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Distribution of the FYB(ES )and RHCE*ce(733C>G) alleles in an Argentinean population: Implications for transfusion medicine

BACKGROUND: The understanding of the molecular bases of blood groups makes possible the identification of red cell antigens and antibodies using molecular approaches, especially when haemagglutination is of limited value. The practical application of DNA typing requires the analysis of the polymorph...

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Autores principales: Cotorruelo, Carlos M, Fiori, Silvana V, Borrás, Silvia E García, Racca, Liliana L, Biondi, Claudia S, Racca, Amelia L
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2412855/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18460195
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2350-9-40
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author Cotorruelo, Carlos M
Fiori, Silvana V
Borrás, Silvia E García
Racca, Liliana L
Biondi, Claudia S
Racca, Amelia L
author_facet Cotorruelo, Carlos M
Fiori, Silvana V
Borrás, Silvia E García
Racca, Liliana L
Biondi, Claudia S
Racca, Amelia L
author_sort Cotorruelo, Carlos M
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The understanding of the molecular bases of blood groups makes possible the identification of red cell antigens and antibodies using molecular approaches, especially when haemagglutination is of limited value. The practical application of DNA typing requires the analysis of the polymorphism and allele distribution of the blood group genes under study since genetic variability was observed among different ethnic groups. Urban populations of Argentina are assumed to have a white Caucasian European genetic component. However, historical and biological data account for the influence of other ethnic groups. In this work we analyse FY and RH blood group alleles attributed to Africans and that could have clinical implications in the immune destruction of erythrocytes. METHODS: We studied 103 white trios (father, mother and child, 309 samples) from the city of Rosario by allele specific PCRs and serological methods. The data obtained were analysed with the appropriate statistical test considering only fathers and mothers (n = 206). RESULTS: We found the presence of the FY*B(ES )and RHCE*ce(733C>G) alleles and an elevated frequency (0.0583) for the Dce haplotype. The number of individuals with a concomitant occurrence of both alleles was significantly higher than that expected by chance. We found that 4.68% of the present gene pool is composed by alleles primarily associated with African ancestry and about 10% of the individuals carried at least one RH or FY allele that is predominantly observed among African populations. Thirteen percent of Fy(b-) subjects were FY*A/FY*B(ES). CONCLUSION: Taken together, the results suggest that admixture events between African slaves and European immigrants at the beginning of the 20(th )century made the physical characteristics of black Africans to be invisible nowadays. Considering that it was a recent historical event, the FY*B(ES )and RHCE*ce(733C>G) alleles did not have time to become widespread but remain concentrated within families. These findings have considerable impact for typing and transfusion strategy in our population, increasing the pool of compatible units for Fy(b-) individuals requiring chronic transfusion. Possible difficulties in transfusion therapy and in genotyping could be anticipated and appropriately improved strategies devised, allowing a better management of the alloimmunization in the blood bank.
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spelling pubmed-24128552008-06-05 Distribution of the FYB(ES )and RHCE*ce(733C>G) alleles in an Argentinean population: Implications for transfusion medicine Cotorruelo, Carlos M Fiori, Silvana V Borrás, Silvia E García Racca, Liliana L Biondi, Claudia S Racca, Amelia L BMC Med Genet Research Article BACKGROUND: The understanding of the molecular bases of blood groups makes possible the identification of red cell antigens and antibodies using molecular approaches, especially when haemagglutination is of limited value. The practical application of DNA typing requires the analysis of the polymorphism and allele distribution of the blood group genes under study since genetic variability was observed among different ethnic groups. Urban populations of Argentina are assumed to have a white Caucasian European genetic component. However, historical and biological data account for the influence of other ethnic groups. In this work we analyse FY and RH blood group alleles attributed to Africans and that could have clinical implications in the immune destruction of erythrocytes. METHODS: We studied 103 white trios (father, mother and child, 309 samples) from the city of Rosario by allele specific PCRs and serological methods. The data obtained were analysed with the appropriate statistical test considering only fathers and mothers (n = 206). RESULTS: We found the presence of the FY*B(ES )and RHCE*ce(733C>G) alleles and an elevated frequency (0.0583) for the Dce haplotype. The number of individuals with a concomitant occurrence of both alleles was significantly higher than that expected by chance. We found that 4.68% of the present gene pool is composed by alleles primarily associated with African ancestry and about 10% of the individuals carried at least one RH or FY allele that is predominantly observed among African populations. Thirteen percent of Fy(b-) subjects were FY*A/FY*B(ES). CONCLUSION: Taken together, the results suggest that admixture events between African slaves and European immigrants at the beginning of the 20(th )century made the physical characteristics of black Africans to be invisible nowadays. Considering that it was a recent historical event, the FY*B(ES )and RHCE*ce(733C>G) alleles did not have time to become widespread but remain concentrated within families. These findings have considerable impact for typing and transfusion strategy in our population, increasing the pool of compatible units for Fy(b-) individuals requiring chronic transfusion. Possible difficulties in transfusion therapy and in genotyping could be anticipated and appropriately improved strategies devised, allowing a better management of the alloimmunization in the blood bank. BioMed Central 2008-05-06 /pmc/articles/PMC2412855/ /pubmed/18460195 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2350-9-40 Text en Copyright © 2008 Cotorruelo et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cotorruelo, Carlos M
Fiori, Silvana V
Borrás, Silvia E García
Racca, Liliana L
Biondi, Claudia S
Racca, Amelia L
Distribution of the FYB(ES )and RHCE*ce(733C>G) alleles in an Argentinean population: Implications for transfusion medicine
title Distribution of the FYB(ES )and RHCE*ce(733C>G) alleles in an Argentinean population: Implications for transfusion medicine
title_full Distribution of the FYB(ES )and RHCE*ce(733C>G) alleles in an Argentinean population: Implications for transfusion medicine
title_fullStr Distribution of the FYB(ES )and RHCE*ce(733C>G) alleles in an Argentinean population: Implications for transfusion medicine
title_full_unstemmed Distribution of the FYB(ES )and RHCE*ce(733C>G) alleles in an Argentinean population: Implications for transfusion medicine
title_short Distribution of the FYB(ES )and RHCE*ce(733C>G) alleles in an Argentinean population: Implications for transfusion medicine
title_sort distribution of the fyb(es )and rhce*ce(733c>g) alleles in an argentinean population: implications for transfusion medicine
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2412855/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18460195
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2350-9-40
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