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    Am J Hum Genet. 1993 Apr;52(4):827-34.

    Slow acetylator mutations in the human polymorphic N-acetyltransferase gene in 786 Asians, blacks, Hispanics, and whites: application to metabolic epidemiology.

    Lin HJ, Han CY, Lin BK, Hardy S.

    Department of Pediatrics, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance 90502.

    Our aim was to determine the population frequencies of the major slow acetylator alleles of the polymorphic N-acetyltransferase (NAT2) gene, whose locus maps to chromosome 8. We used allele-specific PCR amplification on 786 dried blood spots obtained from Hong Kong Chinese, U.S. Koreans, U.S. blacks, U.S. Hispanics, Germans, and U.S. whites. Our results show that four slow acetylator alleles can be detected as mutations at positions 481, 590, and 857 in the NAT2 gene. Recognized base substitutions at positions 341 and 803 need not be determined, because they were almost always associated with the 481T mutation. The known mutation at position 282 was strongly associated with the 590A mutation. The 481T, 590A, and 857A mutations accounted for virtually all of the slow acetylator alleles in Asian and white populations. The 857A mutation proved to be an Asiatic allele. The results will be useful in large-scale epidemiologic studies of cancer and other conditions potentially associated with the acetylator polymorphism.

    PMID: 8460648 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    PMCID: 1682080

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