thee 5 Table 30 Te Distribuuon of Haptoglobin Types in Micronesians From Rongelap Acoil Type l-1 . Group ? All Rongelap Selected* Rongelap No. in Observed group) » No. 176 124 33.5 33.1 39 41 Type 2-2 Expected, Observed No. ™~ No. 39 ~ 18.2 15.3 32 19 Expected, Type 2-1 : Observed No. “2 No. 3135 - 472 500 83 52 Expected, 0 and rare tvpes, Observed No. " No, 85.5 - il 1.6 2 2 *Famuily groups include oniy one child (see text). were visible; two of these were very faint 2-2’s, but the fastest-moving haptoglobin band was not seen in them. one another, and, if superimposed, exhibit bi- Considerable caution must be exercised in extrapolating to an entire population the gene frequencies obtained from a small sample. This is unexposed groups shows almost identical mean BAIB excretion values for che two (exposed, 2.07 = modality with the antimode tn the neighborhood » rd particularly true when studying societies made up of small isolated or semi-isolated groups which “er compartmentalize the breeding community. Thus, the Rongelapese appearto havea fairly highfre- quency of type 1-1, consistent with the general al 5 25) (though not exclusive) rule that in Europe-Africa and America the frequencyof type 1~1 is higher in populations living near the equator than in those du QW z had a 20r 7 2 i z remote from it. It is clear from the Micronesian studies that, at least in some cases, an individual may have no haptoglobin at one time, but have sufficient hapto- AMERICAN WHITES N=300 tad 2 Oo Lod x Lie globin to permit typing at anothertime. (In this case, the interval was 2 years.) Examination of the ahaptoglobinemic individuals gave no significant findings. With =% of the Rongelap population sampled,all the ahaptoglobinemicindividuals fell into one family grouping. This did not help to elucidate the genetic pattern, except to makeit lO 4 Lo cretion for the Rongelapese and that of a New York City white population for comparison. The two distributions are essentially complementary to 1189992 2S FREQUENCY (PERCENT) Oneof the sibs of an ahaptoglobinemic was a types B-Amino-iso-butyric Acid (BAIB) Levels. Figure . 46 shows the frequency distribution of BAIB ex- (20) MARSHALL ISLANDERS (RONGELAP} appear unlikely that the Hp’allele, if such exists, is not at the same locus as the Hp’ and Hp*alleles. 2-1. 615) 15 2.0 2.5 3.0 mg BAIB mg CREATININE Figure 46. Frequency distributionsof urinary excretion rates of 8-amino-iso-butyric acid of Marshall Islanders (Rongelap) and U.S. whites. Meee te tend tween high and low excretors, it is estimated that nearly 90% of the Rongelapese are high excretors. A breakdown of this population into exposed and OT of 1.75. With this point used as the division be- The Micronesian sera studied were all transferrin type CC, which is the common European type.

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