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DOI: 10.1159/000153996
OpenAccess: Closed
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Founder Effect in Familial Hyperchylomicronemia among French Canadians of Quebec

Marc De Braekeleer,C Dionne,Claude Gagné,Pierre Julien,Daniel Brun,M.R.V. Murthy,Paul J. Lupien

Founder effect
Genetics
Genealogy
1991
Familial hyperchylomicronemia has reached a high prevalence in the French Canadian population of eastern Quebec. The birth places of 58 carriers identified through the birth of one affected child clustered in three regions. The genealogies of these 58 individuals showed that no founder was common to all of them. Three sets of founders were found, one for each region, with little overlapping between two regions. These results strongly suggest that more than one mutation, introduced by the French migrants in the 17th century, are segregating in the French Canadian population. Perche, a region situated between Paris and Normandy, appeared to be the most likely putative center of diffusion of at least one mutation in the lipoprotein lipase gene segregating in the modern-day French Canadian population of Quebec.
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    Founder Effect in Familial Hyperchylomicronemia among French Canadians of Quebec” is a paper by Marc De Braekeleer C Dionne Claude Gagné Pierre Julien Daniel Brun M.R.V. Murthy Paul J. Lupien published in 1991. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.