Germline mutation at eight human minisatellite loci has been studied among families from rural areas of the Kiev and Zhitomir regions of Ukraine, which were heavily contaminated by radionuclides after the Chernobyl accident. The control and exposed groups were composed of families containing children conceived before and after the Chernobyl accident, respectively. The groups were matched by ethnicity, maternal age, parental occupation, and smoking habits, and they differed only slightly by paternal age. A statistically significant 1.6-fold increase in mutation rate was found in the germline of exposed fathers, whereas the maternal germline mutation rate in the exposed families was not elevated. These data, together with the results of our previous analysis of the exposed families from Belarus, suggest that the elevated minisatellite mutation rate can be attributed to post-Chernobyl radioactive exposure. The mechanisms of mutation induction at human minisatellite loci are discussed. © 2002 by The American Society of Human Genetics. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Dubrova, Y. E., Grant, G., Chumak, A. A., Stezhka, V. A., & Karakasian, A. N. (2002). Elevated minisatellite mutation rate in the post-chernobyl families from Ukraine. American Journal of Human Genetics, 71(4), 801–809. https://doi.org/10.1086/342729
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