C R Seances Soc Biol Fil
January 1999
Compared to others species Homo sapiens is physically underprivileged as much by his relative weakness than by his lack of natural defense. Only his mental abilities allowed him to cope with the various dangers which threaten him and to rule over the biosphere that he managed to modified for his own benefit. The neolithic revolution which saw the generalization of agriculture and the breeding of animals offered a considerable quantities of resources which lead to a strong demographic growth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHuman anti-D (Rho) monoclonal antibodies (Mabs) of the IgG (70) and IgM (27) classes were tested with red blood cells (RBCs) of various non-human primates, from anthropoid apes to New World monkeys. Significant differences in reactivity were observed among antibodies of two classes depending on taxonomic position of primate animals. Only IgM Mabs gave positive reactions (9 out of 18 Mabs) with blood of Old World monkeys.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRh-related transcripts present in bone marrow samples from several species of nonhuman primates (chimpanzee, gorilla, gibbon, crab-eating macaque) have been amplified by RT-polymerase chain reaction using primers deduced from the sequence of human RH genes. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the nonhuman transcripts revealed a high degree of similarity to human blood group Rh sequences, suggesting a great conservation of the RH genes throughout evolution. Full-length transcripts, potentially encoding 417 amino acid long proteins homologous to Rh polypeptides, were characterized, as well as mRNA isoforms which harbored nucleotide deletions or insertions and potentially encode truncated proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFC R Acad Sci III
August 1994
Microsatellites are tandem repeats of short sequences elements (most often CA repeats) interspersed in many genomes and which frequently show multiallele polymorphism. They have proved invaluable for genomic mapping in man and other species and may be used for evolutionary studies provided that the available primers can be used in different species. The dystrophin gene, which shows high sequence conservation between man, rodents and chicken contains such polymorphic CA repeats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAs the chimpanzee R-C-E-F blood group system appears to be the chimpanzee counterpart of the human Rhesus (RH) system, we have tried to determine whether chimpanzee Rh-like genes encode R-C-E-F-related proteins. Chimpanzee genomic DNA, digested by any of eight endonucleases and hybridized with three Rh exon-specific probes, exhibits a high degree of polymorphism. Analysis of DNA from unrelated individuals of different R-C-E-F types revealed that the presence of some restriction fragments is correlated with particular R-C-E-F types.
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