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Human Genetics | 1986

Mitochondrial DNA polymorphism in Japanese

Satoshi Horai; Ei Matsunaga

SummaryMitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from 116 Japanese was analyzed with nine restriction enzymes that recognize a four or five base pair sequence. The sizes of the mtDNA fragments produced by digestion by each enzyme were compared after gel electrophoresis. Double digestion experiments indicated that, in the coding region from URF2 (unidentified reading frame) to tRNAAsn (bp 5274–5691), there is an insertion of about 60 base pairs (bp) compared with the published mtDNA sequence, which is common to all individuals in the present sample. A total of 95 different morphs were detected with the nine enzymes, 60 of which have not been documented previously. Based on a comparison of the cleavage maps of all individuals, 62 different combinations of restriction types were observed. By pairwise comparison of each restriction type, the average number of nucleotide substitutions per nucleotide site (δ) was estimated to be 0.0026. Phylogenetic analysis of the present data indicates that at least two distinct lineages exist in the Japanese population.


Annals of Human Genetics | 1962

The dimorphism in human normal cerumen

Ei Matsunaga

Various aspects of the dimorphism in human cerumen have been described on the basis of the data collected mostly by Japanese investigators. It was shown that the ear‐wax types are apparently determined by a simple genetic mechanism, and can be used as a polymorphic system for both genetics and anthropology. Frequencies of the alleles for the ear‐wax types have been estimated for different ethnic groups. It was pointed out that the marked difference in the distribution of ear‐wax types among the major races is probably a consequence of natural selection having acted in a long course of evolution, and there may be some differences in the selective value between individuals with wet cerumen and those with dry. In view of the apparent association with axillary odour, it was suggested that the alleles for ear‐wax types may control certain metabolic processes, through which individuals with different types of oerumen may display different reactions to environmental changes. The need for future studies along this line is stressed.


Human Genetics | 1978

Reexamination of paternal age effect in Down's syndrome

Ei Matsunaga; Akira Tonomura; Hidetsune Oishi; Yasumoto Kikuchi

SummaryPaternal age distribution for 1279 cases of Downs syndrome born in 1952–1968 was compared with the corresponding distribution for the general population, corrected for the maternal age as well as for the year of birth of the patients. Although there was no difference in the mean paternal age, the two distributions differed significantly, largely due to the excess of fathers aged 55 years and over and to the deficit of those aged 40–44 years in the patients born to mothers aged 30 years and over. The overall pattern of the relative incidence of Downs syndrome with advancing paternal age, with maternal age controlled, seems consistent with the hypothesis proposed by Stene et al. (1977). It increased from 0.8 for fathers aged 20–24 years slowly up to 1.2 for those aged 45–49 years, though with an intermediate drop to 0.8 at the age of 40–44 years, and then sharply to 2.4 for those aged 55 years and over. This rising pattern of the relative incidence with paternal age was essentially the same for the patients born in 1952–1960 and for those born in 1961–1968, although the slope was less steep in the latter than in the former group.


Human Genetics | 1980

Retinoblastoma: Host resistance and 13q- chromosomal deletion

Ei Matsunaga

SummaryData for 27 cases of retinoblastoma that developed in patients with 13q-were collected from the literature and analyzed. The distribution of unilateral and bilateral cases of retinoblastoma differed significantly from the expectation that the degree of expressivity does not differ between the retinoblastoma gene and deletion of 13q. The excess of unilateral cases among the patients with 13q-, which could not be accounted for by ascertainment bias, was attributed to somewhat lowered carcinogenic potential of deletion of 13q14 as compared with the retinoblastoma gene. It was argued that the retinoblastoma gene is probably not located on 13q, and perhaps 20% or more of the individuals with a deletion of 13q14 would not develop retinoblastoma. The normal allele at the retinoblastoma locus, the haplicon in the segment of 13q14, and the suppressor genes as defined by the host resistance model, may be all concerned, in their function additively and without dominance, with normal differentiation of the embryonic retinal cells.


Human Genetics | 1976

Hereditary retinoblastoma: Penetrance, expressivity and age of onset

Ei Matsunaga

SummaryAnalyses of family data published in Japan concerning 29 kindreds with 2 or more cases of retinoblastoma revealed that, in the children who received the gene from a carrier parent, both penetrance and expressivity increase with increasing degree of expressivity in the parent. The estimate for the average degree of penetrance varies from 0.7 to 0.9, depending upon the method employed. The value will be increased with increasing number of survivors of hereditary retinoblastoma. Data were presented to indicate that the hereditary form of retinoblastoma onset tends to be later in unilateral than in bilateral affection, though in the non-hereditary form onset will be further delayed. No effect of birth order was detected. It was suggested that suppressor genes at other loci play a significant role in manifestation of the major dominant gene for retinoblastoma. Implications of these findings were discussed.


Human Genetics | 1990

Parental age and seasonal variation in the births of children with sporadic retinoblastoma: a mutation-epidemiologic study.

Ei Matsunaga; K. Minoda; Masao S. Sasaki

SummaryStatistical analysis of parental age data from 225 sporadic cases of bilateral retinoblastoma, plus ten sporadic cases of chromosome deletion or translocation involving 13q14 that was identified as of paternal origin, revealed no evidence of paternal or maternal age effect. Parental exposure to ionizing radiation or chemical mutagens, the effect of which is accumulated with advancing age, does not seem to play a major role in the production of germinal mutations at the responsible (RB) locus. Furthermore, analysis of variation in the month of birth of 753 children with sporadic unilateral retinoblastoma did not show any significant deviation from the controls or a cyclic trend. The occurrence of nonheritable retinoblastoma is not likely to be associated with certain viruses such as human adenovirus 12 whose activity varies markedly with season. These results, together with the fairly uniform pattern in the incidence of this tumor among different populations, suggest that most, if not all, cases of sporadic retinoblastoma are caused by some intrinsic biological mechanisms, and not by environmental mutagens that may vary with respect to time and place.


Human Genetics | 1984

High-resolution studies in patients with aniridia-Wilms tumor association, Wilms tumor or related congenital abnormalities

Yasuo Nakagome; T. Ise; M. Sakurai; T. Nakajo; E. Okamoto; T. Takano; Y. Nakahori; Y. Tsuchida; N. Nagahara; Y. Takada; Y. Ohsawa; S. Sawaguchi; A. Toyosaka; N. Kobayashi; Ei Matsunaga; S. Saito

SummaryWe attempted to determine wheter all cases of AWTA (anirida-Wilms tumor association) or any of the following groups of patients show 11p deletion: cases of Wilms tumor with congenital abnormalities other than aniridia, those without any congenital abnormalities, tumor itself in cases of Wilsm tumor without constitutional 11p deletion and cases of aniridia or hemihypertrophy without Wilms tumor. We studied a total of 29 index patients including five cases of AWTA, four cases of Wilms tumor with various congenital abnormalities, 16 cases of Wilms tumor without other abnormalities, three cases of aniridia in one of which Wilms tumor developed later and a case of hemihypertrophy.In all five cases of AWTA and in a case of aniridia who later developed Wilms tumor, 11p deletion involving the p13 band was detected. The mother of the latter also showed an identical 11p deletion. The common segment of deletion was the middle part of the p13. Two possible hypotheses on the mechanism through which Wilms tumor might develop were evaluated, based on the distribution of break points. All other cases, including five with tumor culture, showed a normal karyotype.


Science | 1962

Prezygotic Selection in ABO Blood Groups

Ei Matsunaga; Yuichiro Hiraizumi

A statistical method was devised to test whether prezygotic selection was operating in ABO blood groups, and it was demonstrated, with data from Japanese families, that heterozygous AO and BO fathers transmitted more than 50 percent O-bearing sperm (approximately 55 percent) to their children. Neither sperm incompatibility nor reproductive compensation could account for the results.


Human Genetics | 1977

A survey on maternal age and karyotype in Down's syndrome in Japan, 1947–1975

Ei Matsunaga; Hiroko Fujita

SummaryData on karyotype and maternal age of 1954 cases of Downs syndrome were analyzed to see if the rate of chromosome mutations leading to this abnormality has been enhanced during the last 20 years. Comparison of the data for patients born in 1947–1960 with those in 1961–1975 revealed little change with time in the proportions of cases due to different karyotypes, the overwhelming majority being of 21 trisomy type in both periods. However, there has been a remarkable decline in the mean maternal age from 33.1 years to 29.7 years as well as in the variance from 50.5 to 29.4. While the rate of decline in the variance was almost the same as that for all births occurring in the same periods, the decline in the mean maternal age was much greater for the patients than for all births, suggesting that the rate of nondisjunction might have increased in younger rather than in older mothers. However, when the risk of brearing a child with Downs syndrome for mothers aged 40–44 is taken as unity, no evidence was found for an increase with time in the relative risk for younger mothers. Moreover, results of surveys made in 1960 and thereafter in different parts of Japan indicate that the crude incidence rate of Downs syndrome at birth has been around 0.10%, giving no indication of an upward trend. These findings are discussed with reference to the serious environmental pollution, including possible genetic hazards, with which Japan has been faced since the 1960s.


Human Genetics | 1977

Pitfalls in the use of chromosome variants for paternity dispute cases.

Yasuo Nakagome; Teruo Kitagawa; Kazuso Iinuma; Ei Matsunaga; Tomotaka Shinoda; Toshiyuki Ando

SummaryA huge ‘satellite’ (22s+) was observed in a mentally retarded and malformed girl. It consisted of constitutive heterochromatin based on the C-band technique (CBG). In neither of the parents was the variant observed. Genetic marker studies revealed that the father was, indeed, the father of the proposita (probability, 99.8%).It is emphasized that caution must be taken in the use of chromosome variants for paternity dispute cases.

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Satoshi Horai

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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Yasuo Nakagome

National Institute of Genetics

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Kohei Shiota

National Institute of Genetics

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Takashi Gojobori

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Akira Tonomura

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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J. Azumi

National Institute of Genetics

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Takayoshi Shotake

Primate Research Institute

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Kazuso Iinuma

National Institute of Genetics

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