AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined a specific genetic variation, 1061delC, found in A(weak) alleles and identified 13 new variants with unique characteristics.
  • Researchers used DNA sequencing, flow cytometry, and molecular modeling to analyze red blood cells and enzyme activity from blood samples to investigate the effects of these genetic changes.
  • Findings revealed that while some variants showed diminished A antigen expression, most samples displayed patterns similar to other A subgroups, suggesting a complex relationship between the genetic variations and their phenotypic manifestations.

Article Abstract

Background: The 1061delC single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) has been reported mostly in the context of the common A(2)[A201] allele and typically produces an A(2) phenotype. This study evaluated new A(weak) alleles, each containing 1061delC.

Study Design And Methods: Twenty samples were referred to our laboratory for analysis due to suspected A(weak) phenotypes originally detected at the referring centers. ABO Exons 1 through 7 and flanking intronic regions were sequenced. A antigen expression on red blood cells was analyzed by flow cytometry. Plasma enzyme activity was studied in one case. Molecular three-dimensional modeling techniques studied the potential effects of amino acid changes on the resulting glycosyltransferases (GTs).

Results: Thirteen alleles were discovered, each featuring 1061delC with at least 1 of 12 additional SNPs in the coding region. One of these SNPs disrupts the translation initiation codon. Another constitutes the first reported change in the DVD motif. One SNP found in three alleles causes a substitution of one of the four amino acids that differentiates the wild-type A and B enzymes but plasma enzyme analysis by two methods showed only slightly decreased or normal A(2) activity. Flow cytometric analysis semiquantified the A antigen levels in 16 cases featuring 10 of the alleles and ranged from very weak to nearly A(2) levels. However, the majority of the samples displayed A(x)-like patterns. Molecular modeling of some of the GT variants indicated conformational changes that may explain the diminished A expression observed.

Conclusion: Missense SNPs were identified in 13 novel A(2)-like alleles, which produced a variety of A subgroup phenotypes.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1537-2995.2010.02670.xDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

plasma enzyme
8
alleles
6
weak phenotypes
4
phenotypes associated
4
associated novel
4
novel abo
4
abo alleles
4
alleles carrying
4
carrying a2-related
4
a2-related 1061c
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!