| Literature DB >> 7093530 |
M Pirastu, K Y Lee, A M Dozy, Y W Kan, G Stamatoyannopoulos, M G Hadjiminas, Z Zachariades, A Angius, M Furbetta, C Rosatelli, A Cao.
Abstract
We used restriction endonuclease analysis to determine the incidence of alpha-thalassemia in two Mediterranean islands. In a random population sample, the gene frequency of deletion-type alpha-thalassemia-2 (-alpha) was 0.18 in Sardinians and 0.07 in Greek Cypriots. All cases were the rightward crossover type. From these frequencies and the known incidence of hemoglobin-H disease in these populations, we calculated the frequency of the alpha-thalassemia-1 genotype (--) and determined that it was low. We also found that beta-thalassemia homozygotes in sardinia have a higher incidence of alpha-thalassemia than normals and beta thalassemia heterozygotes because a significantly greater number of these homozygotes are also homozygous for the alpha-thalassemia-2 lesion. These findings support the theory that coinheritance of alpha-thalassemia mitigates the severity of beta-thalassemia and suggest that the protection is most pronounced when two alpha-globin genes are deleted.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1982 PMID: 7093530
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113