Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) in whites is strongly associated with particular HLA-DQ alpha beta heterodimers composed of a DQ alpha chain with an arginine at residue 52 (Arg52+) combined to a DQ beta chain lacking an aspartic acid at residue 57 (Asp57-). With the aim of confirming this association, clarifying which heterodimers account for the highest risk of IDDM and explaining the excess risk of DR3-DQw2/DR4-DQw8, 115 unrelated white IDDM patients and 108 unrelated healthy nondiabetic control subjects were studied. With polymerase chain reaction and sequence-specific oligonucleotide probes, both patients and control subjects were typed for their HLA-DQA1 and DQB1 alleles and their DQA1-DQB1 haplotype and genotype frequencies were compared. Four major findings emerged from our analysis. 1) Arg52+ DQ alpha/Asp57- DQ beta heterodimers, formed in cis and/or in trans, are strongly associated with susceptibility to IDDM; 97% of patients and 46% of control subjects had at least one such susceptibility heterodimer (relative risk [RR] 32, confidence interval [Cl] 14.25-71.86, P less than 10(-7). 2) The degree of disease susceptibility depends on the number of such DQ heterodimers that a subject can express according to his or her DQA1-DQB1 genotype. The highest RR was observed in patients with four susceptibility DQ heterodimers (RR 41, Cl 17.05-95.9). 3) Only part of the susceptibility DQ heterodimers were significantly increased in patients, conferring IDDM susceptibility of different strength. The strongest association was with the DQA1*0501-DQB1*0302 combination formed in trans position (RR 35.2, CI 12.88-96.78, P less than 10(-7).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
The peptide-binding motif of HLA-A29, the predisposing allele for birdshot retinopathy, was determined after acid-elution of endogenous peptides from purified HLA-A29 molecules.
The association between HLA-B27 and spondylarthropathies is currently being reinvestigated in the light of HLA-B27 subtyping. At least 11 different subtypes have been described among which B*2703, B*2706, and B*2709 could be less closely associated with disease at the population level. Differences in the presentation of antigenic peptides by these subtypes could be related to differences in disease susceptibility. We focused our work
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