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Genetic distance: probing the origin of a Papua New Guinea isolate
Authors:E. D. Shields  F. Décary  A. D. Russell
Affiliation:(1) Department of Craniofacial Genetics, Faculty of Dentistry, McGill University, H3A 2B2 Montreal, Canada;(2) Blood Transfusion Service, Red Cross, Ottawa, Canada;(3) Consultant Hansen's Disease, Health Service, Brisbane, Queensland State, Australia
Abstract:In an attempt to elucidate the origin of an isolated peripheral Highland, Papua New Guinea population (the Karimui), HLA, blood group and serum protein markers were investigated. Due to the paucity of published HLA marker data, genetic distances using non-HLA markers were constructed between populations surrounding the Karimui and compared in 3-dimensions by multidimensional scaling analysis. Genetically, the Karimui is most closely associated with Highland populations to the east and northeast. In a attempt to develop a more global view of relationships, distances constructed from HLA marker data between 2 close Highland populations, 2 Coastal Papua New Guinea populations and 4 Australian aborigine populations were compared. The Karimui associated most closely with the Highland populations and equidistantly and at opposite poles from both the Coastal Papuan and aborigine populations. A paradigm of the composition of the founder group and the early population dynamics is developed from genetic, linguistic and anthropologic data.
Keywords:Genetic Distance  HLA  Isolate  Origins  New Guinea
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