Family Studies of Type II CD36 Deficient Subjects: Linkage of a CD36 Allele to a Platelet-Specific mRNA Expression Defect(s) Causing Type II CD36 Deficiency

Author:

Kashiwagi Hirokazu1,Tomiyama Yoshiaki1,Kosugi Satoru1,Shiraga Masamichi1,Lipsky Robert H2,Nagao Nobuo3,Kanakura Yuzuru1,Kurata Yoshiyuki4,Matsuzawa Yuji1

Affiliation:

1. The Second Department of Internal Medicine, Osaka University Medical School, Japan

2. The Department of Biochemistry, The Jerome H. Holland Laboratory, American Red Cross, Japan

3. The Osaka Red Cross Blood Center, Japan

4. The Department of Blood Transfusion, Osaka University Hospital, Japan

Abstract

SummaryWe performed family studies with type II CD36 deficiency. In the Mi.Y family, the proband (YII.1) and his brother (YII.2) displayed a type II deficient phenotype. In the mother(YI.2), binding of the anti CD36 monoclonal antibody, 0KM5, to both platelets and monocytes was reduced as compared to CD36 positive control cells. In the father (YI.1), while 0KM5 binding to his platelets was reduced, that of his monocytes was almost the same as normal control monocytes. Analysis of genomic DNA showed that YI.2, YII.1 and YII.2 were heterozygous for a proline90→serine mutation, and showed that both alleles of YI.1 did not have the mutation. Analysis of CD36 cDNA showed that the Pro90 form of CD36 cDNA could be detected in monocytes, but not in platelets from YII.1 and YII.2. These data indicated that YII.1 and YII.2 could be compound heterozygotes; an allele having a platelet-specific mRNA expression defect(s), which was responsible for the different CD36 expression between their platelets and monocytes, and the Ser90 allele. YI.1 was suggested to be a carrier of the platelet-specific silent allele. The platelet-specific silent allele was linked to a specific genotype of a polymorphic microsatellite sequence in the CD36 gene, supporting our hypothesis that mRNA expression defect(s) occurred at or near the CD36 gene. In a second type IICD36 deficient family, we also obtained results consistent with this hypothesis.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Hematology

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