1. Red cell membrane alteration involving protein 4.1 and protein 3 in a case of recessively inherited haemolytic anaemia
- Author
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Sandra Marques, C Feo, MT Ducluzeau, Isabelle Chaveroche, L Morle, Nicole Alloisio, M. Garbarz, Jean Delaunay, Gabriel Olim, B. Pothier, Pierre Boivin, and João Martins e Silva
- Subjects
Male ,Hemolytic anemia ,Anemia, Hemolytic ,Erythrocytes ,Hot Temperature ,Adolescent ,Hereditary elliptocytosis ,Anion Exchange Protein 1, Erythrocyte ,medicine ,Humans ,Sialoglycoproteins ,Spectrin ,education ,Band 3 ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Elliptocytes ,Erythrocyte Membrane ,Neuropeptides ,Membrane Proteins ,Blood Proteins ,Hematology ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Molecular biology ,Pedigree ,Cytoskeletal Proteins ,Red blood cell ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Biochemistry ,biology.protein ,Congenital hemolytic anemia - Abstract
We present 2 siblings with a severe congenital haemolytic anaemia. Red cells displayed a variety of abnormal shapes, including leptocytes, schizocytes and elliptocytes. Repeatedly, skeletal protein 4.1 appeared reduced by 30%. The 4.1a/4.1b ratio was normal despite the haemolytic state. No change could be detected in spectrin, nor in sialoglycoproteins. Band 3 was denser, narrower and displaced downward. The parents, who are consanguineous, were devoid of any obvious biochemical abnormality; however, their red cells were not normal. These 2 cases with reduced protein 4.1 clearly depart from 4.1 (-) hereditary elliptocytosis. The possibility of an altered binding of protein 4.1 to some other membrane component is discussed.
- Published
- 2009
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