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Understanding the Role of Ribosomal Proteins and Aberrant FLVCR1 Splicing in Diamond Blackfan Anemia

Diamond Blackfan Anemia is a rare congenital disease that is primarily characterized by reduced erythroid progenitors. DBA pathogenesis has been associated with genes encoding ribosomal proteins (RPs) which are important in translation. However, this fails to explain why erythropoiesis is specifically disrupted. Our lab previously found that aberrant splicing of the human transcript encoding heme exporter, FLVCR1, is involved in DBA pathogenesis; and that RPS19 implicated in 25% of DBA patients, regulates FLVCR1 transcript splicing.
This thesis investigated the role of another DBA associated gene encoding RPS17, in the regulation of FLVCR1 splicing and disrupted erythropoiesis in DBA. My findings further support the role of FLVCR1 aberrant splicing in DBA and provide evidence suggesting that RPS17 may not be a candidate DBA gene. Furthermore, my study implicates a potential role for RPS19 transcript levels in defective erythroid differentiation observed in DBA.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:TORONTO/oai:tspace.library.utoronto.ca:1807/32240
Date21 March 2012
CreatorsFernandes, Abigail Brenda
ContributorsTailor, Chetankumar
Source SetsUniversity of Toronto
Languageen_ca
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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