Hajjej Abdelhafidh, Almawi Wassim Y, Hattab Lasmar, El-Gaaied Amel, Hmida Slama
Department of Immunogenetics, National Blood Transfusion Center, Tunis, Tunisia.
Department of Biochemistry, College of Medicine and Medical Sciences, Arabian Gulf University, Manama, Bahrain.
PLoS One. 2015 Aug 28;10(8):e0136909. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0136909. eCollection 2015.
In view of its distinct geographical location and relatively small area, Tunisia witnessed the presence of many civilizations and ethnic groups throughout history, thereby questioning the origin of present-day Tunisian population. We investigated HLA class I and class II gene profiles in Tunisians, and compared this profile with those of Mediterranean and Sub-Sahara African populations. A total of 376 unrelated Tunisian individuals of both genders were genotyped for HLA class I (A, B) and class II (DRB1, DQB1), using reverse dot-blot hybridization (PCR-SSO) method. Statistical analysis was performed using Arlequin software. Phylogenetic trees were constructed by DISPAN software, and correspondence analysis was carried out by VISTA software. One hundred fifty-three HLA alleles were identified in the studied sample, which comprised 41, 50, 40 and 22 alleles at HLA-A,-B,-DRB1 and -DQB1 loci, respectively. The most frequent alleles were HLA-A02:01 (16.76%), HLA-B44:02/03 (17.82%), HLA-DRB107:01 (19.02%), and HLA-DQB103:01 (17.95%). Four-locus haplotype analysis identified HLA-A02:01-B50:01-DRB107:01-DQB102:02 (2.2%) as the common haplotype in Tunisians. Compared to other nearby populations, Tunisians appear to be genetically related to Western Mediterranean population, in particular North Africans and Berbers. In conclusion, HLA genotype results indicate that Tunisians are related to present-day North Africans, Berbers and to Iberians, but not to Eastern Arabs (Palestinians, Jordanians and Lebanese). This suggests that the genetic contribution of Arab invasion of 7th-11th century A.D. had little impact of the North African gene pool.
鉴于其独特的地理位置和相对较小的面积,突尼斯在历史上见证了许多文明和族群的存在,这也引发了对当今突尼斯人口起源的质疑。我们研究了突尼斯人的HLA I类和II类基因谱,并将其与地中海和撒哈拉以南非洲人群的基因谱进行了比较。使用反向点杂交(PCR - SSO)方法,对376名无亲缘关系的突尼斯男女个体进行了HLA I类(A、B)和II类(DRB1、DQB1)基因分型。使用Arlequin软件进行统计分析。通过DISPAN软件构建系统发育树,并通过VISTA软件进行对应分析。在所研究的样本中鉴定出153个HLA等位基因,其中HLA - A、- B、- DRB1和 - DQB1位点分别有41、50、40和22个等位基因。最常见的等位基因是HLA - A02:01(16.76%)、HLA - B44:02/03(17.82%)、HLA - DRB107:01(19.02%)和HLA - DQB103:01(17.95%)。四位点单倍型分析确定HLA - A02:01 - B50:01 - DRB107:01 - DQB102:02(2.2%)为突尼斯人中常见的单倍型。与其他附近人群相比,突尼斯人在基因上似乎与西地中海人群有关,特别是北非人和柏柏尔人。总之,HLA基因型结果表明突尼斯人与当今的北非人、柏柏尔人和伊比利亚人有关,但与东阿拉伯人(巴勒斯坦人、约旦人和黎巴嫩人)无关。这表明公元7至11世纪阿拉伯人入侵对北非基因库的遗传贡献影响不大。