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ΔF508 testing of the DNA bank of the Royal Manchester Children's Hospital

  • Population analysis of the major mutation in cystic fibrosis
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Summary

Details of haplotype and ΔF508 status from various populations represented in the cystic fibrosis (CF) DNA bank of the Royal Manchester Children's Hospital are provided, together with information on the association of genotype and clinical status. Clinical details and DNA analyses from native English in the North-West and South-West of England (Bath), from Lancashire Pakistani families and from Afrikaans Namibian families are compared. A 78.5% incidence of ΔF508 has been found in English families. Compound heterozygotes with CF and only one ΔF508 gene have an increased likelihood of having milder disease, with lessPseudomonas isolated from sputum and relatively more showing either no regular respiratory pathogens or colonisation withStaphylococcus. There is also a relative increase in meconium ileus in these compound heterozygotes. The diagnosis of CF may be in doubt in some subjects negative for ΔF508. Some of the Bath families have unusual haplotypes for an English population and a compound heterozygote ΔF508/ΔI507 has been found. There is evidence from metD analysis of the founder effect in the Afrikaans Namibian families, who have a high ΔF508 incidence.

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Schwarz, M.J., Super, M., Wallis, C. et al. ΔF508 testing of the DNA bank of the Royal Manchester Children's Hospital. Hum Genet 85, 428–430 (1990). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02428298

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02428298

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