The pattern of inheritance of several polymorphic restriction sites associated with the beta-gene cluster, and spanning a region of 52kb, demonstrates that a determinant for hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin (HPFH) segregates independently from the non-alpha globin gene cluster, as we postulated several years ago on purely genetical grounds.
Persistent expression of the gamma-globin gene in adult life has been supposed to be caused by loss of a region located about 3-4 kb 5' to the delta-globin gene from comparison of the extents of deletions in several different forms of delta beta-thalassemia and HPFH (hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin).
The possible linkage between a gene causing heterocellular hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin (HPFH) and human non-alpha globin loci has been studied in a large Sardinian family.
Comparison of these deletions with previously described ones in Negro and in a new Southern Italian case of hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin suggests that the deletion of a region centered at a cluster of repetitive sequences approximately 3.5 kilobases 5' to the delta-globin gene may be critical for the persistent expression of high levels of gamma-globin in hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin compared to delta beta-thalassemia.
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.