Abstract
There is some evidence that genes at loci on the lower end of chromosome 14, encoding for the immunoglobulin heavy chains allotypes (Gm), may influence susceptibility to human tumors. We examined the Gm and Km (IgK light chain) allotype distribution in a sample of 41 patients with familial malignant melanoma and in 79 healthy relatives. An increased frequency of the haplotype carrying the Gm (2) allotype, namely Gm (1, 2, 17;..; 21), seemed to be peculiar to patients, since it was almost twice as frequent in them than in the healthy population and four times as frequent with respect to the healthy relatives. Our findings are in keeping with previous suggestions that in Caucasian melanoma patients genes of the immunoglobulin heavy chain constant region, or Gm-linked genes, may enhance susceptibility to malignant melanoma.
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