Abstract

In a survey of the chromosomal background associated with the sickle cell gene in Guadeloupe, a French Caribbean island, we identified 37 unrelated patients with sickle cell disease (27 SS, nine SC, and one S-β-thalassemia) of 477 unrelated sickle cell patients where the βs gene was linked to 20 different atypical haplotypes. These atypical chromosomes account for about 5% of the overall βs chromosomes in this population. To investigate the origin of these atypical βs haplotypes, we performed extensive typing of βs and βAchromosomes. Twenty-two different 5' subhaplotypes were identified among the βs chromosomes. Fifteen of 20 different atypical haplotypes are likely to be the product of recombination by a single crossover around the <<hot-spot>> 5' to the β-globin gene, or between a major βs haplotype and one of the βs haplotypes present in the population. The remaining casm require genetic mechanisms (gene conversions, additional substitutions in a given haplotype) other than crossovers to generate these atypical haplotypes.

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