These are listed roughly in chronological order of the start of the research. Research on most topics was on-going with significant publications spanning several decades: for instance Xg was discovered in the early 1960s,[2] but the unit contributed to the identification of the underlying gene, PBDX, in 1994.[3]
Elucidating the genetics of the Rhesus blood group. Director R.R. Race with R.A. Fisher had proposed the most widely accepted genetic nomenclature for the Rhesus system. Much of the early work of the unit was concerned with identifying genetic variants of this system which became possible after the initial discovery by Karl Landsteiner and the development of the Coombs test.
Human Blood Groups in Man. A technical reference work written by the unit's first two directors. It was first published in 1950; its final, and 6th, edition appearing in 1975. For much of this period this was a standard reference work for Clinical Haematologists and Blood Transfusion centres.[4]
Xg antigen system. This was the first X-linked blood group to be discovered in 1962, and led to extensive work over the following decades, usually with collaborators, to map genes on the human X chromosome.
^Mann JJ, Cahan A, Gelb AG, et al. A sex-linked blood group. Lancet. 1962;i:8.
^Ellis NA, Tippett P, Petty A, et al. (November 1994). "PBDX is the XG blood group gene". Nat. Genet. 8 (3): 285–90. doi:10.1038/ng1194-285. PMID7533029.
Clarke, Cyril (1985). Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society31, 454–492; Robert Race. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1985.0016 1748-8494
Hughes-Jones, Nevin and Tippett, Patricia (2003). Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society49, 461–473. Ruth Ann Sanger. doi:10.1098/rsbm.2003.0027
Thomson, A. L. (1975). Half a century of medical research. Vol. II : The programme of the Medical Research Council (UK). pp. xii + 402 pp. Medical Research Council, London. ISBN0-11-450029-0
Tippett, P.A. (1996). British Blood Transfusion Service Newsletter40, History of the MRC Blood Group Unit.