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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The human leukocyte antigens (HLA) are implicated in the genetic susceptibility to a large number of diseases. Some of the diseases associated with HLA class II are related to specific amino acids or epitopes of the domain of the HLA class II molecule that is distal to the membrane. In man, selective immunoglobulin A deficiency is the most common immunodeficiency, frequently resulting in recurrent sino-pulmonary infections and gastro-intestinal disorders. Associations have been described with HLA class I, and to a lesser extent with different class II alleles, which might indicate that they share some common feature. Here we study 95 IgA-D patients and find positive associations with three DR-DQ haplotypes and a strong negative association with a fourth haplotype. Comparison of the sequences of the polymorphic amino-terminal domain of the DQ beta chain showed that the three 'susceptibility' haplotypes all had a neutral alanine or valine at position 57. The 'protective' allele had the negatively charged
aspartic acid
at this position (Asp57). Codon 57 of the HLA-DQ beta chain has been implicated in the susceptibility to insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
. Our data suggest that the same amino acid position could possibly also influence susceptibility and resistance to selective immunoglobulin A deficiency.
...
PMID:Different amino acids at position 57 of the HLA-DQ beta chain associated with susceptibility and resistance to IgA deficiency. 197 29
Insulin-dependent (Type I)
diabetes mellitus
is a chronic autoimmune disease. From studies in discordant twins and multiplex families a long prediabetic period has been reported. In a population-based program started in 1983, fifteen individuals at possible risk for future Type I
diabetes
were followed for up to 74 months. Two individuals (13%) developed Type I
diabetes
. These probands were characterized by the presence of high-level cytoplasmic islet cell antibodies (ICA), complement-fixing ICA, and an impaired first-phase insulin response after intravenous glucose load. Both were homozygous for a high-risk immunogenetic marker of Type I
diabetes
, i.e., non-Asp at codon 57 of the HLA-DQ beta chain. In all other subjects studied, the immunogenetic marker that confers "dominant resistance",
aspartic acid
at codon 57, was found. On the basis of our data we conclude that a combination of assays which determine ICA, first-phase insulin release, and HLA-DQB1 polymorphisms will identify individuals with a high probability of developing Type I
diabetes
at the population level. Conversely, HLA haplotypes positive for
aspartic acid
seem to confer resistance to the disease.
...
PMID:Aspartic acid at position 57 of the HLA-DQ beta chain is protective against future development of insulin-dependent (type 1) diabetes mellitus. 204 76
Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus is characterized by the infiltration of lymphocytes into the islets of Langerhans of the pancreas (insulitis) followed by destruction of insulin-secreting beta-cells leading to overt
diabetes
. The best model for the disease is the non-obese diabetic (NOD) mouse. Two unusual features of the class II major histocompatibility complex (MHC) of the NOD mouse are the absence of I-E and the presence of unique I-A molecules (I-ANOD), in which
aspartic acid
at position 57 of the beta-chain is replaced by serine. This feature is also found in the HLA-DQ chain of many Caucasians with insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
. We have previously reported that the expression of I-E prevents the development of insulitis in NOD mouse. Here we report that the expression of I-Ak (A alpha kA beta k) in transgenic NOD mice can also prevent insulitis, and that this protection is seen not only when the I-A beta-chain has
aspartic acid
as residue 57, but also when this residue is serine. These results show that the single amino-acid substitution at position 57 of the I-A beta-chain from
aspartic acid
to serine is not sufficient for the development of the disease.
...
PMID:Direct evidence for the contribution of the unique I-ANOD to the development of insulitis in non-obese diabetic mice. 197 76
The presence of an amino acid other than
aspartic acid
at position 57 of the HLA-DQ beta chain (non-Asp-57) is highly associated with susceptibility to insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(IDDM), whereas an
aspartic acid
at this position (Asp-57) appears to confer resistance to the disease. We hypothesize that the 30-fold difference in IDDM incidence across racial groups and countries is related to variability in the frequency of these alleles. Diabetic and nondiabetic individuals were evaluated in five populations, including those at low, moderate, and high risk. HLA-DQ beta genotype distributions among the IDDM case groups were markedly different (P less than 0.001), as were those among nondiabetic controls (P less than 0.001). Non-Asp-57 alleles were significantly associated with IDDM in all areas; population-specific odds ratios for non-Asp-57 homozygotes relative to Asp-57 homozygotes ranged from 14 to 111. Relative risk information from the case-control study and population incidence data were combined to estimate genotype-specific incidence rates for the Allegheny County, PA, Caucasians. These rates were used to predict the overall incidence rates in the remaining populations, which were within the 95% confidence intervals of the actual rates established from incidence registries. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that population variation in the distribution of non-Asp-57 alleles may explain much of the geographic variation in IDDM incidence.
...
PMID:Worldwide differences in the incidence of type I diabetes are associated with amino acid variation at position 57 of the HLA-DQ beta chain. 221 70
The HLA-DQ beta-chain (DQB1) genes of 72 Japanese patients with insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(IDDM) and 85 control subjects were studied with polymerase chain-reaction (PCR) amplification and allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization. DQW4 (DQBBlank) and DQw9 (DQB3.3) were increased in IDDM patients compared with the control subjects, and DQB1.2, DQB1.9, and DQw7 (DQB3.1) were decreased. Thirty-five (48.6%) IDDM patients had both alleles carrying an
aspartic acid
at position 57 of the DQ beta-chain (Asp 57), 35 (48.6%) were Asp 57/non-Asp 57 heterozygous, and 2 (2.8%) had non-Asp 57 alleles only. Of 85 control subjects, the respective values for these three genotypes were 49 (57.6%), 29 (34.1%), and 7 (8.2%), respectively. The high frequency of Asp 57 alleles in both IDDM and control subjects contrasts with data for Whites. Therefore, the Asp 57 hypothesis that the presence of an
aspartic acid
at position 57 of DQ beta-chain provides protection against developing IDDM is not tenable for Japanese IDDM patients. The DRB1 gene, particularly position 57 of the DR beta-chain, may contribute to IDDM susceptibility in Japanese.
Diabetes
1990 Feb
PMID:High frequency of aspartic acid at position 57 of HLA-DQ beta-chain in Japanese IDDM patients and nondiabetic subjects. 222 36
Recently it has been reported that 57th amino acid of DQ beta antigen was a non-
aspartic acid
in the most Caucasian patients with insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(IDDM). Using serological analysis, HLA-DQ antigens show a strong association with IDDM rather than the HLA-DR antigens. In the Caucasian population, IDDM is associated with DQw2 and DQw3 antigens. However, in the Japanese population, DQw4 and DQw9 antigens are strongly associated with IDDM. In order to determine the possible significance of the 57th amino acid of DQ beta chain for the susceptibility to IDDM in Japanese, we performed DNA Sequence analysis of HLA-DQB from Japanese IDDM patient, its same HLA genotyped healthy sibling and B cell line with Japanese IDDM associated haplotype. The results revealed that all of the 57th amino acid are
aspartic acid
which is thought to contribute to develop IDDM resistance in Caucasian. Furthermore we could not find any other amino acid sequence of DQ beta chain which might contribute to the susceptibility of the Japanese IDDM.
...
PMID:[DNA sequence analysis of HLA-DQB genes associated with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in Japanese]. 222 93
Transplantation of bone marrow cells from nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice, a model for type 1 diabetes mellitus, to C3H/HeN mice, which express I-E alpha molecules and have
aspartic acid
at residue 57 of the I-A beta chain, induced insulitis followed by overt
diabetes
in the recipient C3H/HeN mice more than 40 weeks after bone marrow transplantation. When cyclosporin A, which perturbs T-cell functions, was injected intraperitoneally into [NOD----C3H/HeN] chimeric mice daily for 1 month, the chimeric mice developed insulitis and overt
diabetes
within 20 weeks following bone marrow transplantation. Transplantation of bone marrow cells from (NZW x BXSB)F1 mice, which develop lupus nephritis, myocardial infarction, and idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, into C3H/HeN or C57BL/6J mice induced in the recipient strains both lupus nephritis and idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura more than 3 months after transplantation. Transplantation of a stem-cell-enriched population from (NZW x BXSB)F1 mice into normal mice also induced autoimmune disease in the recipients. These results indicate that both systemic autoimmune disease and organ-specific autoimmune disease originate from defects that reside within the stem cells; the thymus and environmental factors such as sex hormones appear to act only as accelerating factors.
...
PMID:Organ-specific and systemic autoimmune diseases originate from defects in hematopoietic stem cells. 223 44
Family and population studies indicate that predisposition to insulin-dependent (type I)
diabetes mellitus
(IDDM) is polygenic. It has been shown that the absence of the
aspartic acid
in position 57 (Asp57) of the DQ beta chain is positively correlated to IDDM. However, Asp57-negative haplotypes do not always confer susceptibility and conversely, some Asp57-positive haplotypes seem to be disease associated. It has been suggested that other HLA class II sequences, probably belonging to the HLA DQA1 gene, confer susceptibility to IDDM. This report, based on extensive oligonucleotide dot blot hybridization of PCR-amplified DQA1 and DQB1 genes, reinforces the importance of the Asp57-negative DQ beta chain, but also introduces the possibility that a DQ alpha chain bearing an arginine in position 52 (Arg52) confers susceptibility to IDDM. A molecular model of susceptibility to IDDM is proposed. This model strongly suggests that the disease susceptibility correlates quantitatively with the expression at the cell surface of a heterodimer, composed of a DQ alpha-chain bearing an Arg52 and a DQ beta chain lacking an Asp57. In view of the respective positions of the two residues and their charge, we might anticipate that both residues DQ beta Asp57 and DQ alpha Arg52 are critical for modulation of susceptibility, presumably via viral-antigenic peptide and/or autoantigen presentation.
...
PMID:A combination of HLA-DQ beta Asp57-negative and HLA DQ alpha Arg52 confers susceptibility to insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 231 83
There is evidence that certain alleles at the HLA-DQ locus are correlated with susceptibility to insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(IDDM) and in particular that DQ beta-chain alleles containing
aspartic acid
at position 57 are protective. The availability of a large group of patients with IDDM enabled us to assess the role of HLA-DQ alleles in susceptibility to the disease in order to confirm and extend recent observations derived from studies of smaller numbers of patients. Using allele-specific oligonucleotide probes and the polymerase chain reaction, we studied 266 unrelated patients with IDDM and 203 unrelated normal subjects for eight HLA-DQ beta-chain alleles. Two major findings emerged from these studies. First, the presence of an HLA-DQw1.2 allele was protective. Only 6 of the 266 patients with IDDM (2.3 percent) were positive for HLA-DQw1.2, as compared with 74 of the 203 normal subjects (36.4 percent; P less than 0.001). Thus, persons with the HLA-DQw1.2 allele, which is one of the polymorphic forms of the beta chain of the HLA-DQ molecule, rarely had IDDM, no matter which other HLA-DQ beta-chain allele they inherited ("dominant protection"). Second, the presence of the HLA-DQw8 allele increased the risk of IDDM. The relative risk of IDDM was 5.6 in persons homozygous for HLA-DQw8, and it was similar in persons with the HLA-DQw1.1/DQw8 or HLA-DQw2/DQw8 haplotype ("dominant susceptibility"). However, the relative risk of IDDM in persons who had the HLA-DQw1.2/DQw8 haplotype was 0.37, demonstrating that the protective effect of HLA-DQw1.2 predominated over the effect of HLA-DQw8. We conclude that the presence of the HLA Class II antigen DQw1.2 is strongly protective against the development of IDDM, and that complete HLA-DQ typing is necessary for accurate assessment of susceptibility to IDDM.
...
PMID:Analysis of HLA-DQ genotypes and susceptibility in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 234 40
HLA DQ beta chain, in particular amino acid at position 57, has been reported to contribute to susceptibility and resistance to Type 1 (insulin-dependent)
diabetes mellitus
in Caucasians. Resistance has been proposed to be conferred by
aspartic acid
at this position. To ascertain the association of HLA DQ beta and DR beta genes with Type 1
diabetes
in Japanese subjects, ten Japanese Type 1 diabetic patients were investigated at DNA level. Genomic DNA was amplified by polymerase chain reaction, and dot blot analysis was carried out using the amplified DNA with allele specific oligonucleotide probes. All patients had
aspartic acid
at position 57 of at least one of their two DQ beta chains, and there was no significant difference of amino acids at the same position of DR beta chain in patients compared to control subjects. These data indicate that the protective role of
aspartic acid
at position 57 of DQ beta chain is less significant in Japanese compared with Caucasian subjects.
...
PMID:Aspartic acid at position 57 of DQ beta chain does not protect against type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus in Japanese subjects. 251 91
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