Presence of hemoglobinopathies in Sicily: a historic perspective

Sicily, at the center of the Mediterranean, has been the meeting place of Eastern and Western civilizations, and in the Sicilian population the presence of many different alterations in the globin gene clusters can surely be considered testimony of past colonizations. From 1975 to 1994, 100,000 Sici...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAmerican journal of medical genetics Vol. 69; no. 2; p. 200
Main Authors Schilirò, G, Mirabile, E, Testa, R, Russo-Mancuso, G, Dibenedetto, S P
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 17.03.1997
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Summary:Sicily, at the center of the Mediterranean, has been the meeting place of Eastern and Western civilizations, and in the Sicilian population the presence of many different alterations in the globin gene clusters can surely be considered testimony of past colonizations. From 1975 to 1994, 100,000 Sicilian subjects were screened by us to monitor the presence of hemoglobin (Hb) structural variants. In this paper we present the data gathered, emphasizing the high incidence (2.5%) of carriers of at least one abnormal Hb, and the great heterogeneity of globin molecular defects on the island. Twenty-six different mutations were identified: the most common occur in the beta-globin gene (beta(S), beta(C), deltabeta(Lepore), beta(G-San José), beta(O-Arab), but also quite frequent is the mutated allele alpha(J-Oxford). The chromosome haplotypes associated with some of them were characterized. Two uncommon Hbs, Copenhagen and D Punjab, and some 18 rare variants complete the wide spectrum of structural alterations of globin genes in Sicily. We think they are de novo mutations prevalently. It is not possible to exclude that the presence of a few of them is related to migratory phenomena, particularly from North Africa and East Asia. Numerous thalassemic alleles complete the picture of globin gene mutations in Silicy.
ISSN:0148-7299
DOI:10.1002/(SICI)1096-8628(19970317)69:2<200::AID-AJMG17>3.0.CO;2-P