Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To study the association of histocompatibility (HLA) genes in black persons with juvenile-onset diabetes, we determined HLA-A, HLA-B, HLA-C and HLA-DR specificities in 40 black Americans with this disease and in 67 unaffected black Americans. Marked increases in the frequencies of HLA-DRw3 and HLA-DRw4 were found in the patients as compared with the unaffected persons: DRw3 was found in 72.5 per cent of patients versus 29.9 per cent of unaffected persons and DRw4 in 72.5 per cent versus 25.4 per cent (corrected P values each less than 0.0007). DRw2 was not found in any of the patients but was present in 26.9 per cent of unaffected persons (P corrected less than 0.035). There is thus a negative correlation between this specificity and juvenile-onset diabetes. By contrast, no meaningful differences were found in the frequencies of A, B, or C locus antigens. Studies in white persons with juvenile-onset diabetes have suggested that the reported HLA-B associations are due to HLA-D region specificities, and our results also support the premise that D region specificities are the primary associations with juvenile-onset diabetes.
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PMID:HLA-DR specificities among black Americans with juvenile-onset diabetes. 48 12

We studied the distribution of HLA-A, -B, and -C antigens in 94 juvenile-onset diabetic patients and of HLA-DR antigens in 62 of these patients. The frequencies for HLA-B15, -B40, and -Cw3 were significantly increased in the patient group as compared with the control group. With respect to the B-cell specificities, DRw4 was significantly increased in the patients. Analysis of the data to detect the possible presence of primary and secondary associations between HLA alleles and diabetogenic gene(s) indicated that DRw4 possessed a primary association with the diabetogenic gene(s). As a result, B15, B40, and Cw3 possessed secondary associations.
Diabetes 1979 Jan
PMID:Juvenile-onset diabetes HLA-A, -B, -C, and -DR alloantigens. 75 44

We attempted to analyze the association of hyperthyroid Graves' disease with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). Forty-nine patients (23 males and 26 females; 7.6%) of a total of 647 patients with hyperthyroid Graves' disease had NIDDM, several years before or after Graves' disease was diagnosed. Only 1 patient had insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Compared with the general Japanese population (n = 9,133), the incidence of NIDDM (n = 348; 3.9%) in patients with Graves' disease was higher in all age groups. Only 4 patients (8.2%) of the 49 hyperthyroid patients with NIDDM had a history of being overweight (body mass index > 25). In contrast, 276 (79.9%) of the 348 diabetic patients were currently or previously overweight. Moreover, the incidence of a family history of diabetes (13 of the 49 hyperthyroid Graves' patients with NIDDM; 26.5%) was also lower in the patients with NIDDM in the general Japanese population (50% incidence). The male:female ration in patients with Graves' disease and NIDDM was 1:1.1; much different from that in the total Graves' disease population (1:4.1). Analysis of the HLA loci A, B, C, DR and DQ (35 determinations) in 35 hyperthyroid patients with NIDDM and in 386 subjects from the general population revealed a highly significant difference between them in the incidence of HLA-Cw4, -DR2, -DQw1, -DQw3 and -DQw4. This study suggests that there was an association of Graves' disease with NIDDM. A significant association of HLA-DR and -DQ loci was observed in hyperthyroid Graves' patients with NIDDM.
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PMID:Studies on the association of NIDDM in Japanese patients with hyperthyroid Graves' disease. 130 49

From July 1984 through June 1987, we sought referral of all newly diagnosed cases of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus aged 0-29 years in a 14-county area of southern Wisconsin. Each case was asked to identify an age- and sex-matched friend control. Blood specimens were obtained for group B Coxsackievirus immunoglobulin M (IgM) neutralizing antibody titer on cases and controls and HLA-DR typing of cases. There were 225 cases referred, of whom 194 participated. Of these, 134 had both HLA-DR typing and an initial serum specimen drawn within 59 days of diagnosis. Only two of 50 insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus cases less than age 9 years had positive (greater than or equal to 1:16) group B Coxsackievirus IgM titers. Fifteen of 84 cases aged 10-29 years (17.8%) were group B Coxsackievirus IgM positive, compared with five of 71 controls (7.0%). However, group B Coxsackievirus IgM antibody positivity was concentrated in HLA-DR3-positive cases (10 of 39, odds ratio = 4.55, 95% confidence interval 1.26-18.27, p less than 0.01). HLA-DR3-negative cases were not different from controls in group B Coxsackievirus IgM prevalence. Eighty-three percent of the cases and 86% of the group B Coxsackievirus IgM-positive cases were referred in the first 24 months of study. These data demonstrate an association between group B Coxsackievirus infections and onset of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus only in HLA-DR3-positive persons aged 10 years or older. The data also suggest that diabetogenic group B Coxsackievirus strains may circulate only periodically; however, a longer period of study is needed to examine this possibility.
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PMID:A case-control study of group B Coxsackievirus immunoglobulin M antibody prevalence and HLA-DR antigens in newly diagnosed cases of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 132 1

To gain insight into the HLA subregions involved in protection against insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) we investigated the polymorphism of HLA-DR and -DQ genes in 23 DR2 IDDM patients. Results show the following. (1) Fourteen patients (61%) possess the DRB1, DRB5, and DQB1 alleles found in DRw16/DQw5 healthy people. These data contrast with the 5% of DRw16 normally found in DR2 populations and are in agreement with former observations supporting that the DRw16 haplotype is not protective. (2) Nine DR2 patients, i.e., 39% versus 95% in published DR2 controls, possess the DRB alleles found in DRw15 unaffected people. Among them, six patients have also DQA1 and DQB1 alleles identical to those found in DRw15/DQw6 healthy individuals. These data confirm that the DRw15/DQw6 haplotype is protective but indicate that none of the DR or DQ alleles, alone or in association, confers an absolute protection. (3) Our most striking results concern the very high frequency of recombinant haplotypes among the DRw15 patients: 3 of 9. In these three patients recombinations led to the elimination of both DQB1 and DQA1 alleles usually associated with DRw15. This strongly suggests that the occurrence of IDDM in these DRw15 patients is due to the absence of the usual DQ product and thus reinforces the assumption that DQ rather than DR region is involved in the protection conferred by the DRw15/DQw6 haplotype. Finally, analysis of the non-DRw15 haplotypes in heterozygous patients showed that IDDM can occur in the absence of any DQ alpha beta heterodimer of susceptibility.
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PMID:Extensive study of DRB, DQA, and DQB gene polymorphism in 23 DR2-positive, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus patients. 134 43

In this study we report, for the first time, the molecular analysis of HLA-DR and DQ gene frequencies in a large cohort of well-characterized type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus (IDDM) patients (n = 72), and ethnically matched controls (n = 59) collected in sub-Saharan Africa. High molecular mass DNA was prepared and analysed in Southern blots and by oligonucleotide typing. We have shown a strong positive association between IDDM and the Asp 57- DQB1 allele *0201 (DQw2). A rare DR4, DQw2 haplotype was also identified at high frequency in the IDDM cohort. We can now confirm that the association between Asp 57- DQB1 alleles and IDDM, previously reported in ethnically diverse cohorts collected in Western Europe, North America, and South Asia, is also present in an IDDM cohort collected in Africa.
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PMID:Identification of genetic susceptibility loci for insulin-dependent diabetes in Sudan. 135 6

Antibodies to glutamic acid decarboxylase, previously known as the 64 kD antigen, appear to be more predictive of Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus in Caucasoids than other autoantibodies to islet cell antigens. However, seropositivity to glutamic acid decarboxylase is not universal at the onset of Type 1 diabetes and the prevalence in Asians is low compared to Caucasoid patients. This suggests the involvement of multiple pancreatic autoantigens in the Type 1 diabetes autoimmune process or, genetic differences within and between ethnic groups that contribute to the heterogeneous autoimmune response to glutamic acid decarboxylase or both. Alternatively some cases of Type 1 diabetes could have an aetiology unrelated to autoimmunity. This study examined the differential response to glutamic acid decarboxylase according to HLA-DR and -DQ genotypes, as determined by RFLP, in 49 white Australian and 44 Asian patients with Type 1 diabetes. Among Australians heterozygous for HLA-DR3, DR4, 85% were positive for antibodies to glutamic acid decarboxylase, significantly different (p = 0.039) from the prevalence of 48% in patients with at least one HLA-DR antigen other than DR3 or DR4. Also, among Australians, the presence of "low risk" HLA-DQ antigens, namely DQw5, DQw6 or DQw7, reduced the prevalence of antibodies to glutamic acid decarboxylase by 40% (p = 0.064). Among Asians with Type 1 diabetes and with antibodies to glutamic acid decarboxylase, HLA-DR9 was significantly (p = 0.037) increased in frequency, at 63% compared with 22% in those without glutamic acid decarboxylase antibodies, and the presence of a "low risk" HLA-DQ allele reduced the antibody rates by 87% (p = 0.003).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Antibodies to glutamic acid decarboxylase are associated with HLA-DR genotypes in both Australians and Asians with type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus. 136 Apr 32

To evaluate the disease association with HLA-DR 3/4 heterozygotes, 1,074 subjects, who had been analyzed consecutively for HLA-DR antigens for organ transplantation or to study the disease association with HLA from June 1984 to June 1986, were enrolled in this study. Of these subjects, 278 had diabetes, 168 were healthy controls or donors, and 628 had other diseases. Of the 1,074 subjects, 35 subjects (3.2%) were DR 3/4 heterozygotes and 1,039 subjects (96.7%) were non-DR 3/4 heterozygotes. Among the 35 DR 3/4 positive subjects, 23 were diabetic (65.7%), two were healthy donors (5.7%), 10 had other diseases (28.5%) such as recurrent abortion (n = 3), hepatoma (n = 2), Graves' disease (n = 1), idiopathic hypoparathyroidism (n = 1), IgA nephropathy (n = 1), uveitis (n = 1) and gout (n = 1). Among the 23 DR 3/4 positive diabetics, 19 (82.6%) had insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM), three (13.0%) had non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), and one (4.3%) had maturity onset diabetes of the young (MODY). When these DR 3/4 positive diabetics were compared with the other disease and control/donor groups, significant increases in the relative risk were seen for IDDM patients (RR = 32.61, 43.80, respectively, p < 0.001). No significant association could be seen for NIDDM and MODY patients. In those non-diabetic patients positive for DR 3/4, there was no significant association with DR 3/4 heterozygotes. These findings suggest that: 1) DR 3/4 positive subjects are highly associated with IDDM; and 2) there is no significant association of DR 3/4 with NIDDM, MODY and other non-diabetic diseases.
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PMID:Assessment of the association of HLA-DR 3/4 heterozygotes with diabetes mellitus and non-diabetic diseases. 136 26

Induction of expression of MHC class II antigens on the surface of cells that do not ordinarily express these proteins has been implicated in the pathogenesis of autoimmunity in diabetes mellitus and autoimmune thyroiditis. Platelets express class I but not class II HLA antigens. In this report, we describe a child with acute idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura who at the time of the thrombocytopenic episode had class II (HLA-DR) antigens on his platelets. Following recovery, the HLA-DR antigens were no longer present on the platelets. We postulated that class II had been induced on his megakaryocytes by a cytokine such as interferon gamma, and that the induced expression of class II antigens contributed to the autoimmune disorder. To substantiate this possibility we next studied class I and II antigen expression on an erythroleukaemia cell line (HEL), which has many megakaryocytic features. Following treatment of HEL cells with interferon gamma, class I expression was increased and HLA-DR antigens were induced. These observations suggest that cytokine-mediated induced HLA-DR expression may contribute to the pathogenesis of a subset of thrombocytopenias.
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PMID:HLA-DR expression by platelets in acute idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura. 139 Feb 43

Immunophenotyping of the early lesion in the pancreatic islets of Langerhans demonstrates a predominance of CD4+ lymphocytes, which may be preceded by an increase in islet macrophages. This observation implies that both types of cells may be involved in autoimmune-mediated beta-cell destruction leading to IDDM. In an attempt to attribute a role to beta-cell antigen-specific CD4-expressing T-cell clones recently isolated from a newly diagnosed IDDM patient, we investigated whether such CD4 T-cells may be pathogenic in an in vitro cytotoxicity assay with HLA-DR-matched antigen-presenting macrophages as target. We report herein that, indeed, beta-cell antigen-specific CD4+ T-cells are capable of lysing macrophages in an antigen-specific fashion. This cytotoxicity is HLA-DR restricted, T-cell receptor complex mediated, and CD4 dependent. These observations imply that both helper T-cells and macrophages may be involved in the disease process via interaction between T-cells and macrophages pulsed with beta-cell antigen.
Diabetes 1992 Nov
PMID:Beta-cell antigen-specific lysis of macrophages by CD4 T-cell clones from newly diagnosed IDDM patient. A putative mechanism of T-cell-mediated autoimmune islet cell destruction. 139 14


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