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1 beta-like globin protein that can pair with alpha globin.
2 > Gln) was designed to increase affinity for alpha-globin.
3 advantage over beta(S) for dimerization with alpha-globin.
4 mib did not enhance the accumulation of free alpha-globin.
5 oduction of Hemoglobin A by stabilizing free alpha-globin.
6 e inhibition blocked the degradation of free alpha-globin.
7 interregulated PQC responses degrade excess alpha-globin.
8 has the potential to simultaneously suppress alpha-globin.
9 -globin chain to a highly ordered heme-bound alpha*-globin.
10 bbit HRI and amino acids 16-120 in mammalian alpha-globins.
11 athways exist, especially diversified in the alpha-globins.
13 s we show that a 26-nucleotide region of the alpha-globin 3'-untranslated region is an autonomous ele
15 th alphaCP would be disrupted, rendering the alpha-globin 3'UTR more susceptible to endoribonuclease
16 ins, individually or as a pair, can bind the alpha-globin 3'UTR unless they are complexed with the re
18 of the three major alphaCP isoforms and the alpha-globin 3'UTR was detected, suggesting that each of
19 ingle alphaCP molecule binds directly to the alpha-globin 3'UTR, resulting in a simple binary structu
20 g an in vitro-transcribed and polyadenylated alpha-globin 3'UTR, we have devised an in vitro mRNA dec
21 nce the binding efficiency of alphaCP to the alpha-globin 3'UTR, which in turn protected the ErEN tar
22 number of proteins were identified including alpha-globin, 6.8 kDa mitochondrial proteolipid, macroph
24 nt of Hbb(th1/th1) mice with RAP-536 reduced alpha-globin aggregates in peripheral red cells, decreas
25 sly defined role in detoxification of excess alpha-globin, AHSP also acts as a molecular chaperone to
26 1 of 4 alpha-globin genes (genotype Ahsp(-/-)alpha-globin*(alpha/alphaalpha)) exhibited more severe a
27 e that loss of expression of the major adult alpha-globin, alpha1, in two species of icefish (Chaenoc
29 emolysates showed that there are three major alpha globins and two beta globins in circulating erythr
32 arly demonstrated that direct suppression of alpha-globin and induction of gamma-globin are effective
33 involved in hemoglobin biosynthesis, such as alpha-globin and mitoferrin 1, demonstrating that Hipk2
34 d bone marrow cells, tetramers of two murine alpha-globin and two human betaA-globin molecules accoun
39 ngs demonstrate the utility of the expressed alpha-globin as a tool for elucidating the role of this
41 xpressing GATA-1, including those coding for alpha-globin, beta-globin, the erythropoietin receptor,
43 lysin), and one was weakly supported (baboon alpha-globin), but two examples (primate lysozyme and An
44 SP aggravates the toxicity of excessive free alpha-globin caused by beta-globin gene disruption in mi
45 nd support the hypothesis that AHSP promotes alpha globin chain stability during human erythropoiesis
46 der of alpha2 beta2 formation under limiting alpha-globin chain conditions showed Hb betaC112S > Hb A
47 f tetramer formation in vitro under limiting alpha-globin chain conditions showed Hb betaG16D, K120E
48 ng protein [AHSP]), which can stabilize free alpha globin chains in vitro, could influence disease se
49 n binding to membranes was assessed and only alpha globin chains were found, in contrast to other uns
50 inherited with beta-thalassemia, excess free alpha-globin chains are reduced significantly ameliorati
51 nd beta-globin chains with an excess of free alpha-globin chains causing ineffective erythropoiesis a
53 shown to modulate the accumulation of excess alpha-globin chains in murine beta-thalassemia and to de
55 ta(AS3)-globin monomers compete for limiting alpha-globin chains up to 82% of the tetramers formed is
58 haracterised by the presence of an excess of alpha-globin chains, which contribute to erythrocyte pat
63 cis-acting regulatory elements in the human alpha globin cluster but also demonstrated that there ar
64 iated with such an extensive deletion in the alpha-globin cluster implies that much of the DNA remove
65 oss 130 kb of chromatin containing the mouse alpha-globin cluster in cells representing all stages of
66 emoves a significant proportion of the human alpha-globin cluster including the psizeta1, alpha(D), p
72 sequence, IV, were all part of the ancestral alpha-globin-containing unit prior to its tandem duplica
73 t has been suggested that an ancient primate alpha-globin-containing unit was ancestral to the X, Y,
74 b from structural modification by preventing alpha-globin cross-links and oxidations of amino acids i
76 iple promoters in a mouse model in which the alpha-globin domain is extended to include several addit
79 nt AHSP promoted folding of newly translated alpha-globin, enhanced its refolding after denaturation,
82 roach to investigate how interactions of the alpha-globin enhancers are distributed between multiple
83 The review asks how remote elements regulate alpha globin expression and how natural mutations interf
86 cells, we observe the expected reduction in alpha-globin expression and a correction of the patholog
88 Here the authors use CRISP/Cas9 to reduce alpha-globin expression in hematopoietic precursors, and
90 ere we review the evidence that reduction of alpha-globin expression may provide an equally plausible
95 eta-globins in addition to genetic fusion of alpha-globins further stabilized the hemoglobin molecule
96 A spanning the mouse, chicken and pufferfish alpha globin gene clusters and compared them with the co
97 genes in beta thalassaemia heterozygotes or alpha globin gene deletions in beta thalassaemia homozyg
99 l of the elements required to fully regulate alpha globin gene expression from its natural chromosoma
100 ut a 150 kb chromatin segment containing the alpha globin gene locus as it changes from a poised, sil
103 do not localize to a discrete region of the alpha-globin gene and the results of internal deletions
105 ecies, the two paralogs at the 5'-end of the alpha-globin gene cluster (HBA-T1 and HBA-T2) are evolvi
108 central developmental event in the human (h)alpha-globin gene cluster is selective silencing of the
109 an association observed between MCH and the alpha-globin gene cluster variants demonstrated independ
110 ions of HBE1 variants with HCT and MCHC, the alpha-globin gene cluster variants with RBC and MCHC, an
111 n of human chromosome 16, which includes the alpha-globin gene cluster, but no molecular defects were
112 and potential regulatory proteins within the alpha-globin gene comprise an intragenic enhancer specif
116 pale, and microarray analysis revealed that alpha-globin gene expression was decreased in null versu
119 showed low abundance of the transduced human alpha-globin gene in their BFU-E and CFU-GEMM and the la
120 n effective vehicle for delivering the human alpha-globin gene into erythroid cells in utero, but, in
121 t the coinheritance of microdeletions in the alpha-globin gene locus in SSA patients confers "renopro
123 count; and several missense variants at the alpha-globin gene locus were associated with lower hemog
126 tors include beta-globin cluster haplotypes, alpha-globin gene number, and fetal hemoglobin expressio
127 This enhancer-independent expression of the alpha-globin gene requires extensive sequences not only
128 determine the role of these binding sites in alpha-globin gene transcription, we mutated the AP1/NFE2
129 nce of a many-body structural unit involving alpha-globin gene, its enhancers, and POL3RK gene for re
131 led that MIXL could induce expression of the alpha-globin gene, suggesting a functional conservation
136 globin genes were replaced with adult human alpha globin genes (alpha2alpha1) and a human fetal to a
139 n Sri Lanka, co-inheritance of either excess alpha globin genes in beta thalassaemia heterozygotes or
143 of microdeletions in one or two of the four alpha-globin genes (alpha-thalassemia) was associated wi
144 ompound mutants lacking both Ahsp and 1 of 4 alpha-globin genes (genotype Ahsp(-/-)alpha-globin*(alph
145 Rattus and Peromyscus each have three adult alpha-globin genes (HBA-T1, HBA-T2 and HBA-T3), Mus has
146 e arising from the deletion of three of four alpha-globin genes (HbH) and from hemoglobin H Constant
147 Spring (HCS), caused by the deletion of two alpha-globin genes and the Constant Spring mutation.
148 hism (rSNP) in a nongenic region between the alpha-globin genes and their upstream regulatory element
149 to other globin genes, the human and rabbit alpha-globin genes are expressed in transfected erythroi
150 ctive genomic remnants of adult notothenioid alpha-globin genes but have lost the gene that encodes a
152 The primary goals were to assess whether the alpha-globin genes exhibit the hallmarks of spatially va
153 pression of murine embryonic zeta- and adult alpha-globin genes holds that there is a switch in globi
154 functional divergence among the triplicated alpha-globin genes in Rattus and Peromyscus, the red blo
155 e gene-dense chromatin surrounding the human alpha-globin genes is frequently decondensed, independen
156 ediated erythroid-specific activation of the alpha-globin genes is impaired solely by the insertion o
159 e mutation, as well as microdeletions in the alpha-globin genes, could provide an epigenetic influenc
160 rs to influence the expression of the nearby alpha-globin genes, giving rise to reduced alpha-globin
161 ultilocus survey included two closely linked alpha-globin genes, HBA-T1 and HBA-T2, that underlie ada
165 e genotyped for beta thalassaemia mutations, alpha globin genotype and copy number and known genetic
167 on (3'UTR) C-rich motif of the nascent human alpha-globin (halpha-globin) transcript and enhances the
169 eta-spectrin or beta-globin promoter and the alpha-globin HS40 element, a gamma-globin lentiviral vec
170 bin (cpbeta) has been coexpressed with human alpha-globin in bacterial cells and shown to associate t
171 t known how accumulation of excess unmatched alpha-globin in beta thalassemia and beta-globin in alph
175 a switch from the coexpression of zeta- and alpha-globin in the embryonic yolk sac to exclusive expr
179 essed the expression of an erythroid marker, alpha-globin, indicating the ability to suppress cellula
181 n of normal amounts of hemoglobin, even when alpha-globin is deficient, indicating unique and previou
183 gradation study showed that di-ubiquitinated alpha-globin is rapidly degraded in contrast to the mono
184 II by the heterologous introns betaIVS-I or alpha-globin IVS-II, only partially substitute (16 and 3
185 In Escherichia coli and erythroid cells, alpha globin K99E stability is rescued on coexpression w
188 rative sequence analysis with the functional alpha-globin loci at human Chromosome 16p13.3 and mouse
189 pha- and beta-globin genes and of homologous alpha-globin loci that occurs at nuclear speckles and co
190 gulate chromatin structure of the endogenous alpha globin locus in developing erythroblasts will prov
193 adjacent to the telomere, which contains the alpha-globin locus and many widely expressed genes, repl
196 ase I hypersensitive site -40 (HS-40) of the alpha-globin locus is capable of greatly enhancing expre
198 homology to the pseudo-alpha2 region of the alpha-globin locus on human chromosome 16 was detected a
204 decreased oxidative stress and the amount of alpha-globin membrane precipitates, resulting in increas
205 aced between competing 5' splice sites in an alpha-globin minigene, direct hnRNPH/F-regulated alterna
206 re UBE2O is highly up-regulated, unassembled alpha-globin molecules that failed to assemble with beta
208 the 3' untranslated region (3'UTR) of human alpha-globin mRNA (alpha-complex) correlates with mRNA s
212 P complex regulates the production of mature alpha-globin mRNA by enhancing 3' processing of the halp
215 ls treated with HMBA, including induction of alpha-globin mRNA expression, assembly of hemoglobin and
217 ent analysis of nonsense codons in the human alpha-globin mRNA illustrates that the determinants of t
218 nclude that the alpha-complex stabilizes the alpha-globin mRNA in erythroid cells by a multifaceted a
220 obin gene at about 15% of the level of total alpha-globin mRNA in patients with severe beta-thalassem
221 ssion at 7% of the level of total endogenous alpha-globin mRNA in thalassemic erythroid cells resulte
222 monstrate that alpha CP is stably bound to h alpha-globin mRNA in vivo, that alpha-complex assembly o
226 n vivo, that alpha-complex assembly on the h alpha-globin mRNA is restricted to the 3'UTR C-rich moti
228 ma-globin expression averaged 166% of murine alpha-globin mRNA per copy in six pools and 105% in nine
229 els in MEL585 cells (averaging 75% of murine alpha-globin mRNA per copy) without reducing virus titer
230 l of Ank/(A)gamma mRNA averaged 11% of mouse alpha-globin mRNA per gene copy at all developmental sta
232 nique contribution of the alpha-complex to h alpha-globin mRNA stability and support a model in which
235 tro studies, and the functional state of the alpha-globin mRNA targeted by alphaCP has not been defin
236 teristic organization of the poly(A) tail on alpha-globin mRNA which is maintained during normal and
237 TR alphaCP complex may serve to "prepackage" alpha-globin mRNA with its stabilizing complex prior to
238 vel expression of human alpha-globin mRNA (h alpha-globin mRNA) in erythroid cells has been specifica
239 s to enter the 3'-untranslated region of the alpha-globin mRNA, results in accelerated mRNA decay.
254 s challenged this view, since both zeta- and alpha-globin mRNAs can be detected simultaneously in the
255 indicate that some naturally occurring human alpha globin mutations may destabilize the protein by in
258 ucleotide polymorphism in two closely linked alpha-globin paralogs and two closely linked beta-globin
259 her amino acid differences among triplicated alpha-globin paralogs of the Norway rat (Rattus norvegic
260 on at multiple unlinked gene duplicates: two alpha-globin paralogs on chromosome 8 and two beta-globi
267 ed that AP1/NFE2 binding sites in the murine alpha-globin PRE contribute to long-range alpha-globin g
272 y alpha-globin genes, giving rise to reduced alpha-globin production and to an alpha-thalassemia-like
273 recipitation that MRG15 was recruited to the alpha-globin promoter during dimethyl sulfoxide-induced
274 rise an intragenic enhancer specific for the alpha-globin promoter, but directed rearrangements of th
278 ated to its proximity to the remote upstream alpha-globin regulatory elements or reduced competition
279 83 and amino acids 928-960, could target the alpha-globin reporter, a cytosolic protein, to the membr
280 as identified and found to specifically bind alpha-globin, stabilize its structure, and limit the tox
281 n-S can be reversed by exchanging its normal alpha-globin subunits for zeta-globin, an endogenous, de
284 each of the five regulatory elements of the alpha-globin super-enhancer individually and in informat
285 hosphorylation of eIF2alphaP, reduces excess alpha-globin synthesis and enhances translation of ATF4
286 erage gamma-globin synthesis relative to non-alpha-globin synthesis prior to therapy was 3.19% +/- 1.
288 zing protein (AHSP) reversibly binds nascent alpha globin to maintain its native structure and facili
289 ecombinant AHSP binds multiple forms of free alpha-globin to stabilize their structures and inhibit p
290 ighted by the inability of highly structured alpha-globins to undergo ordered oligomerization to form
291 hich ultimately leads to a rapid increase in alpha-globin transcription, occurs late in maturation.
293 ich either the beta-globin Val67(E11) or the alpha-globin Val62(E11) is replaced by threonine have be
294 er define the biochemical properties of some alpha globin variants and support the hypothesis that AH
297 eta-thalassemic erythrocyte precursors, free alpha-globin was polyubiquitinated and degraded by the p
299 cture, and limit the toxic effects of excess alpha-globin, which are manifest in the inherited blood
300 ule produced by the genetic fusion of two di-alpha-globins with a flexible linker demonstrated a decr