Background Recent controlled studies have confirmed that hepatitis C virus (HCV) is the main correlate of liver disease in patients with lichen planus (LP), mainly in southern Europe and Japan. However, a low prevalence of HCV infection has been found in LP patients in England and northern France, and significant differences in serum HCV RNA levels or HCV genotypes have not been found between LP patients and controls. Thus host rather than viral factors may be prevalent in the pathogenesis of HCV-related LP. The HLA-DR allele may influence both the outcome of HCV infection and the appearance of symptoms outside the liver. Objectives To assess whether major histocompatibility complex class II alleles play a part in the development of HCV-related LP. Methods Intermediate-resolution DRB typing by hybridization with oligonucleotide probes was performed in 44 consecutive Italian oral LP (OLP) patients with HCV infection (anti-HCV and HCV RNA positive), in an age, sex and clinically comparable disease control group of 60 Italian OLP patients without HCV infection (anti-HCV and HCV RNA negative), and in 145 healthy unrelated Italian bone marrow donors without evidence of liver disease or history of LP and with negative tests for HCV. Results Patients with exclusive OLP and HCV infection possessed the HLA-DR6 allele more frequently than patients with exclusive OLP but without HCV infection (52% vs. 18%, respectively; P c (P corrected ) 0´028, relative risk 4´93). We did not find any relationship between mucocutaneous LP, HCV infection and HLA-DR alleles. Conclusions HCV-related OLP therefore appears to be a distinctive subset particularly associated with the HLA class II allele HLA-DR6. This could partially explain the peculiar geographical heterogeneity of the association between HCV and LP.
This review reports the characteristics of the human surface molecule CD38, a structure not linked to a definite line and predominantly expressed in early and activated phenotypes. The CD38 molecule consists of a single chain of 46 kDa, spanning the membrane and with the carboxyl terminus located in the extracellular compartment. The CD38 molecule is also involved in the transduction of activation and proliferation signals, which are line unrestricted. The gene coding for the CD38 antigen has been cloned and used for the construction of simian and mouse transfectants expressing the human molecule. These cell models are used for the analysis of several unanswered issues, mainly concerning the in vivo function of CD38, the existence of a natural ligand and of polymorphism in the population.
The aim of this study was to analyse the genetic structure of the Italian bone marrow donor population on the basis of HLA polymorphisms. Maximum likelihood estimates of gene and haplotype frequencies, goodness of fit to Hardy-Weinberg predictions and heterozygosity were calculated for 18 Italian administrative regions. Moreover, the phenotypic peculiarity of the regional populations was assessed by analysing the number of "typical phenotypes" found in each region. Multivariate analyses carried out on HLA-A and HLA-B gene frequencies gave a genetic pattern of the donor pools that reflects the structure of the Italian population determined in previous population genetic studies. Sardinia shows a very large genetic difference with respect to the other regions; of these, the central-southern regions are well-differentiated from the central-northern. Southern regions present higher genetic heterogeneity and a higher probability of providing donors with phenotypes not already present in the Italian bone marrow registry. The large sample size of the bone marrow donor registry allowed us to estimate gene and haplotype frequencies with greater accuracy than in previous studies. Our results may be of use in determining strategies for donor recruitment and selecting unrelated donors for patients requiring bone marrow grafting, as well as for anthropological, epidemiological and population genetics studies.
Our data suggest that Italian patients with MMP lesions predominantly affecting the oral cavity present the same genetic predisposition linked to HLA-DQB1*0301 previously reported mainly in patients with OCP.
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