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. 2001 Sep-Oct;27(5):850-60.
doi: 10.1006/bcmd.2001.0454.

Downeast anemia (dea), a new mouse model of severe nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia caused by hexokinase (HK(1)) deficiency

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Downeast anemia (dea), a new mouse model of severe nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia caused by hexokinase (HK(1)) deficiency

L L Peters et al. Blood Cells Mol Dis. 2001 Sep-Oct.

Abstract

A new spontaneous mutation in the A/J inbred mouse strain, downeast anemia (dea), causes severe hemolytic anemia with extensive tissue iron deposition and marked reticulocytosis. The anemia is present at birth and persists throughout life. The defect is inherited as an autosomal recessive and is transferable through bone marrow stem cells. The red cell morphology is consistent with a nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia, suggestive of a red cell enzymopathy. In linkage analysis, dea is nonrecombinant with the hexokinase-1 gene (Hk1) on mouse Chromosome 10. Expression of Hk1 is markedly decreased in dea erythroid tissues, and the transcript produced is larger than normal. Hexokinase enzyme activity is significantly decreased in dea tissues, including red cells, spleen, and kidney. Southern blot analyses revealed approximately 5.5 kb of additional sequence in the 5' portion of the dea Hk1 gene, which was identified by direct sequencing as an early transposon (ETn) insertion in intron 4. ETn insertions disrupt genes in several mouse models by a variety of mechanisms, including aberrant splicing of ETn sequences into the mRNA. We conclude that the primary gene defect in the dea mutation is in Hk1 and that dea is a model of generalized hexokinase deficiency, the first such model identified to date.

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