Hemoglobin A from adult humans does not contain any coded isoleucine},
thus its presence in hemoglobulin A must originate through errors in
transcription or translation, or by somatic mutations arising during DNA
replication.

Errors in transcription occur infrequently to form altered

mRNA, tRNA and rRNA; such errors change the coding in the mRNA and may reduce
the fidelity of the tRNA as regards both the kind of amino acid it accepts

and the mRNA codons it recognizes-.

Errors in translation arise through

the attachment of wrong amino acids to tRNA (amino acyl synthetase errors)
and the imprecise recognition of the mRNA codons by the tRNA anticodons
(translational

variation).

Somatic mutations result from mistakes in

replication of DNA; many single base substitution mutations change
nonisoleucine into isoleucine codons? and these "mutant" cells could
have hemoglobin mRNA with isoleucine codons.

For this reason, an increase

in the quantity of isoleucine in hemoglobin A would be expected in humans

who have been exposed to agents that cause base substitution mutations.
Radiation may cause base substitution mutations in human somatic cells but
this possibility has never been established.

This report describes the

analysis of the isoleucine content of hemoglobin A from 13 Marshallese
who were exposed to fallout from an atomic bomb test in March of 1954
compared with hemoglobin A from 12 Marshallese controls.

Methods

The blood was collected by Dr. Conard in March of 1974 and received in
Oak Ridge on April 4, 1974.

Hemoglobin was purified initially by molecular

seiving on Sephadex G-220 and then by three successive chromatographic
separations of the carbonmonoxyhemoglobin, methemoglobin, and metcyanhemoglobin

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