Human chromosome heteromorphisms in Americans Blacks: II. Higher incidence of pericentric inversions of secondary constriction regions (h).

Eighty normal American blacks were studied by the CBG technique (C-bands by barium hydroxide using Giemsa) for estimation of size and inversion heteromorphism of chromosomes 1, 9, and 16, and the data were compared to those of whites using subjectively defined criteria. Size and inversion heteromorphisms were classified into 5 levels. The frequencies of size hetromorphisms of chromosomes 1 and 16 were 10.63% and 6.88%, respectively, which are not significantly different from those of a normal population of whites. A higher incidence of size heteromorphisms for chromosome 9 was noted in whites (47.5% vs 30%). The frequencies of inversion heteromorphism of chromosomes 1, 9, and 16 were 17.5%, 21.9%, and 0.0%, respectively. Overall, 61 chromosomes were found to have an inversion. Of these, 28 were in chromosome 1, and 33 were in chromosome 9. A higher incidence of inversion heteromorphisms of chromosomes 1 and 9 was noted in American blacks, while no inversions were found in chromosome 16 in either population. A significant association of increased size of the h region with inversion (r = 0.99 P less than 0.01) is demonstrated, ie, enlarged h regions have a higher frequency of inversions.

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