Publication | Closed Access
Global Patterns of Linkage Disequilibrium at the CD4 Locus and Modern Human Origins
592
Citations
58
References
1996
Year
Alu Deletion PolymorphismGeneticsHuman PolymorphismLinkage AnalysisAlu DeletionMolecular GeneticsGenotype-phenotype AssociationMolecular EcologyHuman VariationHuman OriginPublic HealthPopulationHaplotype DeterminationCd4 LocusGlobal PatternsGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsHuman EvolutionEpidemiologyLinkage DisequilibriumAllelic VariantEvolutionary BiologyMedicineSub-saharan African Populations
Haplotypes consisting of alleles at a short tandem repeat polymorphism (STRP) and an Alu deletion polymorphism at the CD4 locus on chromosome 12 were analyzed in more than 1600 individuals sampled from 42 geographically dispersed populations (13 African, 2 Middle Eastern, 7 European, 9 Asian, 3 Pacific, and 8 Amerindian). Sub-Saharan African populations had more haplotypes and exhibited more variability in frequencies of haplotypes than the Northeast African or non-African populations. The Alu deletion was nearly always associated with a single STRP allele in non-African and Northeast African populations but was associated with a wide range of STRP alleles in the sub-Saharan African populations. This global pattern of haplotype variation and linkage disequilibrium suggests a common and recent African origin for all non-African human populations.
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