Mohammed Abdelrahim O, Attalla Bekhieta, Bashir Fathya M K, Ahmed Fatima E, El Hassan Ahmed M, Ibnauf Gafar, Jiang Weiying, Cavalli-Sforza Luigi L, Karrar Zein Al Abdin, Ibrahim Muntaser E
Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Medicine University of Khartoum, Khartoum, Sudan.
Community Genet. 2006;9(2):113-20. doi: 10.1159/000091489.
The presence of a geographical pattern in the distribution of the sickle cell gene (S gene) and its association with malaria is well documented. To study the distribution of the S gene among various ethnic and linguistic groups in the Sudan we analyzed a hospital-based sample of 189 sickle cell anemia (SCA) patients who reported to the Khartoum Teaching Hospital between June 1996 and March 2000 and 118 controls with other complaints, against their ethnic and linguistic affiliations and geographic origin. Electrophoresis for hemoglobin S and sickling tests were carried out on all patients and controls as a prerequisite for inclusion. The majority of patients (93.7%) belonged to families of single ethnic descent, indicating the high degree of within-group marriages and thus the higher risk of augmenting the gene. SCA was found to be predominant among the Afro-Asiatic-speaking groups (68.4%) including nomadic groups of Arab and non- Arab descent that migrated to the Sudan in various historical epochs. Those patients clustered in western Sudan (Kordofan and Darfur) from where 73% of all cases originate. The proportion of patients reporting from other geographic areas like the south (3.1%), which is primarily inhabited by Nilo-Saharan-speaking groups (19% of the whole sample) who populated the country in previous times, is disproportionate to their total population in the country (chi(2) = 71.6; p = 0.0001). Analysis of the haplotypes associated with the S gene indicated that the most abundant haplotypes are the Cameroon, Benin, Bantu and Senegal haplotypes, respectively. No relationship was seen between haplotypes and the various hematological parameters in the sub-sample analyzed for such association. These results provide an insight into the distribution of the sickle cell gene in the Sudan, and highlight the strong link of the middle Nile Valley with West Africa through the open plateau of the Sahel and the nomadic cattle herders and also probably the relatively young age of the S gene.
镰状细胞基因(S基因)分布的地理模式及其与疟疾的关联已有充分记录。为研究苏丹不同种族和语言群体中S基因的分布情况,我们分析了1996年6月至2000年3月期间前往喀土穆教学医院就诊的189例镰状细胞贫血(SCA)患者以及118例有其他病症的对照者,依据他们的种族、语言归属和地理来源进行分析。对所有患者和对照者进行血红蛋白S电泳和镰变试验,作为纳入研究的前提条件。大多数患者(93.7%)属于单一族裔血统的家庭,这表明族内通婚程度较高,因此该基因扩增的风险也更高。发现SCA在讲亚非语系语言的群体中占主导地位(68.4%),包括在不同历史时期迁徙至苏丹的阿拉伯和非阿拉伯血统的游牧群体。这些患者集中在苏丹西部(科尔多凡和达尔富尔),所有病例中有73%起源于此。来自其他地理区域(如南部)的患者比例(3.1%)与该国该地区的总人口不成比例,南部主要居住着尼罗 - 撒哈拉语系的群体(占整个样本的19%),他们是该国以前的居民(卡方检验χ(2)=71.6;p = 0.0001)。对与S基因相关的单倍型分析表明,最常见的单倍型分别是喀麦隆、贝宁、班图和塞内加尔单倍型。在所分析的子样本中,未发现单倍型与各种血液学参数之间存在这种关联关系。这些结果有助于深入了解苏丹镰状细胞基因的分布情况,并突出了中尼罗河谷通过萨赫勒开阔高原、游牧牧民与西非的紧密联系,以及S基因可能相对年轻的情况。