α(0)-Thalassemia occurs from a deletion of 2 linked α-globin genes and interaction of these defective genes leads to hemoglobin (Hb) Bart's hydrops fetalis, the most severe and lethal thalassemia syndrome.
Our study showed that in most of the alpha thalassemia carriers just one copy of alpha globin gene was absent and they are not at risk of having children with Hb H disease or hydrops fetalis; however, up to 2.2% of neonates were carriers for ααα(anti3.7) triplication and they will be at risk for having a child with thalassemia intermediate if they marry a person which is a carrier of beta thalassemia.
Moreover, a low amount of maternal cell contamination in the fetus specimen for the prenatal diagnosis of hemoglobin Barts hydrops fetalis as well as the rare multiplicated α-globin genes can be identified using this method.
It is a blood disorder that, in its lethal form caused by deletion of all four copies of the α-globin gene, results in the demise of the affected fetus, a condition referred to as haemoglobin (Hb) Bart's hydrops fetalis syndrome.
In the period from 1995 to 1999, molecular analysis of 46 couples in which haematological data were consistent with deletion of two alpha-globin genes in both partners indicated that only 13 of them were actually at risk for haemoglobin (Hb) Bart's hydrops fetalis and prenatal diagnosis was provided in 16 pregnancies.
Mutations at the alpha-globin locus are the most common class of mutations in humans, with deletion of all four adult alpha-globin genes resulting in the perinatal lethal condition haemoglobin Barts hydrops fetalis.
The deletions in the zeta-alpha globin gene cluster in two infants with the hemoglobin Bart's hydrops fetalis syndrome (homozygous alpha thalassemia 1) have been mapped by restriction endonuclease analysis using a zeta-specific probe.
We observed the total deletion of alpha-globin genes in homozygous alpha-thalassemia (hydrops fetalis with hemoglobin Bart's) and the deletion of particular beta and beta-like sequences in cases homozygous for hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin and deltabeta-thalassemia.