It is not unusual for a disease to be considered rare when first described and to prove to be much more prevalent as the medical profession becomes aware of its existence. This seemed to be the case with hereditary hemochromatosis. But now the perception that hemochromatosis is a common disease has undergone a sudden reversal. Although everyone does not yet agree, the data that have accumulated in the past year provide compelling evidence that the actual disease, as contrasted with the genotype or biochemical phenotype, is quite rare after all. In this perspective I will review how an exaggerated impression of the clinical penetrance of the Cys282Tyr mutation of HFE developed, consider some of the factors that may be important in determining whether a person with HFEmutations develops the clinical stigmata of hemochromatosis, and suggest what further studies are needed to better understand the low penetrance of the HFE mutations.

In a classical 1935 monograph that raised the profession's awareness of the disease Sheldon1 wrote, “It may be accepted that haemochromatosis is a rare disease.” Twenty years later, a classical review by Finch and Finch2concluded, “In general hospitals idiopathic hemochromatosis is recognized once in about 20 000 and once in about 7000 hospital deaths. These figures suggest that in the United States there are about 20 000 people with idiopathic hemochromatosis of which only a small fraction are in the symptomatic stage.” These reviews did much to raise our awareness of this interesting disorder, but reflected the general belief that hemochromatosis was a very uncommon disease.

By the early 1980s hemochromatosis had come to be regarded as quite a common disorder in northern European populations.3 I believe that it is no accident that this new perception coincided with establishment of linkage with human leukocyte antigen A (HLA-A) and HLA-B on chromosome 6 and with the development of facile methods for the measurement of serum iron, transferrin saturation, and ferritin levels. An authoritative review4 written by the Practice Guideline Development Task Force of the College of American Pathologists proposed that “Diagnosis of HH (hereditary hemochromatosis) requires observation of elevated TS [transferrin saturation] 60% on at least 2 occasions in the absence of other known causes of elevated TS.” This report, written shortly before the HFE gene was cloned, cited 3 large studies in which hemochromatosis was detected by screening for transferrin saturations. The prevalence was 2.4, 5.6, and 8.3 per 1000 in these surveys. The cloning of HFE gene removed all doubt regarding the gene frequency; the estimate of 5 homozygotes per 1000 proved to be an accurate one.

Gradually and subtly the definition of hemochromatosis had shifted from a clinical disorder to a diagnosis based on the saturation of plasma transferrin with iron. The distinction between the biochemical changes that are associated with the hemochromatosis genotype, on the one hand, and the disease that causes grave illness and shortens life span, on the other, had become blurred. Reflecting this trend, Felitti and I wrote in 1999, “Hereditary hemochromatosis is the most common hereditary disease of Northern Europeans with a prevalence of approximately 5 per 1000.”5 The literature is now replete with exhortations such as, “Both phenotypic and genetic screening are highly cost effective for detection of iron loaded individuals in the general population”6 and “…to benefit all those at risk there is an ethical imperative to implement screening for the major mutation causing hemochromatosis now rather than wait years for confirmation of what is currently known—that at least half of those with predisposing genotype will develop some form of the disease.”7 

Because the disease is readily treated by phlebotomy, population screening would, indeed, be an imperative if most persons who are homozygous for the Cys282Tyr mutation became ill from it. And it has been written that they do. For example it was concluded from a meta-analysis of data from 7 studies that clinical manifestations were present in 50% of male and 44% of female homozygotes.8Edwards et al9 wrote, “Although the time required to become iron loaded is variable, it is clear that most homozygotes will eventually become symptomatic.” More recently, Olynk et al10 reported that “8 of the 16 homozygous subjects had clinical findings that were consistent with the presence of hereditary hemochromatosis, such as hepatomegaly, skin pigmentation, and arthritis.” Bulaj et al11 reported that 52% of males older than 52 years and 16% of females older than 50 years with the homozygous genotype had at least one “disease-related condition.” An expert panel12 held that 95% of patients older than 45 years and homozygous for the Cys282Tyr mutation have significant morbidity from hemochromatosis. Earlier this year Niederau and Strohmeyer6 wrote, “Genetic hemochromatosis is one of the most frequent inborn errors of metabolism. Up to one half of these patients will already have an irreversible complication such as liver cirrhosis, diabetes mellitus or cardiomyopathy.” Those without cirrhosis were characterized as “precirrhotic,” with the clear implication that cirrhosis was sure to follow.

All of these investigations of the penetrance of hemochromatosis had one flaw in common; the prevalence of the findings attributed to hemochromatosis was not reported in matched controls.

Although the idea that the homozygous state for hemochromatosis was clinically highly penetrant had become firmly entrenched, there were reasons to doubt such a premise. It had been found that the prevalence of homozygotes for the Cys282TyrHFE mutation seemed to be no lower in the aged than in the young,13 14 a finding that seemed difficult to reconcile with the concept of a disease that killed frequently.

Although the studies that concluded that the penetrance of hereditary hemochromatosis was high did not compare clinical manifestations of homozygotes with matched controls, there was a single investigation in which an attempt had been made to compare patients with hemochromatosis with a sample from the general population with respect to arthritis, fatigue, liver disease, or diabetes. No difference could be found except possibly for an earlier age of onset.15 This result was especially surprising since the patient group consisted entirely of persons who had been diagnosed with hemochromatosis, a particularly biased sample. What was needed was a population-based screening program in which the health status of homozygotes could be documented prior to their diagnosis. We have now had the opportunity to conduct such an investigation. In a study performed on 41 238 subjects attending a health appraisal clinic at Kaiser-Permanente in southern California all were genotyped and comparison made between 152 Cys282Tyr homozygotes and 22 347 ethnically matched subjects with the wild-typeHFE.16 Many of the subjects were retirees, and the average age was about 58 years. Each had a relatively comprehensive laboratory evaluation, and extensively validated questionnaires were completed by all subjects before a genetic diagnosis had been established. This removed the bias that would be introduced once the patients had been informed that they were homozygous for the hemochromatosis mutation. A possible confounding variable was created by the fact that phenotypic screening for hemochromatosis had been carried out previously at the same clinical facility; 45 of the homozygotes had previously been diagnosed, not because of apparent disease, but because an elevated transferrin saturation had been detected earlier. However, the results were the same whether these patients were included or excluded.17 46 The only difference detected between homozygotes and controls was a significantly higher prevalence of abnormal liver-function tests, aminotransferase activities, and serum collagen IV levels. Only 1 of the 152 subjects had multiple stigmata of classical clinical hemochromatosis, including diabetes, cardiomyopathy, and cirrhosis. Having been convinced, or as it now seems, misled, into believing that hemochromatosis was a common scourge, we tried to find extenuating reasons for the lack of patients with severe hemochromatosis in our cohort. Had they all died, or were they hospitalized on a liver unit or in a diabetic ward? Apparently not. The number of homozygotes was actually slightly in excess of that predicted by the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (Figure1), and the age distribution of our patients was the same as that of controls. Not only had we not lost patients to nonattendance or death, but also the effect of homozygosity for the Cys282Tyr mutation on life span was sufficiently small that it could not be detected in a cohort of 152 patients. Thus, it seemed unlikely that the aberration of liver function that we had detected in 10% to 20% of the patients had a significant effect on life span and presumably on health.

Fig. 1.

The distribution of Cys282Tyr genotypes among the 30 672 white subjects in the Kaiser-Permanente epidemiologic study.

The gene frequency for the Cys282Tyr mutation was 0.0622 (q) in this population, and the frequency of the Cys282Cys (wt [wild type]), 0.9378 (p). (The His63Asp mutation does not need to be taken into account in this calculation). The Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium predicts that in a randomly breeding population, the distribution of the 3 possible genotypes (wt/wt, Cys282Tyr/wt, Cys282Tyr/Cys282Tyr) will be p2, 2 × pq, and q2. The solid bars (▪) represent these predicted frequencies; the open bars (■), the actual frequencies found in the population. It is clear that there is no deficiency of homozygotes. If this analysis were carried out on the polymorphisms that cause sickle disease, cystic fibrosis, or Tay-Sachs disease there would be a marked deficit of homozygotes in the population, since most would not have survived into middle age.

Fig. 1.

The distribution of Cys282Tyr genotypes among the 30 672 white subjects in the Kaiser-Permanente epidemiologic study.

The gene frequency for the Cys282Tyr mutation was 0.0622 (q) in this population, and the frequency of the Cys282Cys (wt [wild type]), 0.9378 (p). (The His63Asp mutation does not need to be taken into account in this calculation). The Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium predicts that in a randomly breeding population, the distribution of the 3 possible genotypes (wt/wt, Cys282Tyr/wt, Cys282Tyr/Cys282Tyr) will be p2, 2 × pq, and q2. The solid bars (▪) represent these predicted frequencies; the open bars (■), the actual frequencies found in the population. It is clear that there is no deficiency of homozygotes. If this analysis were carried out on the polymorphisms that cause sickle disease, cystic fibrosis, or Tay-Sachs disease there would be a marked deficit of homozygotes in the population, since most would not have survived into middle age.

Close modal

Other uncontrolled studies reported within the past year support the conclusions from the Kaiser study, providing confidence that the results do not represent a conclusion based on a geographic anomaly or a methodologic flaw. In the largest of the recent studies, Asberg et al18 examined 65 238 Norwegians. Given the reported gene frequency of 0.078 among Norwegians,19 one would expect to find 400 homozygotes among these subjects. In fact 1698 persons with high transferrin saturation on first measurement were found. After genotyping and repeating transferrin saturation measurements and performing serum ferritin determinations, 179 homozygotes for the Cys282Tyr mutation were selected for biopsy because of high serum ferritin levels. Severe organ damage was found in only 4 of the homozygotes for the Cys282Tyr mutation (1.0% of all of the putative homozygotes; 8.8% of those actually biopsied) and “fibrosis at least moderate” in an additional 12. Thus, the numbers from the San Diego study are very similar to those emerging from Norway. In England, too, penetrance is very low.20 Here 63 homozygotes were found among 10 556 blood donors. All were interviewed and none showed clinical signs of iron overload. In the northeastern United States 4865 patients attending HMOs or general practice were genotyped; 12 homozygotes were found, and none had cardiac dysfunction or cirrhosis.21 

It is true, of course, that the exact clinical penetrance of the hemochromatosis mutations remains unknown, but arguing over whether it is 1% or 4% of homozygotes will avail us little. It is better for us to accept the fact that we have been mistaken concerning the high penetrance of this disorder. The hemochromatosis mutationis common; the hemochromatosis disease is, as Finch and Sheldon originally thought, rare. The challenge now is to understand why a few homozygotes for the Cys282Tyr mutation develop devastating iron-storage disease, while the majority go through life unscathed by this genotype.

Understanding the reason for the different expression of the disease in different people is an example of the challenge that we face in human genetics. As it has become easy to genotype patients with common single-gene disease we have become increasingly aware of the fact that in many disorders, not just hemochromatosis, but Gaucher disease, cystic fibrosis, hemophilia, pyruvate kinase deficiency, and virtually every other disorder, patients with the same genotype have different clinical phenotypes even though their mutant genotype is identical.22 There are 3 potential explanations for this variable penetrance—epigenetic, environmental, and genetic.

Epigenetic mechanisms

An epigenetic mechanism that could account for differences in phenotypes in genotypically identical individuals has recently been proposed. There are many retrotransposons in the mammalian genome, and some of these may influence the expression of nearby genes. Whitelaw and Martin23 recently suggested that silencing of retrotransposons occurs during early embryogenesis, but that this process is incomplete and random, producing a mosaic pattern of retrotransposon expression in somatic cells. This is an elegant concept that requires further evaluation, but one that we cannot yet approach in human disease.

Environmental factors

There are surely environmental variables that affect the expression of hemochromatosis. One might expect that the level or type of iron intake might have an influence, but normal diet provides a rather narrow range of iron and most patients with hemochromatosis have not taken iron medication. It therefore seems doubtful that the role of diet is an important one.

The effect of alcoholism has always been recognized. Sheldon1 found that about one fifth of all patients and one third of females had a history of alcoholism. In fact, some earlier investigators considered alcohol to be the cause of hemochromatosis, and later its role was emphasized by MacDonald24 who believed that hemochromatosis had no genetic basis at all.

The data from our study of the Kaiser-Permanente population show an effect of alcohol intake. Table 1 shows the effect of the frequency of alcohol intake on serum collagen IV levels, a measure of hepatic fibrosis. There is a statistically highly significant effect (P < .001), but the data also make clear that alcohol intake cannot be the most important or the only variable. Of the homozygotes with elevated collagen IV levels, 8 never drank and 7 stated that they hardly ever used alcohol. We have much additional information regarding the relationship of alcohol intake to manifestations of hemochromatosis in the Kaiser population, including the number of drinks taken and the frequency of very heavy drinking, and this is under analysis. There seems, for example, to be no relationship at all between serum ferritin levels of the homozygotes in our study and frequency of drinking. Clearly there must be other risk factors that are of major importance. Indeed, other hepatotoxic influences may be important. Hepatitis C may well worsen the disease,25 but most patients with clinical hemochromatosis do not have hepatitis C.

Table 1.

The distribution of homozygotes for the Cys282Tyr mutation with respect to elevations of serum collagen level to greater than 187 ng/mL

Frequency of alcohol intakeSerum collagen IV level normal (%)Serum collagen IV level elevated (%)
Never/hardly ever 50 (56) 15 (41)  
Less than 3 times/week 26 (29) 6 (16)  
More than 3 times/week 4 (4) 10 (28) 
Daily 9 (10) 5 (14) 
Frequency of alcohol intakeSerum collagen IV level normal (%)Serum collagen IV level elevated (%)
Never/hardly ever 50 (56) 15 (41)  
Less than 3 times/week 26 (29) 6 (16)  
More than 3 times/week 4 (4) 10 (28) 
Daily 9 (10) 5 (14) 

Genetic modifiers

The possibility that mutations or polymorphisms in other genes are involved in determining a severe disease phenotype is an attractive one. Examples of mutations that produce a severe genotype only when another mutation is also present exist but are not commonly appreciated. In the case of thrombophilia, the combination of 2 defects, each of which alone have a modest thrombophilic effect, gives rise to more severe disease.26 For example, patients who inherit both factor V Leiden and protein C deficiency are much more likely to develop thrombotic disease than are those with only one or the other mutation.27 Alone, neither glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency nor the uridine diphosphate (UDP) glucuronosyl transferase mutation that gives rise to Gilbert syndrome produce severe jaundice, but it is the combination that produces potentially deadly hyperbilirubinemia in the newborn.28 

Defects in the HFE gene are by no means the only cause of iron-storage disease. It seems likely that mutations of other genes involved in iron homeostasis occurring in homozygotes for the Cys282TyrHFE mutation may be the ones who develop severe iron-storage disease. In humans, mutations of transferrin,29transferrin receptor-2,30-32ferroportin,33,34 ceruloplasmin,35,36 and hepcidin47 have all been associated with iron-storage disease. In mice, knock-outs of β2-microglobulin37,38 and of Usf2 causing hepcidin deficiency result in excess iron storage. All of these candidates have already been sequenced in sufficient numbers of patients with hemochromatosis to rule out an important role in determining the phenotype in patients22,39; others need to be investigated. It has been suggested that the tumor necrosis factor promoter polymorphism might be a factor affecting severity of liver damage in hemochromatosis,40 but we have not seen a significant effect in our own larger series.41What, then, are some of the other mutations that need to be investigated? The common duplication polymorphism of haptoglobin has been associated with increased ferritin levels but not with increased hepatic fibrosis in homozygotes for the Cys282Tyr HFEmutation.42 The studies reported so far are small, and the patients with hemochromatosis selected for study were heavily biased toward those with clinical manifestations. A particularly attractive gene to attempt to identify is the one that causes juvenile hemochromatosis. This gene was mapped to chromosome 1q several years ago43 in several Italian families, and the critical interval seems to have been narrowed in more recent studies.44 45 It is probably only 1 to 2 megabases in size, but unfortunately it is not accurately represented by the human genome project in GenBank. There seem to be major duplications in this region, and the published assembly, although continually undergoing revision, is not correct. Finding the gene that causes juvenile hemochromatosis would certainly shed some new light on the regulation of iron metabolism, since none of the genes that have been found so far to produce dysregulation of iron homeostasis are in this interval. It seems entirely possible that mutations of the same gene that causes juvenile hemochromatosis may help to explain why only few patients homozygous for the Cys282Tyr mutation develop severe iron-storage disease. Perhaps heterozygotes for the same mutation that causes juvenile hemochromatosis in the homozygous state develop severe hereditary hemochromatosis when they are homozygous for the Cys282Tyr mutation, or homozygotes or compound heterozygotes for other mutations of the same gene may be the ones who are at risk. If this proved to be the case, then one might even aver that HFE is not the real hereditary hemochromatosis gene but merely a risk factor.

Certainly much needs to be done. The HFE mutation seems to be a necessary but not sufficient condition for the development of clinical disease. Finding the factor(s) that are required in addition to the HFE mutation in producing clinically significant iron-storage disease will be an important step forward. It would provide us with further insights into the regulation of iron homeostasis, and enable us to more precisely distinguish those few homozygotes for HFE mutations who need treatment from the large number who do not.

This is manuscript number 15074-MEM from the Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA.

Supported by National Institutes of Health grants DK53505-04 and RR00833 and the Stein Endowment Fund.

1
Sheldon
JH
Haemochromatosis. London
1935
Oxford University Press
United Kingdom
2
Finch
SC
Finch
CA
Idiopathic hemochromatosis, an iron storage disease: A. Iron metabolism in hemochromatosis.
Medicine (Baltimore).
34
1955
381
430
3
Olsson
KS
Ritter
B
Rosen
U
Heedman
PA
Staugard
F
Prevalence of iron overload in central Sweden.
Acta Med Scand.
213
1983
145
150
4
Witte
DL
Crosby
WH
Edwards
CQ
Fairbanks
VF
Mitros
FA
Hereditary hemochromatosis.
Clin Chim Acta.
245
1996
139
200
5
Felitti
VJ
Beutler
E
New developments in hereditary hemochromatosis.
Am J Med Sci.
318
1999
257
268
6
Niederau
C
Strohmeyer
G
Strategies for early diagnosis of haemochromatosis.
Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol.
14
2002
217
221
7
Allen
K
Williamson
R
Screening for hereditary haemochromatosis should be implemented now.
BMJ.
320
2000
183
184
8
Bradley
LA
Haddow
JE
Palomaki
GE
Population screening for haemochromatosis: a unifying analysis of published intervention trials.
J Med Screen.
3
1996
178
184
9
Edwards
CQ
Griffen
LM
Ajioka
RS
Kushner
JP
Screening for hemochromatosis: phenotype versus genotype.
Semin Hematol.
35
1998
72
76
10
Olynyk
JK
Cullen
DJ
Aquilia
S
Rossi
E
Summerville
L
Powell
LW
A population-based study of the clinical expression of the hemochromatosis gene.
N Engl J Med.
341
1999
718
724
11
Bulaj
ZJ
Ajioka
RS
Phillips
JD
et al
Disease-related conditions in relatives of patients with hemochromatosis.
N Engl J Med.
343
2000
1529
1535
12
Adams
P
Brissot
P
Powell
L
EASL International Consensus Conference on Haemochromatosis—Part II. Expert document.
J Hepatol.
33
2000
487
496
13
Willis
G
Wimperis
JZ
Smith
KC
Fellows
IW
Jennings
BA
Haemochromatosis gene C282Y homozygotes in an elderly male population.
Lancet.
354
1999
221
222
14
Steinberg
KK
Cogswell
ME
Chang
JC
et al
Prevalence of C282Y and H63D mutations in the hemochromatosis (HFE) gene in the United States.
JAMA.
285
2001
2216
2222
15
McDonnell
SM
Preston
BL
Jewell
SA
et al
A survey of 2,851 patients with hemochromatosis: symptoms and response to treatment.
Am J Med.
106
1999
619
624
16
Beutler
E
Felitti
VJ
Koziol
JA
Ho
NJ
Gelbart
T
Penetrance of the 845G6A (C282Y) HFE hereditary haemochromatosis mutation in the USA.
Lancet.
359
2002
211
218
17
Waalen
J
Felitti
V
Gelbart
T
Ho
NJ
Beutler
E
Prevalence of hemochromatosis-related symptoms in homozygotes for the C282Y mutation of the HFE gene.
Mayo Clin Proc.
77
2002
522
530
18
Asberg
A
Hveem
K
Thorstensen
K
et al
Screening for hemochromatosis: high prevalence and low morbidity in an unselected population of 65,238 persons.
Scand J Gastroenterol.
36
2001
1108
1115
19
Distante
S
Berg
JP
Lande
K
Haug
E
Bell
H
High prevalence of the hemochromatosis-associated Cys282Tyr HFE gene mutation in a healthy Norwegian population in the city of Oslo, and its phenotypic expression.
Scand J Gastroenterol.
34
1999
529
534
20
Jackson
HA
Carter
K
Darke
C
et al
HFE mutations, iron deficiency and overload in 10,500 blood donors.
Br J Haematol.
114
2001
474
484
21
Phatak
PD
Ryan
DH
Cappuccio
J
et al
Prevalence and penetrance of HFE mutations in 4865 unselected primary care patients.
Blood Cells Mol Dis.
29
2002
41
47
22
Beutler
E
Discrepancies between genotype and phenotype in hematology: an important frontier.
Blood.
98
2001
2597
2602
23
Whitelaw
E
Martin
DI
Retrotransposons as epigenetic mediators of phenotypic variation in mammals.
Nat Genetics.
27
2001
361
365
24
MacDonald
RA
Idiopathic hemochromatosis: genetic or acquired?
Arch Intern Med.
112
1963
82
88
25
Diwakaran
HH
Befeler
AS
Britton
RS
Brunt
EM
Bacon
BR
Accelerated hepatic fibrosis in patients with combined hereditary hemochromatosis and chronic hepatitis C infection.
J Hepatol.
36
2002
687
691
26
Rosendaal
FR
Venous thrombosis: a multicausal disease.
Lancet.
353
1999
1167
1173
27
Allaart
CF
Poort
SR
Rosendaal
FR
Reitsma
PH
Bertina
RM
Briet
E
Increased risk of venous thrombosis in carriers of hereditary protein C deficiency defect.
Lancet.
341
1993
134
138
28
Kaplan
M
Renbaum
P
Levy-Lahad
E
Hammerman
C
Lahad
A
Beutler
E
Gilbert syndrome and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency: a dose-dependent genetic interaction crucial to neonatal hyperbilirubinemia.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A.
94
1997
12128
12132
29
Beutler
E
Gelbart
T
Lee
P
Trevino
R
Fernandez
MA
Fairbanks
VF
Molecular characterization of a case of atransferrinemia.
Blood.
96
2000
4071
4074
30
Girelli
D
Bozzini
C
Roetto
A
et al
Clinical and pathologic findings in hemochromatosis type 3 due to a novel mutation in transferrin receptor 2 gene.
Gastroenterology.
122
2002
1295
1302
31
Roetto
A
Totaro
A
Piperno
A
et al
New mutations inactivating transferrin receptor 2 in hemochromatosis type 3.
Blood.
97
2001
2555
2560
32
Camaschella
C
Roetto
A
Cali
A
et al
The gene TFR2 is mutated in a new type of haemochromatosis mapping to 7q22.
Nat Genetics.
25
2000
14
15
33
Montosi
G
Donovan
A
Totaro
A
et al
Autosomal-dominant hemochromatosis is associated with a mutation in the ferroportin (SLC11A3) gene.
J Clin Invest.
108
2001
619
623
34
Njajou
OT
Vaessen
N
Joosse
M
et al
A mutation in SLC11A3 is associated with autosomal dominant hemochromatosis.
Nat Genetics.
28
2001
213
214
35
Hellman
NE
Schaefer
M
Gehrke
S
et al
Hepatic iron overload in aceruloplasminaemia.
Gut.
47
2000
858
860
36
Morita
H
Ikeda
S
Yamamoto
K
et al
Hereditary ceruloplasmin deficiency with hemosiderosis: a clinicopathological study of a Japanese family.
Ann Neurol.
37
1995
646
656
37
de Sousa
M
Reimao
R
Lacerda
R
Hugo
P
Kaufmann
SH
Porto
G
Iron overload in beta 2-microglobulin-deficient mice.
Immunol Lett.
39
1994
105
111
38
Rothenberg
BE
Voland
JR
β2 Knockout mice develop parenchymal iron overload: a putative role for class I genes of the major histocompatibility complex in iron metabolism.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A.
93
1996
1529
1534
39
Majore
S
Binni
F
Ricerca
BM
Brioli
G
Grammatico
P
Absence of hepcidin gene mutations in 10 Italian patients with primary iron overload.
Haematologica.
87
2002
221
222
40
Fargion
S
Valenti
L
Dongiovanni
P
et al
Tumor necrosis factor alpha promoter polymorphisms influence the phenotypic expression of hereditary hemochromatosis.
Blood.
97
2001
3707
3712
41
Beutler
E
Gelbart
T
Tumor necrosis factor promoter polymorphisms and liver abnormalities of homozygotes for the 845G>A (C282Y) hereditary hemochromatosis mutation [letter].
Blood.
100
2002
2268
42
Van Vlierberghe
H
Langlois
M
Delanghe
J
et al
Haptoglobin phenotype 2-2 overrepresentation in Cys282Tyr hemochromatotic patients.
J Hepatol.
35
2001
707
711
43
Roetto
A
Totaro
A
Cazzola
M
et al
Juvenile hemochromatosis locus maps to chromosome 1q.
Am J Hum Genet.
64
1999
1388
1393
44
Papanikolaou
G
Politou
M
Roetto
A
et al
Linkage to chromosome 1q in Greek families with juvenile hemochromatosis.
Blood Cells Mol Dis.
27
2001
744
749
45
Roetto
A
Alberti
F
Daraio
F
et al
Exclusion of ZIRTL as candidate gene of juvenile hemochromatosis and refinement of the critical interval on 1q21.
Blood Cells Mol Dis.
26
2000
205
210
46
Waalen
J
Felitti
V
Gelbart
T
Ho
NJ
Beutler
E
Penetrance of hemochromatosis.
Blood Cells Mol Dis.
29
2002
418
432
47
Roetto
A
Papanikolaou
G
Politou
M
Alberti
F
Girelli
D
Christakis
J
et al
Mutant antimicrobial peptide hepcidin is associated with severe juvenile hemochromatosis.
Nat Genet.
33
2003
21
22

Author notes

Ernest Beutler, The Scripps Research Institute, Department of Molecular and Experimental Medicine, 10550 N Torrey Pines Rd, La Jolla, CA 92037; e-mail: beutler@scripps.edu.

Sign in via your Institution