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    Evoluzione genetica dell’uomo

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    Allele and haplotype frequency distribution of the EcoRI, RsaI, and MspI COL1A2 RFLPs among various human populations

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    The EcoRI, RsaI, and MspI RFLPs (restriction fragment length polymorphisms) of the COL1A2 gene, one of the two genes that encode for the polypeptides of type I collagen, have been studied in four West African and two Asian populations to evaluate their potential effectiveness as anthropological markers. All three RFLPs were in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. The comparisons between present data on two of the major human groups and those on Europeans and Amerindians show a considerable heterogeneity for each of the three RFLPs under study. EcoRI, in particular, appears to be highly effective in distinguishing Africans, Europeans, and Asians from each other. As expected, the analysis at the haplotype level considerably improves the discriminating efficiency of these three markers by creating a clear-cut distinction between Tharus and Indonesians, the two Asian populations of the present survey. In fact, even though these two populations exhibit the same frequencies for the RsaI and MspI alleles, the frequency of the MspI(-) allele among the RsaI(-) chromosomes is 0.5 +/- 0.14 in the Indonesian sample and 0 + 0.04 in the Tharu sample

    COII/tRNALys intergenic 9bp deletion and other mitochondrial DNA markers clearly reveal that the Tharus (Southern Nepal) have oriental affinities

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    We searched for the East Asian mtDNA 9-bp deletion in the intergenic COII/tRNA(Lys) region in a sample of 107 Tharus (50 from central Terai and 57 from eastern Terai), a population whose anthropological origin has yet to be completely clarified. The deletion, detected by electrophoresis of the PCR-amplified nt 7392-8628 mtDNA fragment after digestion with HaeIII, was found in about 8% of both Tharu groups but was found in none of the 76 Hindus who were examined as a non-Oriental neighboring control population. A complete triplication of the 9-bp unit, the second case so far reported, was also observed in one eastern Tharu. All the mtDNAs with the deletion, and that with the triplication, were further characterized (by PCR amplification of the relevant mtDNA fragments and their digestion with the appropriate enzymes) to locate them in the Ballinger et al. phylogeny of East Asian mtDNA haplotypes. The deletion was found to be associated with four different haplotypes, two of which are reported for the first time. One of the deletions and especially the triplication could be best explained by the assumption of novel length-change events. Ballinger's classification of East Asian mtDNA haplotypes is mainly based on the phenotypes for the DdeI site at nt 10394 and the AluI site at nt 10397. Analysis of the entire Tharu sample revealed that more than 70% of the Tharus have both sites, the association of which has been suggested as an ancient East Asian peculiarity. These results conclusively indicate that the Tharus have a predominantly maternal Oriental ancestry. Moreover, they show at least one and perhaps two further distinct length mutations, and this suggests that the examined region is a hot spot of rearrangements
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