Hemoglobinopathy

Hemoglobinopathy is the medical term for a group of blood disorders and diseases that affect red blood cells.[1]

Hemoglobinopathy
Other namesHemoglobinopathies
SpecialtyHematology 

It can be a kind of genetic defect that results in abnormal structure of one of the globin chains of the hemoglobin molecule.[2] Hemoglobinopathies are inherited single-gene disorders; in most cases, they are inherited as autosomal co-dominant traits.[3] Common hemoglobinopathies include sickle-cell disease. It is estimated that 7% of world's population (420 million) are carriers, with 60% of total and 70% pathological being in Africa. Hemoglobinopathies are most common in populations from Africa, the Mediterranean basin and Southeast Asia.

Hemoglobinopathies are simply structural abnormalities in the globin proteins themselves.[4] Thalassemias, in contrast, usually result in underproduction of normal globin proteins, often through mutations in regulatory genes. The two conditions may overlap, however, since some conditions which cause abnormalities in globin proteins (hemoglobinopathy) also affect their production (thalassemia). Thus, some hemoglobinopathies are also thalassemias, but most are not.

Either hemoglobinopathy or thalassemia, or both, may cause anemia. Some well-known hemoglobin variants such as sickle-cell anemia and congenital dyserythropoietic anemia are responsible for diseases, and are considered hemoglobinopathies. However, many hemoglobin variants do not cause pathology or anemia, and thus are often not classed as hemoglobinopathies, because they are not considered pathologies. Hemoglobin variants are a part of the normal embryonic and fetal development, but may also be pathologic mutant forms of hemoglobin in a population, caused by variations in genetics. Other variants cause no detectable pathology, and are thus considered non-pathological variants.[5][6]

Migration patterns

Alkaline electrophoresis

In general on alkaline electrophoresis in order of increasing mobility are hemoglobins A2, E=O=C, G=D=S=Lepore, F, A, K, J, Bart's, N, I, and H.

In general a sickling test (sodium bisulfite) is performed on abnormal hemoglobins migrating in the S location to see if the red cells precipitate in solution.

Acid electrophoresis

In general on acid electrophoresis in order of increasing mobility are hemoglobins F, A=D=G=E=O=Lepore, S, and C.

This is how abnormal hemoglobin variants are isolated and identified using these two methods. For example, a Hgb G-Philadelphia would migrate with S on alkaline electrophoresis and would migrate with A on acid electrophoresis, respectively

use of iso electric focusing to determine quantitative differences in globin chain synthesis and high performance liquid chromatography that separates hemoglobins based on their various affinities for the column

Classification of Hemoglobinopathies

A) Qualitative

Structural abnormalities

Hb variants: Hb structural variants are qualitative defects that cause a change in the structure (primary, secondary, tertiary, and/or quaternary) of the Hb molecule. The majority of Hb variants do not cause disease and are most commonly discovered either incidentally or through newborn screening. A subset of Hb variants can cause severe disease when inherited in the homozygous or compound heterozygous state in combination with another structural variant or a thalassemia mutation. When clinical consequences occur, they may include anemia due to hemolysis or polycythemia due to alterations in the oxygen affinity of the abnormal Hb. Common examples of hemoglobin variants associated with hemolysis include sickle Hb (Hb S) and Hb C. Hb variants can usually be detected by protein-based assay methods; however, DNA-based methods may be required for variants with ambiguous or unusual results from protein analysis.

The major functional consequences of Hb structural variants can be classified as follows:

  • Change in physical properties (solubility): Common beta globin mutations can alter the solubility of the Hb molecule: Hb S polymerizes when deoxygenated and Hb C crystallizes.[7]
  • Reduced protein stability (instability): Unstable Hb variants are mutations that cause the Hb molecule to precipitate, spontaneously or upon oxidative stress, resulting in hemolytic anemia. Precipitated, denatured Hb can attach to the inner layer of the plasma membrane of the red blood cell (RBC) and form Heinz bodies.[8]
  • Change in oxygen affinity: High or low oxygen affinity Hb molecules are more likely than normal to adopt the relaxed (R, oxy) state or the tense (T, deoxy) state, respectively. High oxygen affinity variants (R state) cause polycythemia (e.g., Hb Chesapeake, Hb Montefiore). Low oxygen affinity variants can cause cyanosis (e.g., Hb Kansas, Hb Beth Israel).[9]
  • Oxidation of heme iron: Mutations of the heme binding site, particularly those affecting the conserved proximal or distal histidine residues, can produce M-hemoglobin, in which the iron atom in heme is oxidized from the ferrous (Fe2+) state to the ferric (Fe3+) state, with resultant methemoglobinemia.[10]

Globin chains: Many of the clinically important hemoglobinopathies are caused by missense mutations in the coding sequence of a globin gene (single nucleotide substitutions that alter the amino acid sequence of the resulting protein).

  1. Sickle cell disease':'
  • a common hereditary hemoglobinopathy caused by a point mutation in β-globin that promotes the polymerization of deoxygenated hemoglobin, leading to red cell distortion, hemolytic anemia, microvascular obstruction, and ischemic tissue damage.

Haeme

2. Unstable Hb:

  • Methemoglobinemia:
    • a condition caused by elevated levels of methemoglobin in the blood. Methaemoglobin is a form of Hb that contains the ferric [Fe3+] form of iron. The affinity for oxygen of ferric iron is impaired. The binding of oxygen to methaemoglobin results in an increased affinity for oxygen in the remaining heme sites that are in ferrous state within the same tetrameric haemoglobin unit.

B) Quantitative

Amount abnormalities

Copy number variation (e.g., deletion, duplication, insertion) is also a common genetic cause of Hb disorders, and complex rearrangements and globin gene fusions can also occur.

  • Thalassemias: Thalassemias are quantitative defects that lead to reduced levels of one type of globin chain, creating an imbalance in the ratio of alpha-like chains to beta-like chains. As noted above, this ratio is normally tightly regulated to prevent excess globin chains of one type from accumulating. The excess chains that fail to incorporate into Hb form non-functional aggregates that precipitate within the RBC. This can lead to premature RBC destruction in the bone marrow (beta thalassemia) and/or in the peripheral blood (alpha thalassemia). Types:
    • Alpha
    • Beta (Major)
    • Beta (Minor)

Hemoglobin variants

Haemoglobin variant are not necessarily pathological. For example, haemoglobin Valletta and haemoglobin Marseille are two haemoglobin variants which are non-pathological

Evolution

Some hemoglobinopathies (and also related diseases like glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency) seem to have given an evolutionary benefit, especially to heterozygotes, in areas where malaria is endemic. Malaria parasites live inside red blood cells, but subtly disturb normal cellular function. In patients predisposed for rapid clearance of red blood cells, this may lead to early destruction of cells infected with the parasite and increased chance of survival for the carrier of the trait.

Hemoglobin functions:

  • Transport of oxygen from the lungs to the tissues: This is due to the peculiar cooperation of the globin chains that allows the molecule to take in more oxygen where there is increased oxygen and to release oxygen in low concentration of oxygen.
  • Transport of carbon dioxide from the tissues to the lungs: The end product of tissue metabolism is acidic which increases hydrogen ions in solution. The hydrogen ions combine with bicarbonates to produce water and carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide is mop up by hemoglobin to favor this reversible reaction.
  • Transport of nitric oxide: Nitric oxide is a vasodilatator. This assists in the regulation of vascular reaction in times of stress as experienced during inflammation.

Pathology and organic structural abnormalities may lead to any of the following disease processes:

  • Anemia due to reduced life span of the red cells of reduced production of the cells e. g. hemoglobin S, C and E.
  • Increased oxygen affinity: The red blood cells do not release their oxygen content readily in hypoxic conditions. The bone marow therefore needs to produce more red blood cells and there is polycythemia.
  • Unstable hemoglobins: Red blood cells are easily destroyed under stress and hemolysis occurs with possible jaundice.
  • Methemoglobinemia: The iron in the heme portion of hemoglobin is easily oxidised and this reduces the ability of hemoglobin to bind oxygen. More deoxygenated hemoglobin are formed and the blood becomes cyanotic.


Hemoglobin Biology

Normal hemoglobins — Human Hbs are tetrameric proteins composed of two pairs of globin chains, each of which contains one alpha-like (α-like) chain and one beta-like (β-like) chain. Each globin chain is associated with an iron-containing heme moiety. Throughout life, the synthesis of the alpha-like and the beta-like (also called non-alpha-like) chains is balanced so that their ratio is relatively constant and there is no excess of either type.[13]

The specific alpha and beta-like chains that are incorporated into Hb are highly regulated during development:

  • Embryonic Hbs are expressed as early as four to six weeks of embryogenesis and disappear around the eighth week of gestation as they are replaced by fetal Hb.[14][15]Embryonic Hbs include:
    • Hb Gower-1, composed of two ζ globins (zeta globins) and two ε globins (epsilon globins) (ζ2ε2)
    • Hb Gower-2, composed of two alpha globins and two epsilon globins (α2ε2)
    • Hb Portland, composed of two zeta globins and two gamma globins (ζ2γ2)
  • Fetal Hb (Hb F) is produced from approximately eight weeks of gestation through birth and constitutes approximately 80 percent of Hb in the full-term neonate. It declines during the first few months of life and, in the normal state, constitutes <1 percent of total Hb by early childhood. Hb F is composed of two alpha globins and two gamma globins (α2γ2).
  • Adult Hb (Hb A) is the predominant Hb in children by six months of age and onward; it constitutes 96-97% of total Hb in individuals without a hemoglobinopathy. It is composed of two alpha globins and two beta globins (α2β2).
  • Hb A2 is a minor adult Hb that normally accounts for approximately 2.5-3.5% of total Hb from six months of age onward. It is composed of two alpha globins and two delta globins (α2δ2).
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References

  1. CDC (2019-02-08). "Hemoglobinopathies Research". Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Retrieved 2019-05-05.
  2. "hemoglobinopathy" at Dorland's Medical Dictionary
  3. Weatherall DJ, Clegg JB. Inherited haemoglobin disorders: an increasing global health problem. Bull World Health Organ. 2001;79(8):704-712.
  4. "Hemoglobinopathies and Thalassemia". medicalassistantonlineprograms.org/.
  5. "Hemoglobin Variants". Lab Tests Online. American Association for Clinical Chemistry. 2007-11-10. Retrieved 2008-10-12.
  6. Huisman THJ (1996). "A Syllabus of Human Hemoglobin Variants". Globin Gene Server. Pennsylvania State University. Retrieved 2008-10-12.
  7. Eaton, William A.; Hofrichter, James (1990). "Sickle Cell Hemoglobin Polymerization". Advances in Protein Chemistry. 40: 63–279. doi:10.1016/S0065-3233(08)60287-9. ISBN 9780120342402. PMID 2195851.
  8. Srivastava P, Kaeda J, Roper D, Vulliamy T, Buckley M, Luzzatto L. Severe hemolytic anemia associated with the homozygous state for an unstable hemoglobin variant (Hb Bushwick). Blood. 1995Sep1;86(5):1977–82.
  9. Percy MJ, Butt NN, Crotty GM, Drummond MW, Harrison C, Jones GL, et al. Identification of high oxygen affinity hemoglobin variants in the investigation of patients with erythrocytosis. Haematologica. 2009Sep1;94(9):1321–2.
  10. Percy MJ, Butt NN, Crotty GM, Drummond MW, Harrison C, Jones GL, et al. Identification of high oxygen affinity hemoglobin variants in the investigation of patients with erythrocytosis. Haematologica. 2009Sep1;94(9):1321–2.
  11. Joseph Bonavetura and Austin Riggs, March 1968, "Hemoglobin Kansas, A Human Hemoglobin with a Neutral Amino Acid Substitution and an Abnormal Oxygen Equilibrium", The Journal of Biological Chemistry, Vol. 243, No. 5, Issue of March 10, pages 980-991.
  12. "rs33948057". dbSNP. National Center for Biotechnology Information. Retrieved 7 February 2014.
  13. Weatherall DJ. The New Genetics and Clinical Practice, Oxford University Press, Oxford 1991.
  14. Huisman TH. The structure and function of normal and abnormal haemoglobins. In: Bailliere's Clinical Haematology, Higgs DR, Weatherall DJ (Eds), W.B. Saunders, London 1993. p.1.
  15. Natarajan K, Townes TM, Kutlar A. Disorders of hemoglobin structure: sickle cell anemia and related abnormalities. In: Williams Hematology, 8th ed, Kaushansky K, Lichtman MA, Beutler E, et al. (Eds), McGraw-Hill, 2010. p.ch.48.
Classification
External resources
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