Ethnic variation in genetic disease: possible roles of hitchhiking and epistasis.
- 1 May 1975
- journal article
- Vol. 27 (3) , 348-64
Abstract
The high incidence of some genetic diseases in certain ethnic groups is important in planning of medical genetic programs. Simple interaction models predict that at least some lethal recessive alleles will have "hitchhiked" to increased frequencies because of linkage to genes whose alleles have been favored by selection for other reasons in certain populations. In the absence of linkage or epistasis with a gene favored by selection, heterozygote advantage for a recessive lethal may produce the same phenomenon. In the hitchhiking model (linkage), the increase in the gene frequency is temporary, but the length of time that the increased gene frequency is at least double the base frequency may be quite long. Changes in gene frequency for the unlinked epistatic model result in a new equilibrium with a possibly higher gene frequency. The most likely chromosomal regions in which hitchhiked lethal recessives would be found are in the vicinity of genes whose allelic frequencies vary substantially among human racial groups (e.g., Gm, Rh, Duffy, lactose tolerance, or HL-A). There will be a hitchhiking effect if recombination distance is less than the selective advantage. The closer the linkage of two loci, the easier hitchhiking effects will be to detect. Hitchhiking is suggested by nonrandom association of the recessive disease and one of the selected markers, as in the case of Gm and cystic fibrosis. However, there is so far insufficient evidence of linkage between them. More pedigree information is necessary than is now available.This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Phenylketonuria Testing - Its Role in Pediatrics and Public HealthCRC Critical Reviews in Clinical Laboratory Sciences, 1971
- Race, ethnic group, and diseaseSocial Biology, 1969
- Results of Mass Screening for Hyperaminoacidemias in the Newborn InfantArchives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1969
- Phenylketonuria. Mass screening of newborns in Ireland.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1968
- The Erie County survey of long-term childhood illness. II. Incidence and prevalence.American Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1968
- Treatment of classical phenylketonuria.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1968
- Cystic fibrosis in the Leeds region: incidence and life expectancy.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1967
- The ethnic distribution of disease in the United StatesJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1967
- A Cystic Fibrosis Pilot Survey in Three New England StatesAmerican Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1962
- The Frequency of Cystic Fibrosis of the Pancreas in SwedenActa Paediatrica, 1962