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Red cell glutathione peroxidase (GPX1) variation in Afro-Jamaican,Asiatic Indian,and Dutch populations
Authors:P. Meera Khan  Chitralekha Verma  Lucie M. M. Wijnen  Shiela Jairaj
Affiliation:(1) Human Genetics Institute, Leiden University, Sylvius Laboratories, P.O. Box 9503, NL-2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands;(2) Department of Anthropology, Lucknow University, 226001 Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India
Abstract:Summary A Cellogel procedure for screening the electrophoretic variants of the human red cell glutathione peroxidase (GPX1) was described. Three hundred and ninety eight Dutch persons living in various parts of The Netherlands, 385 individuals born in various states of India, and 72 Jamaicans of African origin livig in Birmingham, UK, were screened for GPX1 variants. The Dutch were monomorphic, while one Afro-Jamaican female and two males and one female of the 116 Punjabis were found to be variants indistinguishable from each other in their pattern of electrophoresis. The clear five banded pattern of the variant indicated that the subunit structure of the human red cell glutathione peroxidase is most probably a tetramer and suggested that the variant is the expression of a heterozygote due to alleles at an autosomal locus. The corresponding phenotype was designated tentatively as GPX1 2-1 and the alleles as GPX1*1 and GPX1*2 respectively. The variant 2-1 was found to be identical to the ldquoThomasrdquo variant described by Beutler and West (1974). Thus so far, in addition to the Afro-Americans and Ashkenazi Jews (Beutler et al. 1974), the Punjabis of the Indian subcontinent (this report) were found to exhibit the GPX1 polymorphism due to the GPX1*2 allele. The data discussed in this paper (which included unpublished observations on several African and non-African populations) suggest that the GPX1*2 allele is originally an African variant and hint that the present day Punjabis of Indian subcontinent, like Ashkenazi Jews, are ldquopredominantly of Mediterranean origin with some proportion of African ancestryrdquo (Mourant et al. 1976).
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