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Molecular genetic diagnosis of Tunisian Glanzmann thrombasthenia patients reveals a common nonsense mutation in the ITGA2B gene that seems to be specific for the studied population.

: Glanzmann thrombasthenia is an inherited severe bleeding disease. Mutations associated with Glanzmann thrombasthenia are highly heterogeneous and occur across the two genes coding for the platelet αIIbβ3 integrin. This study was aimed at identifying Glanzmann thrombasthenia-associated novel mutations in Tunisian patients. Seven unrelated Glanzmann thrombasthenia patients issued from high consanguineous families (86%; 6/7 of the patients) were studied. Glanzmann thrombasthenia diagnoses were based on patients' bleeding histories and platelet aggregation tests. Screening of ITGA2B and ITGB3 genes was performed by denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography (DHPLC) analysis. Amplicons with abnormal elution profiles were subjected to direct sequencing. DHPLC/sequencing analysis identified a pathogenic homozygous mutation in exon 26 at position c.2702C>A, inducing a substitution of a serine to a stop codon (p.S901*) in the ITGA2B gene, in three patients. This mutation was only previously reported in a Glanzmann thrombasthenia patient of a Tunisian origin and not in other populations. We diagnosed a pathogenic Glanzmann thrombasthenia mutation in ITGA2B screened by DHPLC that appears to be specific to individuals of Tunisian heritage and that deserves to be investigated in first intention. As a result, we determined that performing prenatal diagnosis and setting a prevention strategy via counselling for affected heterozygote individuals will be helpful for Tunisian Glanzmann thrombasthenia families where there is still a high rate of consanguinity.

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