The distribution of the hemoglobin Constant Spring (Hb CS) gene in eight populations in Southeast Asia (including Assam) was determined using oligonucleotide hybridization. Hb CS was absent in two Assamese populations with a high prevalence of Hb E. The Hb CS gene frequency was 0.033 in northern Thailand and near 0.01 in central Thailand and Cambodia. High frequencies, between 0.05 and 0.06, were observed in northeastern Thailand. The present data and a similar study in Laotians suggest that the Lao-speaking populations of the Mekong River basin in northeastern Thailand and Laos have the highest frequencies of the Hb CS gene in Southeast Asia.
DNA haplotypes (HT) and frameworks (FW) linked to the beta-globin locus were determined by restriction fragment analysis using eight restriction enzymes on chromosomes bearing the Hb A gene (HBB*A) or the HbE gene (HBB*E) in the So, an Austro-Asiatic population of northeast Thailand with an HBB*E frequency near 0.5. All HBB*E genes were present with FW2, and only two haplotypes were observed (25 HT 27-2, -+- +-; 10 HT 41-2, +----++-). In a control group from the general population of Northeast Thailand the HT distribution was more diverse, and 2 of 20 HBB*E genes were present in FW 3. High frequencies of HBB*E in FW 3 in Southeast Asia are apparently limited to the Khmer population of Cambodia. There were no differences in the hematologic parameters in subjects homozygous for HBB*E/FW2 or HBB*E/FW3.
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