Abstract
Eight known abnormal hemoglobins in more than 40 patients have been identified with an allele-specific amplification procedure. These are mutants of the Aγ (Hb F-Sardinia), the δ (Hb Bz), the α (Hb Philadelphia), and the β (Hbs S, C, E, D-Los Angeles, O-Arab) globin genes. Adjustment to an unusually high annealing temperature improves the procedure greatly, allowing excellent discrimination between normal and mutant alleles, irrespective of the particular mismatch. The discrimination includes the Hbs C and E in the same reaction mixture - multiplex allele-specific amplification. The procedure can successively use primers with 3′-penultimate critical nucleotides, degenerative ends, and potentially dimerizing properties.