The distribution of Gc subtypes among the Mongoloid populations
- 1 November 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Physical Anthropology
- Vol. 53 (4) , 505-508
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.1330530406
Abstract
The polymorphism of Gc (group‐specific components) has been investigated for a series of 3,160 individual samples from 11 Mongoloid populations in Asia and North and South America by isoelectric focusing on polyacrylamide gels. The samples fall into six Gc phenotypes which can be explained by the three common alleles, Gc1F, Gc1S, and Gc2, together with several variant phenotypes explained as the heterozygotes for the three common alleles. The distribution of Gc1F suballele appears to be considerably different from population to population among Mongoloids, ranging from 0.105 (Machiguenga Indans, Peru) to 0.609 (Kadazan, Borneo). A clear geographic cline from Southeast Asia into South America in Gc1F allele was observed in the populations. In general, Gc1F allele frequencies are lower in European populations and higher in African populations. The range of variability in the Gc1F values observed among the Asiatic populations is between the Africans and the Europeans.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Group-specific componentHuman Genetics, 1979
- Group-Specific Component (Gc) ‘Subtypes’ of Gc1 by Isoelectric Focusing in US Blacks and WhitesHuman Heredity, 1979
- An Improved Method for the Identification of Gc1 Subtypes (Group‐Specific Component) by Isoelectric FocusingVox Sanguinis, 1978
- Gc subtypes demonstrated by isoelectric focusing: Further data and description of new variants among an African sample (Fula) from SenegalJournal of Human Genetics, 1978
- Analysis of the Gc polymorphism in human populations by isoelectrofocusing on polyacrylamide gels. Demonstration of subtypes of the Gc1 allele and of additional Gc variantsHuman Genetics, 1978
- GcT (Toulouse): A Fast Variant of the Group-Specific System in an Pyrenean FamilyVox Sanguinis, 1977
- Group-Specific Component: Evidence for two Subtypes of the Gc 1 GeneScience, 1977
- Skin-Pigment Regulation of Vitamin-D Biosynthesis in ManScience, 1967
- Inheritance of a New Group-Specific System demonstrated in Normal Human Sera by means of an Immuno-Electrophoretic TechniqueNature, 1960
- IMMUNE‐ELECTROPHORETIC DEMONSTRATION OF QUALITATIVE DIFFERENCES IN HUMAN SERA AND THEIR RELATION TO THE HAPTOGLOBINSActa Pathologica Microbiologica Scandinavica, 1959