Abstract:
Using restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) and sequence haplotype analysis, we studied the chromosomal background of the
β-globin gene in 31 unrelated Lebanese IVS-I-110 or codon 39 (Cd39) subjects, and five normal βA/βA individuals. Our results are compared with those
from similar studies in other parts of the Mediterranean in an attempt to provide insights into historical patterns of selection and disease. The great majority of the Lebanese chromosomes with the IVS-I-110 mutation are associated with the RFLP haplotype I and sequence haplotype HT1, which is
probably the ancestral structure on which the mutation first emerged. The remainder of the IVS-I-110 alleles are linked to the 5′-subhaplotype 12 RFLP
haplotype and/or HTR sequence haplotype. In contrast, in Turkey, IVS-I-110
is associated with six distinct sequence haplotypes and four distinct RFLP
haplotypes, suggesting that the mutation probably emerged there. The diversity of sequence haplotypes described in Turkey was probably generated
through recombination or gene conversion events with the most frequent βA
autochthonous structures. Our data on Lebanese βA chromosomes and Algerian βA chromosomes, along with previously described Turkish βA chromosomes, strengthen this hypothesis. Following its emergence in Turkey, the
IVS-I-110 mutation was probably introduced to Lebanon later, by migration
or settlements. Cd39 demonstrates a remarkable level of sequence and RFLP
haplotype heterogeneity in Algeria, in contrast to its relative homogeneity in
Turkish samples. However, its rarity in the Near East, and more specifically
in Lebanon, does not allow us to draw any conclusions concerning its origin
and gene flow.
Citation:
Zahed, L., Demont, J., Bouhass, R., Trabuchet, G., Hanni, C., Zalloua, P., & Perrin, P. (2002). Origin and history of the IVS-I-110 and codon 39 [beta]-thalassemia mutations in the Lebanese population. Human biology, 74(6), 837-847.