4.4 Article

Diamond-Blackfan anemia: genotype-phenotype correlations in Italian patients with RPL5 and RPL11 mutations

Journal

HAEMATOLOGICA-THE HEMATOLOGY JOURNAL
Volume 95, Issue 2, Pages 206-213

Publisher

FERRATA STORTI FOUNDATION
DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2009.011783

Keywords

red cells; bone marrow failure; anemia; DBA; ribosomal proteins

Categories

Funding

  1. Banca del Piemonte
  2. Ministero Italiano della Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica
  3. Regione Piemonte
  4. Gruppo di Sostegno DBA Italia
  5. DBA Foundation
  6. Telethon Italia [GGP07242]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background Diamond-Blackfan anemia is a rare, pure red blood cell aplasia of childhood due to an intrinsic defect in erythropoietic progenitors. About 40% of patients display various malformations. Anemia is corrected by steroid treatment in more than 50%, of cases; non-responders need chronic transfusions or stem cell transplantation. Defects in the RPS19 gene, encoding the ribosomal protein S19, are the main known cause of Diamond-Blackfan anemia and account for more than 25% of cases. Mutations in RPS24, RPS17, and RPL35A described in a minority of patients show that Diamond-Blackfan anemia is a disorder of ribosome biogenesis. Two new genes (RPL5, RPL11), encoding for ribosomal proteins of the large subunit, have been reported to be involved in a considerable percentage of patients. Design and Methods In this genotype-phenotype analysis we screened the coding sequence and intron-exon boundaries of RPS14, RPS16, RPS24, RPL5, RPL11, and RPL35A in 92 Italian patients with Diamond-Blackfan anemia who were negative for RPS19 mutations. Results About 20%, of the patients screened had mutations in RPL5 or RPL11, and only 1.6%, in RPS24. All but three mutations that we report here are new mutations. No mutations were found in RPS14, RPS16; or RPL35A. Remarkably, we observed a higher percentage of somatic malformations in patients with RPL5 and RPL11 mutations. A close association was evident between RPL5 mutations and craniofacial malformations, and between hand malformations and RPL11 mutations. Conclusions Mutations in four ribosomal proteins account for around 50% of all cases of Diamond-Blackfan anemia in Italian patients. Genotype-phenotype data suggest that mutation screening should begin with RPL5 and RPL11 in patients with Diamond-Blackfan anemia with malformations.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available