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Query: UMLS:C0011854 (
type 1 diabetes
)
20,749
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Many studies have shown an association of
IDDM
with polymorphisms in the HLA region on chromosome 6p21. Previously our case-control study in the Belgian population showed significant association between
IDDM
and certain HLA class II alleles, in particular Lys71+, encoding DRB1 alleles. In the present study, 81 Danish multiplex
IDDM
families and 82 healthy Danish controls were examined for polymorphisms in the
HLA-DRB
genes and 54 of the 81 families for polymorphisms in HLA-B, -DQA1, -DQB1, -TNFA, and -TNFB genes. The results confirm our previous studies in the Belgian population and show that DRB1Lya71+/+ homozygotes have a relative risk (RR) of 103.5. Linkage between
IDDM
and DRB1 alleles that encode Lys71+ was shown by affected zib pair analysis which showed strong linkage (p < 1 x 10(-6). By family based association studies, the DRB1Lys71+ was identified as the allale which increased susceptibility to develop
IDDM
most in the HLA region (haplotype relative risk = 8.38). Haplotype analysis confirmed the increased risk contributed by DRB1Lys71+ alleles and in addition showed that DRB1Lys71- provides protection against
IDDM
even in the presence of DQB1Aep47-. These results indicate that DRB1Lys71+ screening is a powerful test compared to full HLA typing to determine the risk for a random person to develop
IDDM
in the Danish population, with an even higher probability than shown previously for the Belgians.
...
PMID:Linkage and association of the HLA gene complex with IDDM in 81 Danish families: strong linkage between DR beta 1Lys71+ and IDDM. 895 Jun 68
GAD65 autoantibodies (GAD65Ab) are highly prevalent in
type 1 diabetes
, but their functional role in the pathogenesis of the disease and their relationship to T-cell reactivity to GAD65 is still unclear. We tested the hypothesis that GAD65Ab modulate presentation of GAD65 to T-cells. T-cell hybridoma T33.1, which recognizes the GAD65 274-286 epitope in the context of
HLA-DRB
1*0401, was incubated with antigen-presenting cells exposed to recombinant human GAD65 alone or complexed with GAD65Ab' or GAD65Ab- sera. Stimulation of the T33.1 hybridoma was greatly enhanced by multiple GAD65Ab+ sera. The enhancement effect was most prominent with sera from patients with high GAD65 autoantibody levels. Sera from GAD65Ab- subjects had no effect. The correlation between T-cell stimulation and GAD65Ab levels was not absolute, suggesting that other variables such as autoantibody recognition of different regions of GAD65 and variable effects on processing of the 274-286 epitope may contribute. Uptake of antibody-complexed GAD65 was Fc receptor (FcR)-mediated because the enhancement of presentation was inhibited by monoclonal antibodies against FcR. Our results support the hypothesis that GAD65Ab modulate presentation of GAD65 to T-cells. Increased antigen uptake and heterogeneity in the autoantibody specificity may provide a mechanism for antibody-facilitated T-cell response influencing the progression of
type 1 diabetes
.
...
PMID:GAD65-specific autoantibodies enhance the presentation of an immunodominant T-cell epitope from GAD65. 1101 44
The prevalence of diabetes mellitus in the young is higher in Bangladesh like other Asian developing nations. Albeit, undernutrition has been shown to be associated with diabetes in the young, not all such individuals are diabetic. Diabetes Mellitus is a multigenic disease. In
IDDM
, DR3/4 heterozygotes were shown to have a greatly increased risk of developing the disease, suggesting the concept of genetic factor(s) being involved in the development of diabetes. Therefore, this study was undertaken to determine the distribution of HLA class II alleles (DRB) and to identify the HLA associated risk for developing diabetes mellitus in the young Bangladeshis. A total of fifty individuals were investigated. Half of them (n=25) were diabetic patients, registered in BIRDEM and half the participants were their non-diabetic sibs. A genomic DNA PCR and Enzyme Linked Probe Hybridization Assay (ELPHA, Bio-test, Germany) was used to determine HLA class II alleles (DRB1, DRB 3, 4, 5) by in vitro amplification of DRB gene. Among all the sero-equivalent antigens found in the study subjects, the prevalence of DR15 (DR2) was overrepresented, both in the diabetic subjects and in their non-diabetic sibs. Moreover, compared with the non-diabetic group the diabetic patients showed higher frequency of DR15 alleles (39 and 25%) though the difference was not significant (chisq. 1.7, p>0.05). Next to DR15, DR4 was the most prevalent
HLA-DRB
gene found in the study population. Interestingly, the frequency of DR4 was higher in the diabetic than in the non-diabetic group (20 vs. 14%). The study showed that the DR15 and DR4 were the most prevalent in the study population. Moreover, DR7 though not very significant, was higher in non-diabetic compared to their diabetic sibs. Comparison between the diabetic and non-diabetic sibs could have been interesting and significant but we could not confirm our findings, possibly, due to small sample size. A study in a larger paired sample of unrelated population is also needed to substantiate our findings, and also to prove the susceptibility or resistant haplotype in the young diabetic subjects.
...
PMID:Genetic background of diabetic and nondiabetic sibs in young Bangladeshis. 1176 1
A combination of specific HLA class II antigens and the presence of
type 1 diabetes
(T1D)-related antibodies has a high positive predictive value for T1D but low sensitivity. The aim of the present study was to determine the frequencies of
HLA-DRB
-DQB deduced haplotypes associated with susceptibility and protection in Slovenian patients with established T1D, to evaluate the relationship between the HLA-DRB1-QBP-DQB1 haplotypes and the presence of insulin autoantibodies (IAA) and glutamic acid decarboxylase antibodies (GADA), and to access the possible impact of polymorphic QBP promoters on this relationship. A cohort of 135 patients with T1D (age 17.5 +/- 7.0 years, duration of T1D 9.14 +/- 6.3 years) was investigated. HLA-DRB1 and DQB1 alleles were typed using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-reverse line blot method. QBP promoter region alleles were determined using PCR-sequence-specific oligonucleotide hybridization (SSO) and PCR-sequence-specific primers (SSP). IAA and GADA antibodies were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The chi-square test with Yates' correction was used for statistical analysis. Deduced haplotypes DRB1*0301-DQB1*0201 (P = 0.0001, OR = 3.4), DRB1*0401-DQB1*0302 (P = 0.0001, OR = 29.8), and DRB1*0402-DQB1*0302 (P = 0.008, OR = 4.7) were significantly more common, and DRB1*1501-DQB1*0602 (P = 0.0001, OR = 0.03) significantly less common in the investigated cohort than in a Slovenian control group. The highest risk and the strongest protective HLA-DR-DQ haplotypes found in Slovenian patients with T1D did not differ from those found in other Caucasian populations. While the DRB1*0301-QBP2.1-DQB1*0201 haplotype, where QBP2.1 did not help to further distinguish DQB1*0201-possessing haplotypes in IAA-positive and IAA-negative patients, was strongly associated with the presence of IAA, the DRB1*0101-QBP5.12-DQB1*0501 haplotype, although not protective compared to the control population, was associated with an absence of IAA in the investigated cohort. It is suggested that there may be a combined influence of the QBP5.12 promoter and the DQB1*0501 functional molecule on reduced IAA production.
...
PMID:The HLA-DRB, -DQB polymorphism and anti-insulin antibody response in Slovenian patients with type 1 diabetes. 1278 1
Insofar as genetic susceptibility to
type 1 diabetes
is associated with HLA class II genes, with certain allelic combinations conferring disease susceptibility or resistance, this study assessed the distributions of HLA-DR and -DQ among 107 unrelated patients with
type 1 diabetes
and 88 healthy controls from Bahrain, all of Arab origin. The
HLA-DRB
and -DQB genotypes were determined by PCR-sequence-specific priming. The following alleles showed the strongest association with
type 1 diabetes
among patients versus controls according to their frequencies: DRB1*030101 (0.430 versus 0.097; P < 0.001), DRB1*040101 (0.243 versus 0.034; P < 0.001), DQB1*0201 (0.467 versus 0.193; P < 0.001), and DQB1*0302 (0.229 versus 0.091; P < 0.001). When the frequencies of alleles in controls were compared to those in patients, negative associations were seen for DRB1*100101 (0.085 versus 0.014; P < 0.001), DRB1*110101 (0.210 versus 0.060; P < 0.001), DQB1*030101 (0.170 versus 0.075; P = 0.006), and DQB1*050101 (0.335 versus 0.121; P < 0.001). In addition, the DRB1*030101-DQB1*0201 (70.1 versus 22.7%; P < 0.001) and DRB1*030101-DQB1*0302 (21.5 versus 0.0%; P < 0.001) genotypes were more prevalent among patients, thereby conferring disease susceptibility, whereas the DRB1*100101-DQB1*050101 (20.5 versus 2.8%; P < 0.001), DRB1*110101-DQB1*030101 (28.4 versus 8.4%; P < 0.001), and DRB1*110101-DQB1*050101 (30.7 versus 0.9%; P < 0.001) genotypes were more prevalent among controls, thus assigning a protective role. These results confirm the association of specific HLA-DR and -DQ alleles and haplotypes with
type 1 diabetes
and may underline several characteristics that distinguish Bahraini patients from other Caucasians patients.
...
PMID:Specific HLA-DRB and -DQB alleles and haplotypes confer disease susceptibility or resistance in Bahraini type 1 diabetes patients. 1501 78
The present study demonstrated genetic analysis of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) in a familial Graves' disease linked to autoimmune mechanism. The proband was a 17 year-old female. At 15 years, Graves' disease was diagnosed with serum TSH was <0.015 IU/ml; free T(3), 13.6 pg/ml; free T(4), 4.51 ng/dl; and TSH receptor antibody (TRAb), 94.1%. She had two brothers (19 and 13 years-old), who manifested Graves' disease at 18 and 13 years, respectively. They also had elevated TRAb as high as 48.4 and 49.1%, respectively. There was a strong family history of Graves' disease in their maternal pedigree. Namely, their two aunts and a cousin had Graves' disease, and their onset ages of Graves' disease were also during their teen-age years. However, there was no patient with Graves' disease in the paternal pedigree. We checked
HLA-DRB
and -DQB haplotype in the members of maternal pedigree and proband's father. The members of maternal pedigree including both affected and unaffected Graves' disease had haplotypes of DRB1*150101 and DQB1*0602, except for the cousin who had DRB1*140301 and DQB1*030101. The haplotypes of DRB1*150101 and DQB1*0602 were different from susceptible HLA types in Japanese childhood onset Graves' disease. However, two cases of Graves' disease also had HLA types of DRB1*40501 and DQB1*0401, in addition to the haplotypes of DRB1*150101 and DQB1*0602. There was no other autoimmune disease including
type 1 diabetes
mellitus in their family. The present findings indicated that familial Graves' disease was found mainly in the maternal females and become overt during their teen-age years. They had new HLA haplotypes distinct from those susceptibly in Japanese Graves' patients. Further study will be necessary to analyze the mutant locus of DNA to elucidate pathogenesis of familial Graves' disease.
...
PMID:New HLA DRB1 and DQB1 haplotypes in a pedigree of familial Graves' disease in Japan. 1778 16
The primary associations of the HLA class II genes, HLA-DRB1 and HLA-DQB1, and the class I genes, HLA-A and HLA-B, with
type 1 diabetes
(T1D) are well established. However, the role of polymorphism at the HLA-DRB3, HLA-DRB4, and HLA-DRB5 loci remains unclear. In two separate studies, one of 500 subjects and 500 control subjects and one of 366 DRB1*03:01-positive samples from selected multiplex T1D families, we used Roche 454 sequencing with Conexio Genomics ASSIGN ATF 454 HLA genotyping software analysis to analyze sequence variation at these three
HLA-DRB
loci. Association analyses were performed on the two
HLA-DRB
loci haplotypes (DRB1-DRB3, -DRB4, or -DRB5). Three common HLA-DRB3 alleles (*01:01, *02:02, *03:01) were observed. DRB1*03:01 haplotypes carrying DRB3*02:02 conferred a higher T1D risk than did DRB1*03:01 haplotypes carrying DRB3*01:01 in DRB1*03:01/*03:01 homozygotes with two DRB3*01:01 alleles (odds ratio [OR] 3.4 [95% CI 1.46-8.09]), compared with those carrying one or two DRB3*02:02 alleles (OR 25.5 [3.43-189.2]) (P = 0.033). For DRB1*03:01/*04:01 heterozygotes, however, the HLA-DRB3 allele did not significantly modify the T1D risk of the DRB1*03:01 haplotype (OR 7.7 for *02:02; 6.8 for *01:01). These observations were confirmed by sequence analysis of HLA-DRB3 exon 2 in a targeted replication study of 281 informative T1D family members and 86 affected family-based association control (AFBAC) haplotypes. The frequency of DRB3*02:02 was 42.9% in the DRB1*03:01/*03:01 patients and 27.6% in the DRB1*03:01/*04 (P = 0.005) compared with 22.6% in AFBAC DRB1*03:01 chromosomes (P = 0.001). Analysis of T1D-associated alleles at other HLA loci (HLA-A, HLA-B, and HLA-DPB1) on DRB1*03:01 haplotypes suggests that DRB3*02:02 on the DRB1*03:01 haplotype can contribute to T1D risk.
...
PMID:Next generation sequencing reveals the association of DRB3*02:02 with type 1 diabetes. 2346 45