[[File: Rhesus monkey.jpg| thumb|250px|upright|The name rhesus factor (Rh) goes back to the use of erythrocytes extracted from the blood of Rhesus macaque for obtaining the first blood serum.]]
The Rh blood group system is a human blood group system. It contains proteins on the surface of red blood cells. After the ABO blood group system, it is most likely to be involved in transfusion reactions. The Rh blood group system consisted of 49 defined blood group antigens in 2005. there are over 50 antigens, of which the five antigens D, C, c, E, and e are among the most prominent. There is no d antigen. Rh(D) status of an individual is normally described with a positive (+) or negative (−) suffix after the ABO type (e.g., someone who is A+ has the A antigen and Rh(D) antigen, whereas someone who is A− has the A antigen but lacks the Rh(D) antigen). The terms Rh factor, Rh positive, and Rh negative refer to the Rh(D) antigen only. Antibodies to Rh antigens can be involved in hemolytic transfusion reactions and antibodies to the Rh(D) and Rh antigens confer significant risk of hemolytic disease of the newborn.
+ Rh haplotype notation ! Fisher–Race !! Wiener |
R |
R |
R |
R |
r |
r' |
r″ |
ry |
The Wiener system uses the Rh–Hr nomenclature. This system is based on the theory that there is one gene at a single locus on each of the two copies of chromosome 1, each contributing to production of multiple antigens. In this theory, a gene R1 is supposed to give rise to the "blood factors" Rh0, rh′, and rh″ (corresponding to modern nomenclature of the D, C, and E antigens) and the gene r to produce hr′ and hr″ (corresponding to modern nomenclature of the c and e antigens).
Notations of the two theories are used interchangeably in blood banking (e.g., Rho(D) meaning RhD positive). Wiener's notation is more complex and cumbersome for routine use. Because it is simpler to explain, the Fisher–Race theory has become more widely used.
DNA testing has shown that both are partially correct: There are in fact two linked genes, the RHD gene which produces a single immune specificity (anti-D) and the RHCE gene with multiple specificities (anti-C, anti-c, anti-E, anti-e). Thus, Wiener's postulate that a gene could have multiple specificities (something many did not give credence to originally) has been proved to be correct. On the other hand, Wiener's theory that there is only one gene has proved to be incorrect, as has the Fisher–Race theory that there are three genes, rather than the two. The CDE notation used in the Fisher–Race nomenclature is sometimes rearranged to DCE to more accurately represent the co-location of the C and E encoding on the RhCE gene, and to make interpretation easier.
Rh are readily identified through the presence or absence of the Rh surface antigens. As can be seen in the table below, most of the Rh phenotypes can be produced by several different Rh . The exact genotype of any individual can only be identified by DNA analysis. Regarding patient treatment, only the phenotype is usually of any clinical significance to ensure a patient is not exposed to an antigen they are likely to develop antibodies against. A probable genotype may be speculated on, based upon the statistical distributions of genotypes in the patient's place of origin.
R0 (cDe or Dce) is today most common in Africa. The allele was thus often assumed in early blood group analyses to have been typical of populations on the continent, particularly in areas below the Sahara. Ottensooser et al. (1963) suggested that high R0 frequencies were likely characteristic of the ancient Jews, who had emigrated from Egypt prior to their dispersal throughout the Mediterranean Basin and Europe on the basis of high R0 percentages among Sephardi and Ashkenazi Jews compared to native populations and the relative genetic isolation of Ashkenazim. However, more recent studies have found R0 frequencies as low as 24.3% among some Afroasiatic-speaking groups in the Horn of Africa, as well as higher R0 frequencies among certain other Afroasiatic speakers in North Africa (37.3%) and among some Palestinians in the Levant (30.4%). On the contrary, at a frequency of 47.2% of the population of Basque country having the lack of the D antigen, these people display the highest frequency of the Rh negative phenotype.
+ Rh phenotypes and genotypes (UK, 1948) !rowspan="2" | Phenotype expressed on cell !colspan="2" | Genotype expressed in DNA !rowspan="2" | Prevalence (%) |
R0RZ | 0.0125 | ||
R0rY | 0.0003 | ||
R1R2 | 11.8648 | ||
R1r″ | 0.9992 | ||
R2r′ | 0.2775 | ||
RZr | 0.1893 | ||
R2RZ | 0.0687 | ||
R2rY | 0.0014 | ||
RZr″ | 0.0058 | ||
R1rY | 0.0042 | ||
RZr′ | 0.0048 | ||
R1RZ | 0.2048 | ||
RZRZ | 0.0006 | ||
RZrY | < 0.0001 | ||
R0r′ | 0.0505 | ||
R1r | 32.6808 | ||
R1R0 | 2.1586 | ||
R1R1 | 17.6803 | ||
R1r′ | 0.8270 | ||
R2R0 | 0.7243 | ||
R0r″ | 0.0610 | ||
R2r | 10.9657 | ||
R2R2 | 1.9906 | ||
R2r″ | 0.3353 | ||
R0R0 | 0.0659 | ||
R0r | 1.9950 | ||
rrY | 0.0039 | ||
r′r″ | 0.0234 | ||
r″rY | 0.0001 | ||
r′rY | 0.0001 | ||
rYrY | < 0.0001 | ||
rr′ | 0.7644 | ||
r′r′ | 0.0097 | ||
rr″ | 0.9235 | ||
r″r″ | 0.0141 | ||
rr | 15.1020 |
+ Rh phenotypes in patients and donors in Turkey |
33.0 |
30.5 |
21.8 |
11.6 |
10.4 |
2.7 |
2.4 |
0.98 |
0.03 |
– |
All Rh antibodies except D display dosage (antibody reacts more strongly with red cells homozygous for an antigen than cells heterozygous for the antigen (EE stronger reaction vs Ee)).
If anti-E is detected, the presence of anti-c should be strongly suspected (due to combined genetic inheritance). It is therefore common to select c-negative and E-negative blood for transfusion patients who have an anti-E and lack the c antigen (in general, a patient will not produce antibodies against their own antigens). Anti-c is a common cause of delayed hemolytic transfusion reactions.
When the condition is caused by the Rh D antigen-antibody incompatibility, it is called Rh D Hemolytic disease of the newborn or Rh disease. Here, sensitization to Rh D antigens (usually by feto-maternal transfusion during pregnancy) may lead to the production of maternal IgG anti-D antibodies which can pass through the placenta. This is of particular importance to D negative females at or below childbearing age, because any subsequent pregnancy may be affected by the Rh D hemolytic disease of the newborn if the baby is D positive. The vast majority of Rh disease is preventable in modern antenatal care by injections of IgG anti-D antibodies (Rho(D) Immune Globulin). The incidence of Rh disease is mathematically related to the frequency of D negative individuals in a population, so Rh disease is rare in old-stock populations of Africa and the eastern half of Asia, and the Indigenous peoples of Oceania and the Americas, but more common in other genetic groups, most especially Western Europeans, but also other West Eurasians, and to a lesser degree, native Siberians, as well as those of mixed-race with a significant or dominant descent from those (e.g. the vast majority of Latin Americans and Central Asians).
+ Population data for the Rh D factor and RhD neg allele | |||
African Americans | ~ 7% | 93% | ~ 26% |
Albania | 10.86% | 89% | weak D 1.4% |
Basques | 21%–36% | 65% | ~ 60% |
United Kingdom | 17% | 83% | |
China | < 1% | > 99% | |
19.4% | 80.6% | ||
(others) | 16% | 84% | 40% |
India | 5.87% | 94.13% | |
Indonesia | < 1% | > 99% | |
Japan | < 1% | > 99% | |
Koreans | < 1% | > 99% | |
Madagascar | 1% | 99% | |
Moroccans | 9.5% | 90.5% | |
Moroccans (High Atlas) | ~ 29% | 71% | |
Native Americans | ~ 1% | 99% | ~ 10% |
Nigeria | 6% | 94% | |
Saudi Arabia | 8.8% | 91.2% | 29.5% |
Subequatorial Africa | 1%–3% | 99%–97% | |
United States | 15% | 85% | |
The D antigen is a dominant trait. If both of a child's parents are Rh negative, the child will definitely be Rh negative. Otherwise, the child may be Rh positive or Rh negative, depending on the parents' specific genotypes.
The for the next 4 most common Rh antigens, C, c, E and e are expressed on the highly similar RhCE protein that is genetically encoded in the RHCE gene, also found on chromosome 1. It has been shown that the RHD gene arose by duplication of the RHCE gene during primate evolution. Mice have just one RH gene.
The RHAG gene, which is responsible for encoding Rh-associated glycoprotein (RhAG), is found on chromosome 6a.
The polypeptides produced from the RHD and RHCE genes form a complex on the red blood cell membrane with the Rh-associated glycoprotein.
Natural selection aside, the RHD-RHCE region is structurally predisposed to many mutations seen in humans, since the pair arose by gene duplication and remain similar enough for unequal crossing over to occur. In addition to the case where D is deleted, crossover can also produce a single gene mixing from both RHD and RHCE, forming the majority of partial D types.
The practical implication of this is that people with this sub-phenotype will have a product labeled as "D positive" when donating blood. When receiving blood, they are sometimes typed as a "D negative", though this is the subject of some debate. Most "Weak D" patients can receive "D positive" blood without complications. However, it is important to correctly identify the ones that have to be considered D+ or D−. This is important, since most blood banks have a limited supply of "D negative" blood and the correct transfusion is clinically relevant. In this respect, genotyping of blood groups has much simplified this detection of the various variants in the Rh blood group system.
In the past, partial D was called 'D mosaic' or 'D variant.' Different partial D phenotypes are defined by different D epitopes on the outer surface of the red blood cell membrane. More than 30 different partial D phenotypes have been described.
Red blood cells lacking Rh/RhAG proteins have structural abnormalities (such as stomatocytosis) and cell membrane defects that can result in hemolytic anemia.
The first Rhnull blood was discovered in an Aboriginal Australian woman, in 1961. Only 43 individuals have been reported to have it worldwide. Only nine active donors have been reported. Its properties make it attractive in numerous medical applications, but scarcity makes it expensive to transport and acquire.
While this blood type has been identified in fewer than 50 people, it is not quite as rare as this figure is often interpreted to mean, though still exceedingly rare. It is estimated that 1 in 6 million people have this blood type.
Some of the other Rh "antigens" are f ("ce", RH6), Ce (RH7), Cw (RH8), Cx (RH9), V (RH10), Ew (RH11), G (RH12), Tar (RH40), VS (RH20), Dw (RH23), and CE (RH22). Some of these groups, including f, Ce and CE, describe grouping of some existing groups. Others, like V, describe an epitope created by some other mutation on the RHD and RHCE genes. V in particular is caused by a mutation on RHCE.
The significance of their discovery was not immediately apparent and was only realized in 1940, after subsequent findings by Philip Levine and Rufus Stetson. The serum that led to the discovery was produced by immunizing rabbits with red blood cells from a rhesus macaque. The antigen that induced this immunization was designated by them as Rh factor to indicate that rhesus blood had been used for the production of the serum.
In 1939, Phillip Levine and Rufus Stetson published in a first case report the clinical consequences of non-recognized Rh factor, hemolytic transfusion reaction, and hemolytic disease of the newborn in its most severe form. It was recognized that the serum of the reported woman agglutinated with red blood cells of about 80% of the people although the then known blood groups, in particular ABO were matched. No name was given to this antibody when described. In 1940, Landsteiner and Wiener made the connection to their earlier discovery, reporting a serum that also reacted with about 85% of different human red blood cells.
In 1941, Group O: a patient in Irvington, New Jersey, US, delivered a normal infant in 1931; this pregnancy was followed by a long period of sterility. The second pregnancy (April, 1941) resulted in an infant with Jaundice. In May 1941, the third anti-Rh serum (M.S.) of Group O became available.
Based on the serologic similarities, 'Rh factor' was later also used for antigens, and anti-Rh for antibodies, found in humans such as those previously described by Levine and Stetson. Although differences between these two sera were shown already in 1942 and clearly demonstrated in 1963, the already widely used term "Rh" was kept for the clinically described human antibodies which are different from the ones related to the rhesus monkey. This real factor found in rhesus macaque was classified in the Landsteiner-Weiner antigen system (antigen LW, antibody anti-LW) in honor of the discoverers.
It was recognized that the Rh factor was just one in a system of various antigens. Based on different models of genetic inheritance, two different terminologies were developed; both of them are still in use.
The clinical significance of this highly immunizing D antigen (i.e., Rh factor) was soon realized. Some keystones were to recognize its importance for blood transfusion (including reliable diagnostic tests), hemolytic disease of the newborn (including exchange transfusion), and very importantly the prevention of it by screening and prophylaxis.
The discovery of cell-free fetal DNA in maternal circulation by Holzgrieve et al. led to the noninvasive genotyping of fetal Rh genes in many countries.
Weak D
In serologic testing, D positive blood is easily identified. Units that are D negative are often retested to rule out a weaker reaction. This was previously referred to as Du, which has been replaced.+ Comparison
Partial D
Rhnull phenotype
Other Rh group antigens
History
External links
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