尼泊尔特赖东部塔鲁人的MtDNA多态性。

G Passarino, O Semino, G Pepe, S L Shrestha, G Modiano, A S Santachiara Benerecetti
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摘要

Tharus是Terai(过去疟疾发病率严重的地区)的人口,可细分为三个主要群体:西部、中部和南部Tharus。他们通常被认为是一个蒙古人种,这已经进一步证实了mtDNA在中央塔鲁斯的发现。对疟疾相关基因分布的研究表明,在西部和中部地区,α -thal基因的频率极高(0.8)。然而,出乎意料的是,在东塔鲁斯的一个样本中,这个频率只有0.04。这使人们对塔罗斯是单一人类学实体的普遍观念产生了怀疑。在目前的调查中,mtDNA标记被研究在相同的样品东塔鲁斯先前检查的α -thal基因。研究结果如下:1。证实中塔鲁属蒙古人种的三个特征(即HpaI-1/HincII-1和HaeII-5多态性的普遍存在,以及缺乏BamHI多态性)也存在于该样本中。因为直到最近,唯一可以接近塔鲁斯的邻近人口是印度人(高加索人),这一结果有力地支持了塔鲁斯确实是一个单一人类学实体的观点;2. 在东部和中部的塔鲁人之间有两个统计学上显著的差异,即中部塔鲁人的HaeII型5频率要高得多,而在同一组中没有15.487 bp的突变(在东部塔鲁人中很常见),加上α -tal基因的结果,表明塔鲁亚群经历了有效的生殖隔离。
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MtDNA polymorphisms among Tharus of eastern Terai (Nepal).

Tharus--a population of Terai (a region with a severe malarial morbidity in the past)--can be subdivided into three main groups: Western, Central and Southern Tharus. They have usually been considered a Mongoloid population and this has been further substantiated by mtDNA findings on Central Tharus. Studies on the distribution of malaria-related genes have shown an extremely high frequency (0.8) of the alpha-thal gene among Western and Central Tharus. This frequency, however, unexpectedly turned out to be only 0.04 in a sample of Eastern Tharus. This raised doubts on the common notion that Tharus are a single anthropological entity. In the present investigation mtDNA markers were studied in the same sample of Eastern Tharus previously examined for the alpha-thal gene. The findings were: 1. the same three features which confirmed the classification of Central Tharus as Mongoloids (i.e., the common occurrence of HpaI-1/HincII-1 and HaeII-5 morphs, and the lack of BamHI polymorphism) were also present in this sample. Since the only neighbouring population accessible to Tharus, until recently, has been Hindu (Caucasoids), this result strongly supports the notion that Tharus are indeed a single anthropological entity; 2. two statistically significant differences between Eastern and Central Tharus--namely, a much higher HaeII morph 5 frequency among Central Tharus, and the absence in the same group of the mutation at 15.487 bp (very common among Eastern Tharus)--together with the results on alpha-tal gene, suggested that Tharu subgroups underwent an effective reproductive isolation.

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