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Hbb

Hbb is most commonly an abbreviation for the hemoglobin subunit beta gene (HBB) in humans. The gene encodes the beta chain of adult hemoglobin (HbA), a tetramer consisting of two alpha and two beta chains. The beta-globin protein is 147 amino acids long and is expressed primarily in erythroid cells during red blood cell development. The HBB gene is located on chromosome 11 and is part of the beta-globin gene cluster, which also includes HBD (delta-globin), HBG1 and HBG2 (gamma-globin), and HBE1 (epsilon-globin). The alpha-globin genes (HBA1 and HBA2) belong to a separate cluster on chromosome 16. Expression is regulated by elements such as the locus control region (LCR), ensuring proper temporal and quantitative expression during erythropoiesis.

Mutations in HBB cause several inherited blood disorders. The most common are beta-thalassemias, resulting from mutations

Beyond medicine, HBB is a widely used symbol in genetics and genomics to denote the gene and

that
reduce
or
abolish
beta-globin
production.
Sickle
cell
disease
arises
from
a
single
point
mutation
(Glu6Val)
in
HbS,
leading
to
polymerization
of
deoxygenated
hemoglobin
and
red
blood
cell
sickling.
Clinical
severity
ranges
from
asymptomatic
trait
to
severe
anemia,
depending
on
zygosity
and
coexisting
genetic
factors.
Treatments
include
supportive
care,
transfusions,
and
therapies
that
induce
fetal
hemoglobin
(HbF),
which
can
ameliorate
disease
in
some
cases.
its
protein
product.
The
lowercase
spelling
hbb
is
uncommon
in
contemporary
biomedical
literature,
where
HBB
is
the
standard
reference.
The
term
may
appear
in
some
databases
or
naming
conventions,
but
HBB
consistently
refers
to
the
beta-globin
gene
and
its
protein.