Summary
The diagnostic evaluation of Diamond Blackfan Anaemia (DBA), an inherited bone marrow failure syndrome characterised by erythroid hypoplasia, is challenging because of a broad phenotypic ...variability and the lack of functional screening tests. In this study, we explored the potential of untargeted metabolomics to diagnose DBA. In dried blood spot samples from 18 DBA patients and 40 healthy controls, a total of 1752 unique metabolite features were identified. This metabolic fingerprint was incorporated into a machine‐learning algorithm, and a binary classification model was constructed using a training set. The model showed high performance characteristics (average accuracy 91·9%), and correct prediction of class was observed for all controls (n = 12) and all but one patient (n = 4/5) from the validation or ‘test’ set (accuracy 94%). Importantly, in patients with congenital dyserythropoietic anaemia (CDA) – an erythroid disorder with overlapping features – we observed a distinct metabolic profile, indicating the disease specificity of the DBA fingerprint and underlining its diagnostic potential. Furthermore, when exploring phenotypic heterogeneity, DBA treatment subgroups yielded discrete differences in metabolic profiles, which could hold future potential in understanding therapy responses. Our data demonstrate that untargeted metabolomics in dried blood spots is a promising new diagnostic tool for DBA.
Adenosine Triphosphatase (ATPase) Phospholipid Transporting 11C gene (ATP11C) encodes the major phosphatidylserine (PS) flippase in human red blood cells (RBCs). Flippases actively transport ...phospholipids (e.g., PS) from the outer to the inner leaflet to establish and maintain phospholipid asymmetry of the lipid bilayer of cell membranes. This asymmetry is crucial for survival since externalized PS triggers phagocytosis by splenic macrophages. Here we report on pathophysiological consequences of decreased flippase activity, prompted by a patient with hemolytic anemia and hemizygosity for a novel c.2365C > T p.(Leu789Phe) missense variant in ATP11C. ATP11C protein expression was strongly reduced by 58% in patient‐derived RBC ghosts. Furthermore, functional characterization showed only 26% PS flippase activity. These results were confirmed by recombinant mutant ATP11C protein expression in HEK293T cells, which was decreased to 27% compared to wild type, whereas PS‐stimulated ATPase activity was decreased by 57%. Patient RBCs showed a mild increase in PS surface exposure when compared to control RBCs, which further increased in the most dense RBCs after RBC storage stress. The increase in PS was not due to higher global membrane content of PS or other phospholipids. In contrast, membrane lipid lateral distribution showed increased abundance of cholesterol‐enriched domains in RBC low curvature areas. Finally, more dense RBCs and subtle changes in RBC morphology under flow hint toward alterations in flow behavior of ATP11C‐deficient RBCs. Altogether, ATP11C deficiency is the likely cause of hemolytic anemia in our patient, thereby underlining the physiological role and relevance of this flippase in human RBCs.
ATP11C deficiency is associated with reduced red blood cell flippase activity and increased phosphatidylserine surface exposure
Pyruvate kinase deficiency (PKD) is the most common cause of chronic hereditary non-spherocytic hemolytic anemia and results in a broad spectrum of disease. The diagnosis of PKD requires a high index ...of suspicion and judicious use of laboratory tests that may not always be informative, including pyruvate kinase enzyme assay and genetic analysis of the PKLR gene. A significant minority of patients with PKD have occult mutations in non-coding regions of PKLR which are missed on standard genetic tests. The biochemical consequences of PKD result in hemolytic anemia due to red cell pyruvate and ATP deficiency while simultaneously causing increased red cell 2,3-diphosphoglycerate, which facilitates oxygen unloading. This phenomenon, in addition to numerous other factors such as genetic background and differences in splenic function result in a poor correlation between symptoms and degree of anemia from patient to patient. Red cell transfusions should, therefore, be symptom-directed and not based on a hemoglobin threshold. Patients may experience specific complications, such as paravertebral extramedullary hematopoiesis and chronic debilitating icterus, which require personalized treatment. The decision to perform splenectomy or hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is nuanced and depends on disease burden and long-term outlook given that targeted therapeutics are in development. In recognition of the complicated nature of the disease and its management and the limitations of the PKD literature, an international working group of ten PKD experts convened to better define the disease burden and manifestations. This article summarizes the conclusions of this working group and is a guide for clinicians and investigators caring for patients with PKD.
Summary
Congenital dyserythropoietic anaemia type II (CDAII) is a rare autosomal recessive disease characterized by ineffective erythropoiesis, haemolysis, erythroblast morphological abnormalities, ...hypoglycosylation of some red blood cell membrane proteins, particularly band 3, and mutations in the SEC23B gene. We report the analysis of 101 patients from 91 families with a median follow‐up of 23 years (range 0–65); 68 patients are newly reported. Clinical and haematological parameters were separately analysed in early infancy and thereafter, when feasible. Molecular analysis of the SEC23B gene confirmed the high heterogeneity of the defect, leading to the identification of 54 different mutations, 24 of which are newly described. To evaluate the genotype‐phenotype correlation, patients were grouped according to their genotype (two missense mutations vs. one missense/one drastic mutation) and assigned to two different severity gradings based on laboratory data and on therapeutic needs; by this approach only a weak genotype‐phenotype correlation was observed in the analysed groups.
Diamond−Blackfan anemia (DBA) is one of the inherited bone marrow failure syndromes marked by erythroid hypoplasia. Underlying variants in ribosomal protein (RP) genes account for 80% of cases, ...thereby classifying DBA as a ribosomopathy. In addition to RP genes, extremely rare variants in non-RP genes, including GATA1, the master transcription factor in erythropoiesis, have been reported in recent years in patients with a DBA-like phenotype. Subsequently, a pivotal role for GATA-1 in DBA pathophysiology was established by studies showing the impaired translation of GATA1 mRNA downstream of the RP haploinsufficiency. Here, we report on a patient from the Dutch DBA registry, in which we found a novel hemizygous variant in GATA1 (c.220+2T>C), and an Iranian patient with a previously reported variant in the initiation codon of GATA1 (c.2T>C). Although clinical features were concordant with DBA, the bone marrow morphology in both patients was not typical for DBA, showing moderate erythropoietic activity with signs of dyserythropoiesis and dysmegakaryopoiesis. This motivated us to re-evaluate the clinical characteristics of previously reported cases, which resulted in the comprehensive characterization of 18 patients with an inherited GATA-1 defect in exon 2 that is presented in this case-series. In addition, we re-investigated the bone marrow aspirate of one of the previously published cases. Altogether, our observations suggest that DBA caused by GATA1 defects is characterized by distinct phenotypic characteristics, including dyserythropoiesis and dysmegakaryopoiesis, and therefore represents a distinct phenotype within the DBA disease spectrum, which might need specific clinical management.