1. Tandem inversion duplication within F8 Intron 1 associated with mild haemophilia A.
- Author
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Lannoy, N., Bandelier, C., Grisart, B., Reginster, M., Ronge‐Collard, E., Vikkula, M., and Hermans, C.
- Subjects
INTRONS ,SPLIT genes ,EXONS (Genetics) ,HAEMOPHILUS diseases ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
In approximately 90% of mild haemophilia A ( HA) patients, a missense mutation can be identified using complete gene sequencing. In this study, multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification analysis was performed as a second step in 10 French-speaking Belgian with mild HA presenting no detectable causal mutation by complete sequencing of the factor VIII (FVIII) ( F8) gene's 26 exons and its 1.2 kb of contiguous promoter sequence. This gene dosage technique enabled the detection of exon 1 duplications of F8 in three apparently unrelated subjects. Using array-comparative genomic hybridization, breakpoint analysis delimited the duplication extent to 210 kb in the F8 intron 1 and VBP1 gene intragenic position. We postulated that the rearrangement responsible for this duplication, never before reported, could be attributed to a symmetrical tandem inversion duplication, resulting in a large 233 kb rearrangement of F8 intron 1. This rearranged intron should lead to the production of a small number of normal mRNA transcripts in relation to the mild HA phenotype. Our analysis of the entire F8 mRNA from index case 1, particularly the segment containing exons 1-9, revealed normal amplification and sequencing. Reduced plasma FVIII antigen levels caused by cross-reacting material is associated with a quantitative deficiency of plasma FVIII. Male patients were unresponsive to desmopressin (1-deamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin). All patients displayed identical F8 haplotypes, despite not being related, which suggests a possible founder effect caused by a 210 kb duplication involving F8 exon 1. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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