1981
DOI: 10.1016/0198-8859(81)90062-8
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HLA-DR characterization of a Chippewa Indian subpopulation with high prevalence of rheumatoid arthritis

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Cited by 66 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…HLA-A, B, and C antigens were determined by a standard complement-dependent microcytotoxicity test. Typing for HLA-DR and DQ specificities was performed using a 2-color fluorescence method (31). Each patient was tested for 19 A, 34 B, and 5 C antigens and for DRI-DRw10, DRw52, DRw53, DQwl, DQw2, and DQw3, using typing sera from our own and private sources standardized against the typing sera of the 8th and 9th International Histocompatibility Testing Workshops (32,331.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…HLA-A, B, and C antigens were determined by a standard complement-dependent microcytotoxicity test. Typing for HLA-DR and DQ specificities was performed using a 2-color fluorescence method (31). Each patient was tested for 19 A, 34 B, and 5 C antigens and for DRI-DRw10, DRw52, DRw53, DQwl, DQw2, and DQw3, using typing sera from our own and private sources standardized against the typing sera of the 8th and 9th International Histocompatibility Testing Workshops (32,331.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sequence homologies among DR3, DR5, and DRw6, as well as the DRw52 subtypes (Dw24-Dw26), suggest that DRwSZbearing haplotypes constitute a "gene family" that is evolutionarily distinct from other haplotypes (42,44,45) (Figure 3). The HLA-DRw8 haplotype appears to have evolved from the DRw52 family, but because of a large deletion encompassing the 3' untranslated portion of DRPl through the coding sequences of (46). and therefore, should have only DRPI, and no DRP3, coding sequences.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…HLA typing for A, B, C, DR, and DQ antigens was performed as previously described (10). The families studied in Houston had all been HLA typed by the Immunogenetics Laboratory at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine; those studied in Oklahoma City had been HLA typed by the laboratory of the Division of Rheumatology, Immunology, and Allergy of the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%