-10 (Exon 2) | JRA34-R7 | CATTGGTGTTGCCTCGTGACAT |
| PCR-11 (Exon 2) | JRA34-R10 | CTTCGACAGCGCCCCTTCGGATTGGTGTTGCCTCGTGACAC |
| PCR-12 (Exon 5) | JRA421-F4 | CTGACAGTGAGAGAAAACTTAA |
| PCR-13 (Exon 5) | JRA421-15 | ACTACAACACTACCCGTGAGTGACGGTGAGCGAAAACTTAC |
| PCR-14 (Exon 5) | JRA421-R2 | CACTTTATCCAGACCTAACTC-3′ |
Fig. 3Jra antigen analysis by flow cytometry and family lineage. Jra antigen density was analyzed by flow cytometry, and the percentage of each antigen density was shown with 376 C/C and 421C/C defined as 100 %
Fig. 4Peripheral blood smear (a) and bone marrow fluid smear (c) at 3 days of age. Peripheral blood showed a few hypersegmented neutrophils and megathrombocytes. Hyperplastic bone marrow was observed; however, no immature erythroblasts or megakaryocytes were found. Peripheral blood smear (b) and bone marrow fluid smear (d) at 4 months of age. The hypersegmented neutrophils in peripheral blood disappeared, and no megathrombocytes were observed. In the bone marrow, strongly basophilic immature erythroblasts were observed, and megakaryocytes appeared normal. Both findings were observed using May-Giemsa staining