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  1. #1
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    DNA Project Aims to Count Scots Redheads

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-20237511
    A project is being launched which aims to find out how many people in Scotland carry the red hair gene.
    Researchers from the ScotlandsDNA project also hope to discover why Scotland appears to have the most red-headed people in the world.
    Only about 1-2% of the world's population has red hair, but in Scotland the figure is much higher at around 13% or about 650,000 people.
    The information will be used to make a "ginger" map of the British Isles.
    Researchers at the ScotlandsDNA project believe the figure for Scottish red hair gene carriers may be much higher, and could be as many as 1.6m.
    A person who doesn't have red hair can still produce red haired children if their partner is a carrier of a gene.
    Red hair appears in people with two copies of a recessive gene on chromosome 16 which causes a mutation in the MC1R protein and can often skip generations.
    Contrary to popular belief, the gene is not dying out and will most likely continue for many generations to come.
    The ScotlandsDNA project is launching a new test which costs £25 and will tell participants whether or not they're a carrier of a red haired gene
    It will also inform them of which of three types of the gene they have, and possibly provide some insight into why Scotland is the most red-headed nation on earth.
    Managing director of ScotlandsDNA, Alastair Moffat is keen to map the number of possible carriers of the gene in Scotland and attempt to explain why we have so many Scots red-heads.
    "It's not necessarily the people who have red hair that interest us at ScotlandsDNA, what we want to do is discover who carries the red hair gene variant," Mr Moffat told BBC Scotland.
    "I think that's a much larger number. For example, in my own family, I have three kids and two of them have red hair - and while I haven't got much hair, it's certainly not red, and neither has my wife.
    "In either side of our families, there was no red hair - and I thought, where has this come from? That was what got me interested.
    "We're looking at people who have already had their DNA tested by Scotland's DNA, which is simple for us to do.
    "But they have to be tested first, and then we can tell them if they're carriers of the red-head variant."
    All physical colouring is a mixture of two pigments; black melanin and red/yellow melanin, but in red-heads a particular receptor in the pathway for pigmentation, MC1R, is disrupted and black melanin is suppressed while red/yellow melanin is allowed to be made.
    The result is red hair, light skin colour, often freckles and a greater sensitivity to sunlight.
    The three types of red-head gene are:
    Cysteine-red (or R151C) is carried by 10% of British people
    Tryptophan-red (or R160W) is carried by 9% of British people
    Histidine-red (or D294H) is carried by 2.5% of British people
    There are other, much rarer variants, but for a child to have red hair, both parents must be carriers and there is a 25% chance that their offspring will have it, which is known as "recessive inheritance".
    Everyone who carries one of the variants is a direct descendant of the first person ever to have it, but Mr Moffat believes the origins of the gene are more an adaptation to Scotland's poor weather.
    Mr Moffat added: "I think it's to do with sunshine - we all need vitamin D from sunshine, but Scotland is cloudy, we have an Atlantic climate and we need light skin to get as much vitamin D from the Sun as possible."
    Regional Director for Scotland for Clan Cunningham International, and a Scottish Armiger.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    27th July 12
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    This sounds very interesting. I am of Scottish ancestry AND I happened to be blessed with the best hair color imaginable...red.
    [COLOR=#000000]Teàrlach MacDhòmhnaill[/COLOR]
    [COLOR=#000000]Missouri State Commissioner - Clan Donald USA[/COLOR]

  3. #3
    Tam Piperson is offline Membership Revoked for repeated rule violations.
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    My last wife and I (neither of whom has red hair) were fortunate enough to have had a son together who has reddish hair; so it must be a recessive gene, as both she and I had ancestors and relatives that were redheads.

  4. #4
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    5th June 12
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    Thanks for sharing this. We have two generations with no redheads--then a handsome grandson with flaming red hair.
    Dani Mac

  5. #5
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    15th September 08
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    I think if I had known about genetic testing before I proposed to my wife, I might have asked her to take a test before we got married. Then at least I would not have had my hopes up at the birth of every child that they would have red hair, like I do (did).
    I am Matty Ross of the Clan ROSS

  6. #6
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    I would be curious to see my relatives' genetic information - my family is Scottish and English. I have some reddish lowlights in my otherwise light brown hair, but my younger half brother has flame red hair (so jealous!!!)

  7. #7
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    I had been told recently, that in the not too distant future; that red hair will be VERY rare. don't know how true that is.
    Humor, is chaos; remembered in tranquillity- James Thurber

  8. #8
    Tam Piperson is offline Membership Revoked for repeated rule violations.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tartan Tess View Post
    I had been told recently, that in the not too distant future; that red hair will be VERY rare. don't know how true that is.
    Since the specific ethnic groups that tend to have red and blonde hair, light eyes, and fair skin are all experiencing a significant decrease in population due to having fewer and fewer children, while the populations of those who don't possess those particular characteristics are on the increase due to better health care and nutrition, it is very likely to be the case that those traits may eventually become extinct in the not so distant future.

    In many cultures, particularly where red hair does not occur naturally, it is still highly prized and some go to efforts to achieve it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8tRzM2tZFng
    Last edited by Tam Piperson; 10th November 12 at 04:01 PM.

  9. #9
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    I recently had my DNA analyzed through Ancestry.com The results of my Genetic Ethnicity is British Isles 52% and Scandinavian 44% I have red hair, my father and a couple of uncles and aunts had red hair. None of my children have red hair but two of my grandchildren, both boys, have red hair. It is a gene that seems to be a live and well in our family tree. I would be interested in participating in this study if you are taking Americans in the group.

  10. #10
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    I used to keep budgerigars, which proved to be a very interesting hobby for a biologist.

    Eradicating a recessive gene is almost impossible, even with controlled breeding.

    Just because you have a group of similar looking individuals with a dominant inherited feature it doesn't mean that a gene which is recessive to it has been lost, it is just hidden, and without DNA analysis there is no quick way to tell which individuals are homozygous and which heterozygous for a particular feature.

    You might have no red headed people known in a family, and no red heads at the wedding, but that is no guarantee of a lack of redheaded offspring.

    Anne the Pleater :ootd:

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