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PRESENTED AT THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON HEMOGLOBIN DISORDERS, KUWAIT, February 5–7th, 2011

α-Hemoglobin Stabilizing Protein: A Modulating Factor in Thalassemias?

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Pages 463-468 | Received 01 Mar 2011, Accepted 21 Mar 2011, Published online: 27 Sep 2011
 

Abstract

α-Hemoglobin stabilizing protein (AHSP) is a small protein of 102 residues induced by GATA-1, Oct-1- and EKLF. It is synthesized at a high level in the red blood cell precursors and acts as a chaperone protecting the α-hemoglobin (α-Hb) chains against precipitation. α-Hemoglobin stabilizing protein forms a heterodimer complex with α-Hb, then displaying modified oxygen binding kinetics. In the absence of AHSP, α-Hb oxidizes and precipitates within the erythrocyte precursors of bone marrow leading to apoptosis and defective erythropoiesis.

Several α-Hb variants with a structural abnormality, frequently located in the contact area between α-Hb and AHSP, exhibit instability and a thalassemia-like syndrome when they are associated with another α-thalassemia (α-thal) determinant. We suggest that this disorder could result from a disturbed interaction between the abnormal α-Hb chains and AHSP. Hb Groene Hart (Pro119>Ser) was one of the first examples in which we observed this abnormality. We later verified this mechanism in a list of several variants, now considered as being nondeletional α-thalassemias.

Conversely, it was hypothesized from studies on knock-out mice, that a defect affecting AHSP could cause a thalassemia-like syndrome. This was supported in man by studies showing that a decreased expression of AHSP linked to specific genetic clades could act as a modulating factor in some thalassemia phenotypes. It was also supported by our observation of a family from Southeast Asia, in which a child homozygous for an AHSP mutant (Val56>Gly) displayed, in his first year of life, a moderate thalassemia syndrome. This mutant AHSP was expressed in vitro and demonstrated by biochemical and biophysical studies to display a clear defective interaction with α-Hb, which could support the hypothesis that the reb blood cell (RBC) disorders of the child resulted from this abnormality. It therefore appears that AHSP is a factor with a key role in the formation of Hb tetramers and that structural abnormalities, either on the α-Hb or on the AHSP, may act as a thalassemia modulating factor.

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