Publication | Closed Access
C‐ and Q‐band polymorphisms in the chromosomes of three human populations
126
Citations
18
References
1976
Year
GeneticsGenetic EpidemiologyHuman PopulationsHuman PolymorphismQ‐band PolymorphismsHuman VariationBiostatisticsPublic HealthChromosome 22Human ComplementStatistical GeneticsGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsAllelic VariantLinkage DisequilibriumScottish PopulationsEvolutionary BiologyChromosome BiologyIsland PopulationMedicineChromosome 9
The incidence of the various classes of C-band and Q-band polymorphisms on ten pairs of chromosomes in the human complement have been investigated in three Scottish populations, two from the mainland (newborn and 14 year olds) and one, of individuals over 65 years, from an island in the Outer Hebrides. Although there is an overall similarity between the populations, there are some differences, especially with the island group. For all populations, over 90% of the C-band size variants fall within the medium class. Rather more variation is found in the Q-band intensity polymorphisms: the island population appears to have fewer Brilliant and Intense variants than do the other two groups, 2-9 per person as compared to 4-2 and 3-9 for the newborn and 14 year olds respectively; this may be an age difference rather than a population difference.
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