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A New Variant of Human Transferrin in a Venezuelan Family

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Abstract

THE most prolific of the hereditary variations among the human serum proteins is that of the iron-transport protein transferrin. The initial demonstration of genetically determined transferrin heterogeneity1 has been followed by numerous reports of additional variants, until at the present time thirteen transferrins have been described: B0 (ref. 2), B0–1 (ref. 3), B1 (ref. 4), B2 (ref. 5), B3 (ref. 6), C, D0 (ref. 2), D4 (ref. 7), DMontreal (ref. 8), DChi (ref. 6), D1 (ref 9), D2 (ref. 4), and D3 (ref. 2). Each of the molecular species of transferrin has been identified by its characteristic mobility in starch-gel electrophoresis. Transferrin C is common in all populations; variants of more rapid mobility than transferrin C have been named B, and slower-moving variants have been labelled D. Where convenient, subscripts have been chosen to define the relative electrophoretic mobilities of variants within the fast- and slow-moving categories. In certain cases, particular transferrins appear to be restricted to specific populations; thus, transferrin B0–1 occurs in 8 per cent of Navajo Indians, B2 in 1 per cent of Caucasians, DChi in 6 per cent of Chinese, and D1 in 10 per cent of American Negroes.

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ARENDS, T., GALLANGO, M., PARKER, W. et al. A New Variant of Human Transferrin in a Venezuelan Family. Nature 196, 477–478 (1962). https://doi.org/10.1038/196477a0

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