Abstract
Sequence analyses and dot-blot analyses with synthetic oligonucleotide probes have identified eight individuals in three Turkish families and one Bulgarian family with one chromosome having a C----T mutation at nucleotide position--101 relative to the Cap site of the beta-globin gene. This nucleotide is part of one of the conserved blocks of nucleotides within the promoter region; in vitro expression analyses with the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase system showed that this substitution will decrease the effectiveness of transcription. Five subjects had a thalassemia intermedia due to the additional presence of a known classical high hemoglobin (Hb) A2 beta-thalassemia mutation on the second chromosome; their hematologic condition was relatively mild. The three persons with a heterozygosity for the--101 C----T mutation had normal hematologic data without microcytosis but with high-normal levels of Hb A2 and a mild imbalance in chain synthesis. The newly discovered mutation is considered one of the silent types of beta- thalassemia. It is relatively rare because it was absent among several hundred normal and beta-thalassemia chromosomes.