Busi B R, Wells L J, Volkers W S, Ebeli-Struijk A C, Meera Khan P
Hum Genet. 1979 May 23;49(1):105-13. doi: 10.1007/BF00277692.
English, Italian (including Sardinian), and Spanish populations from Europe and Muslim, Hindu, Sikh, Punjabi, and other populations from the Indian subcontinent currently living either in Birmingham or in India were screened for electrophoretically detectable genetic variants of red cell glyoxalase I (GLO), and their frequencies were reported. All the western European populations investigated, including those reported, exhibited an incidence of close to 44% for the GLO1 gene. The frequency distribution of the GLO1 gene in various populations from the Indian subcontinent, in contrast, was found to range between 0.15 and 0.33. These observations suggest that the European populations in general are genetically more homogeneous than are the populations of the Indian subcontinent.
对来自欧洲的英国、意大利(包括撒丁岛)和西班牙人群,以及目前居住在伯明翰或印度的来自印度次大陆的穆斯林、印度教、锡克教、旁遮普和其他人群,进行了红细胞乙二醛酶I(GLO)电泳可检测遗传变异的筛查,并报告了其频率。所有调查的西欧人群,包括已报道的那些,GLO1基因的发生率接近44%。相比之下,发现GLO1基因在印度次大陆不同人群中的频率分布在0.15至0.33之间。这些观察结果表明,总体而言,欧洲人群在基因上比印度次大陆人群更为同质。