Persistent Iron and Folate Deficiency in a Patient with Deletional Hereditary Persistence of Fetal Hemoglobin; the Effect on the Relative Levels of HB F andGγ Chains and the Corresponding mRNAS

H. Landman,Titus H.J. Huisman

Hemoglobin(1998)

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Abstract
We describe a Black female who has suffered for many years from an (often) severe anemia (Hb 5-9 g/dl) with iron deficiency (serum Fe 8 microg/dl; TIBC 462 microg/dl; ferritin 7 ng/ml or less) and folate deficiency. The patient had hypermenorrhea which was appropriately treated resulting in an increase in hemoglobin level but not affecting the Fe deficiency. Splenomegaly was present, perhaps resulting from a clay-eating habit, although this was consistently denied. The patient had an alpha-thalassemia-2 (-3.7 kb) trait and a deletional hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin (HPFH) (type II) which were inherited from her father. Over the last six years the level of Hb F varied between 8.5 and 16% (25-29% in the father), while the G gamma value was also low (15-22% versus 32-34% in the father). Comparable reductions were seen in the relative levels of gamma-mRNA and G gamma-mRNA. These data support results published by Adams et al who showed a severe reduction in Hb F level in another HPFH heterozygote with Fe deficiency; these investigations suggested that a reduction in alpha-globin synthesis resulted in preferential formation of alpha beta dimers rather than alpha gamma dimers. Our data suggest that the decrease of Hb F and G gamma levels is due to a reduction in gamma-mRNA formation, mainly of the G gamma type, rather than through a posttranslational mechanism alone.
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Key words
folate deficiency,fetal hemoglobin,iron,deletional hereditary persistence
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