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Query: UMLS:C0011854 (
type 1 diabetes
)
20,749
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
HLA-DQA11 and DQB1 alleles coding for arginine (R) in position 52, and an amino acid other than
aspartic acid
(ND) in position 57, respectively, are strong genetic markers for
IDDM
in Caucasians. However, their contribution to the occurrence of the disease in Asian populations is less clear. As part of the WHO DiaMond Molecular Epidemiology Sub-Project, HLA-DQ molecular typing was performed for
IDDM
cases and non-diabetic controls from three populations in the Western Pacific Rim Region where incidence rates have been established (Hokkaido, Japan; Seoul, Korea; Auckland, New Zealand). DQA1*R homozygosity was significantly associated with
IDDM
in all areas. DQB1*ND homozygosity was also related to
IDDM
in Korea and New Zealand, but not in Japan. Individuals who were homozygous for DQA1*R and DQB1*ND were at highest
IDDM
risk in Korea and New Zealand, with the most striking findings in Auckland. In Japan, individuals carrying two DQA1*R, but only one DQB1*ND allele, were most likely to develop
IDDM
. These data revealed considerable genetic heterogeneity between Japan and Korea and suggest that DQA1*R and DQB1*ND alleles may explain a larger proportion of
IDDM
incidence in Caucasian compared to Asian populations.
...
PMID:Molecular epidemiology of IDDM in the Western Pacific Rim Region. WHO DiaMond Molecular Epidemiology Sub-Project Group. 901 80
This article focuses on recent developments that have defined the autoimmune nature of this entity and its genetic basis, especially the crucial roles of
aspartic acid
at position 57 of the DQ beta chain and arginine at position 52 of the DQ alpha chain of the HLA complex on chromosome 6 in conferring susceptibility; other genetic markers on other genes are mentioned. These genetic markers help to explain the worldwide differences in prevalence and incidence of
type 1 diabetes
. Because the autoimmune process may be gradual, markers of beta pancreatic cell damage, such as islet cell antibodies, glutamic acid decarboxylase antibodies, and insulin autoantibodies, coupled with evidence of progressive failure of insulin secretion may be used to predict the future onset of disease. In turn, accurate prediction may permit preventive intervention. Two intervention trials are mentioned: (1) Diabetes Prevention Trial for Type 1, a multicenter trial in the United States using insulin; and (2) European Nicotinamide Diabetes Intervention Trial in Europe using nicotinamide as the preventive or delaying agent. These first steps reflect the remarkable progress and understanding of this major problem of childhood and the hopes for its future prevention.
...
PMID:Aspects of the etiology, prediction, and prevention of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in childhood. 913 Sep 20
Type I diabetes is an autoimmune and a polygenic disease, in which MHC-class II genes contribute to 48% of the disease. The aim of the present study, is to provide a guideline to understanding the molecular association of these genes, through the immunogenetic analysis of 3 Latin american mestizo populations. We included 606 individuals, 349 patients with DMDI and 257 healthy controls coming from 3 geographical areas: Mexico City, Mexico; Caracas, Venezuela and Medellin, Colombia. The results clearly indicate that in mestizo groups, the diabetogenic haplotypes are from mediterranean ancestry, while protection is due to Amerindian genes. It was demonstrated that the relevant sequences for
IDDM
expression are located to DRB1 and DQB1 loci with a minimal contribution of DQA1 residues. The sequences determining peptide recognition and the induction of TH1 cells mediating the cellular autoimmune response are in positions DRB1-57 and 74 (an
aspartic acid
and a glutamic acid respectively, confer protection), modulated by D-57 in the DQ, 8 chain. These data show that DRB1-DQB1 haplotypes are central for
IDDM
expression and open new pathways for the disease management.
...
PMID:[High- and low-risk molecular sequences in autoimmune diseases. An analysis of type I diabetes in Latin America]. 950 14
The molecular mechanism by which some, but not all, variants of encephalomyocarditis (EMC) virus selectively infect pancreatic beta-cells in mice and induce
IDDM
has been an enigma for more than a decade. We report here that the binding site of the EMC viral capsid protein VP1 determines viral diabetogenicity. Recombinant chimeric EMC viruses containing threonine, serine, proline,
aspartic acid
, or valine at position 152 of the major capsid protein VP1 bind poorly to beta-cells. In contrast, recombinant chimeric EMC viruses containing alanine or glycine at position 152 of the VP1 bind efficiently to and infect beta-cells, resulting in the development of diabetes. Three-dimensional molecular modeling reveals that the van der Waals interactions are greater and the residues surrounding position 152 of the VP1 are more closely packed in recombinant chimeric viruses containing threonine, serine, proline,
aspartic acid
, or valine at position 152 than in recombinant chimeric viruses containing alanine or glycine at the same position. Our studies reveal that the surface areas surrounding alanine or glycine at position 152 of the VP1 are more accessible, thus increasing the availability of the binding sites for attachment to beta-cell receptors and resulting in viral infection and the development of diabetes.
...
PMID:Determination of encephalomyocarditis viral diabetogenicity by a putative binding site of the viral capsid protein. 956 90
Susceptibility to the human autoimmune disease
IDDM
is strongly associated with those haplotypes of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) carrying DQB1 alleles that do not encode
aspartic acid
at codon 57. Similarly, in a spontaneous animal model of this disease, the NOD mouse, the genes of the MHC play an important role in the development of diabetes. The DQB1 homolog in NOD mice, I-Ab(g7), encodes a histidine at codon 56 and a serine at codon 57, while all other known I-Ab alleles encode proline and
aspartic acid
, respectively, at these positions. We therefore mutated the NOD I-Ab allele to encode proline at position 56 and
aspartic acid
at position 57 and introduced this allele onto the NOD genetic background to study the effect of these substitutions on susceptibility to diabetes. No transgenic mice developed diabetes by 8 months of age, and transgenic mice had markedly reduced lymphocytic infiltration in the pancreas compared with nontransgenic littermates. Furthermore, splenocytes from transgenic mice failed to proliferate or secrete gamma-interferon in response to a panel of beta-cell autoantigens, although the mice did produce beta-cell specific antibodies. Interestingly, the proportion of IgG1 and IgE relative to IgG2a comprising these autoantibodies was much greater in transgenic mice compared with nontransgenic control mice. Finally, T-cells from transgenic mice inhibited the adoptive transfer of diabetes to irradiated recipients. This inhibition was partially reversed by treatment of the recipients with a combination of anti-interleukin (IL)-4 and anti-IL-10 monoclonal antibodies. Thus, a transgenic class II MHC allele encoding
aspartic acid
at B57 prevents diabetes, in part, by promoting the production of IL-4 and IL-10, which interfere with the effector phase of the diabetic process.
...
PMID:Prevention of diabetes in NOD mice by a mutated I-Ab transgene. 975 94
The murine MHC class II variant I-Ad confers susceptibility to herpes simplex virus (HSV)-induced keratitis and relative protection against
type 1 diabetes
mellitus. The association to these autoimmune diseases appears to be largely determined by the peptide sidechain specificity of the P9 pocket, which we therefore have analyzed in detail. Assessment of T-cell responses and I-Ad binding capacity of position 446-substituted analogs of an IgG2a allotype b (IgG2a(b)) heavy chain peptide demonstrates that engagement of the P9 pocket is crucial for effective peptide presentation. Sidechain size rather than charge decides the capacity to engage the P9 pocket. Thus, small, uncharged sidechains are accepted, whereas acidic and aromatic amino acids as well as lysine and arginine are disfavored. The specificity of the P9 pocket of I-Ad (serine beta57) is distinct from that of the diabetes-associated I-Ag7 (
aspartic acid
beta57), supporting the contention that the polymorphism at residue beta57 influences diabetes susceptibility via P9-specific effects on the repertoires of self peptides presented to T cells. Furthermore, the data rationalize the susceptibility to HSV-induced keratitis conferred by the a and the protection conferred by the b allotypes of the IgG2a heavy chain. Keratitogenic T cells, which cross-react with the viral UL6 protein and a corneal antigen, are silenced in IgG2a(b) mice because of antigenic mimicry with gamma2a(b) 435-451. Our finding that the lysine P9 residue of the corresponding gamma2a(a) allopeptide precludes high-affinity binding to I-Ad indicates that the susceptibility of IgG2a(a) mice reflects inefficient thymic presentation of autologous IgG2a and thus failure to purge the T-cell repertoire of the pathogenic clones.
...
PMID:The P9 peptide sidechain specificity of I-Ad. 1065 74
Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus
(
IDDM
) develops in nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice through the destruction of the B cells in pancreatic Langerhans islets by islet autoantigen-specific T cells. The islet autoantigen glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 (GAD65) is thought to be a major target autoantigen in
IDDM
. In the present report, we established GAD65-specific T-cell clones using overlapping peptides that cover the amino acid sequences of mouse GAD65. T-cell epitopes of GAD65 were characterized by proliferation and binding assays using various analogue peptides and wild-type or mutant I-Ag7 transfectants. The efficacy of the peptide vaccine in
IDDM
was determined by administering T-cell epitope peptides to NOD mice and evaluating the histopathology of their insulitis. We obtained two types of T-cell clone, one specific for peptide p316-335 and another specific for p531-545 of GAD65. The p531-545 site has already been identified, but we report the p316-335 site for the first time. T-cell clones recognized those peptides in the wild-type I-Ag7 but not in the mutant I-Ag7 in which the serine at position 57 of the beta-chain was replaced by an
aspartic acid
. Both the p316-335 and p531-545 peptides bound weakly to I-Ag7. Some peptides with amino acid substitutions had antagonistic activity, and administration of a large amount of wild-type peptide reduced the severity of insulitis in NOD mice. Our results suggest that peptide vaccine therapy may be useful in autoimmune diseases, including
IDDM
.
...
PMID:Importance of GAD65 peptides and I-Ag7 in the development of insulitis in nonobese diabetic mice. 1091 5
Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus
is an autoimmune disease that is genetically linked to the HLA class II molecule DQ in humans and to MHC I-Ag7 in nonobese diabetic mice. The I-Ag7 beta-chain is unique and contains multiple polymorphisms, at least one of which is shared with DQ alleles linked to insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. This polymorphism occurs at position 57 in the beta-chain, in which
aspartic acid
is mutated to a serine, a change that results in the loss of an interchain salt bridge between alphaArg76 and betaAsp57 at the periphery of the peptide binding groove. Using mAbs we have identified alternative conformations of I-Ag7 class II molecules. By using an invariant chain construct with various peptides engineered into the class II-associated invariant chain peptide (CLIP) region we have found that formation of these conformations is dependent on the peptide occupying the binding groove. Blocking studies with these Abs indicate that these conformations are present at the cell surface and are capable of interactions with TCRs that result in T cell activation.
...
PMID:The MHC class II molecule I-Ag7 exists in alternate conformations that are peptide dependent. 1092 90
We studied HLA DQB1 allele frequencies and the relative risk (RR) of various genotypes in 72 type 1 diabetic patients and 40 control individuals in Uruguay. This is a tri-racial (Caucasian, Black and Indo-American) mixed population. The products of the polymerase chain reaction amplifications were hybridized with oligonucleotides by allele-specific oligonucleotide reverse or dot blot methods. Significant differences between these two groups were observed only for allele DQB1*0302 (35%, RR = 7.34, P<0.001). The frequency of the alleles carrying a non-
aspartic acid
residue at position 57 was significantly higher in the diabetic patients (85 vs 53%, P<0.001). In contrast, the frequency of Asp alleles was negatively associated with
type 1 diabetes
(RR = 0.20, P<0.001). The genotype DQB1*0302/DQB1*0201 (33%, RR = 5.41, P<0.05) was positively associated with this disease. The genotype frequencies associated with
type 1 diabetes
in our population were significantly different from what is known for Caucasian and Black populations as well as compared with another admixed population, from Chile.
...
PMID:Association between diabetes type 1 and DQB1 alleles in a case-control study conducted in Montevideo, Uruguay. 1291 99
This study analyzed the expression of anti-islet autoantibodies and HLA-DR and -DQ genotypes in Korean children with
type 1 diabetes
mellitus (T1DM). The positivity of the anti-ICA512, anti-GAD65, and anti-insulin autoantibodies in the newly onset T1DM patients (n = 15) was 66.7%, 86.7%, and 46.7%, respectively, and all of them had one or more of the autoantibodies. HLA analysis showed higher frequencies of HLA-DRB1*0301, *0405, *09012 and -DQB1*0201, *0401, *03032 alleles in T1DM patients compared to controls (P(c) < 0.05). Because HLA-DQB1*0401, *03032 alleles carry
aspartic acid
at position 57 of DQB, susceptibility to T1DM in Korean children was not related to the presence of
aspartic acid
at position 57 of DQB1 locus. We suggest this unique HLA-DR, -DQ allele distribution might be an important factor for the low incidence of T1DM in Korea, and the combined anti-islet autoantibody assays could be valuable screening markers for the early detection of T1DM in Korea.
...
PMID:Analysis of children with type 1 diabetes in Korea: high prevalence of specific anti-islet autoantibodies, immunogenetic similarities to Western populations with "unique" haplotypes, and lack of discrimination by aspartic acid at position 57 of DQB. 1550 97
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