17 research outputs found

    The characteristics and spectrum of F9

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    Gestione Della Chioma Della Vite: influenza della cimatura dei germogli sui parametri vegeto-produttivi. (Grapevine canopy management: influence of shoot trimming on the performance of the cultivars Pinot grigio and Chardonnay).

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    Belvini, P; Costa, L.D; De Bei, R; Genovese, D. and Ponchia, G.http://direct.bl.uk/bld/PlaceOrder.do?UIN=218792698&ETOC=RN&from=searchengin

    Hepatitis C virus quasispecies in the natural course of HCV-related disease in patietns with haemophilia

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    Patients with haemophilia show high prevalence of hepatitis C infection but low rate of progressive liver disease when they are not co-infected with HIV. The balance between host immune system and hepatitis C virus (HCV) variability seems to play a major role in the evolution of the HCV-related disease. To address this point we have studied, in a group of selected patients with haemophilia, the composition and in some cases the evolution, of the highest variable envelope gene within the hypervariable region 1 (HVR1) of the HCV, which is the region more directly exposed to the host immune response. Five of 12 patients show a very high homogeneity of the HVR1 and four of those had severe progressive liver disease. These results seem to confirm the major role of the immunity in driving the variability of the HCV rather than the high degree of different HCV strains to which haemophiliacs have been in touch with, during their long-term replacement therapy. Our results seem in keeping with other studies on different type of patients, where a low degree of quasispecies variability has been demonstrated in relationship with the progression and the severity of their liver disease

    "Molecular genotyping of the italian cohort of patients with hemophilia B."

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    BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The aim of the study, funded by the Italian Ministry of Health, was to identify the causative mutation in all known patients with hemophilia B in Italy. DESIGN AND METHODS: Overall, 269 patients followed by 25 regional centers were considered in the study; after exclusion of the related individuals, 238 unrelated patients were analyzed (153 with severe, 59 with moderate and 26 with mild hemophilia B). Screening of the factor IX gene was performed using conformation sensitive gel electrophoresis (CSGE) followed by denaturing high performance liquid chromatography (dHPLC) or direct sequencing in negative cases, or by dHPLC/sequencing (36 cases). RESULTS: A mutation was identified in 236 of the 238 patients: 6 had large gene deletions (4 total and 2 partial), 14 small deletions, 1 combined deletion/insertion and 215 single nucleotide substitutions. A correlation was observed between the type of mutation and severity of hemophilia; however, a number of patients with the same genotype had varying severities of the disease. Eight of the 169 patients with severe hemophilia B (4.7%) developed inhibitors: 2 of these had a complete gene deletion, 1 had a large partial deletion (from exon A to part of exon H) while 5 had 3 different nonsense mutations. One patient with a nonsense mutation developed anaphylaxis. We also studied 65 families with hemophilia B involving 144 females (14 obligatory carriers, 85 carriers and 45 non-carriers) and performed 12 antenatal diagnoses. INTERPRETATION AND CONCLUSIONS: The data have been used to build the Italian mutation database to provide each family with knowledge of the disease-causing defect for genetic counseling. This Italian study confirms the marked heterogeneity of factor IX mutations in the population and the presence of a degree of genotype/phenotype discordance. The identification of the mutation can also be used to predict risk of inhibitor development

    Ribosome readthrough accounts for secreted full-length factor IX in hemophilia B patients with nonsense mutations.

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    We investigated the spontaneous ribosome readthrough, virtually unexplored in genes encoding secreted proteins, over coagulation F9 nonsense mutations. Expression of recombinant factor IX (FIX) in eukaryotic cells demonstrated appreciable levels of secreted FIX molecules for the mutations p.R162* (5 ± 0.3% of rFIX-wt antigen levels), p.R294* (3.1 ± 1.1%) and p.R298* (2.5 ± 0.7%), but not for the p.L103*. Western blotting revealed a large proportion of truncated molecules, which correlated with small amounts of full-length FIX (rFIX-162*, ∼0.5%; rFIX-294*; and rFIX-298*, ∼0.2%). Western blotting of plasma from FIX deficient (Hemophilia B) patients revealed traces of full-length FIX for the p.R294* and p.R298* mutations, but not for the p.L103* mutation that triggered major FIX mRNA decay. The detection of full-length proteins has clinical implication, particularly for post-therapeutic immunological complications in Hemophilia. Data in patients' plasma and in vitro, obtained in the proper protein context, support a ribosome readthrough gradient, consistent with its predicted determinants of efficiency
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