Figure 1
Figure 1. Schematic diagram of α- and β-globin gene clusters and the types of hemoglobin produced at each developmental stage. Genes are arranged along the chromosome in the order in which they are expressed during development; (A) in the α-cluster ζ (embryonic) and α (fetal and adult); (B) in the β-cluster ε (embryonic), γ (fetal), and δ and β (adult). The 4 upstream regulatory elements of the α-locus are known as MCSR1 to MCSR4, whereas the 5 regulatory elements of the β-locus are collectively referred to as locus control region (LCR). The hemoglobin types expressed during different stages of development are embryonic (Hb Gower-I [ζ2ε2], Hb Gower-II [α2ε2], and Hb Portland [ζ2γ2]), fetal (HbF [α2γ2]), and adult (HbA [α2β2] and HbA2[α2δ2]).

Schematic diagram of α- and β-globin gene clusters and the types of hemoglobin produced at each developmental stage. Genes are arranged along the chromosome in the order in which they are expressed during development; (A) in the α-cluster ζ (embryonic) and α (fetal and adult); (B) in the β-cluster ε (embryonic), γ (fetal), and δ and β (adult). The 4 upstream regulatory elements of the α-locus are known as MCSR1 to MCSR4, whereas the 5 regulatory elements of the β-locus are collectively referred to as locus control region (LCR). The hemoglobin types expressed during different stages of development are embryonic (Hb Gower-I [ζ2ε2], Hb Gower-II [α2ε2], and Hb Portland [ζ2γ2]), fetal (HbF [α2γ2]), and adult (HbA [α2β2] and HbA22δ2]).

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