Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0018133 (
graft-versus-host disease
)
18,032
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In preparation for a bone marrow transplantation 217 patients and their families were complotyped for Bf, C4A and
C4B
in addition to the routinely performed HLA-A,B,C,DR and HLA-D typing. In 147 families uncertainties in haplotype definition occurred which could be solved in 37 cases (25%) by complotyping. Additionally, patients and their relatives were subtyped for class I gene products by one-dimensional isoelectric focusing, a method by which serologically identical HLA-A, B, or C antigens could be split in five out of 22 cases tested. The results obtained clearly show the relevance of both methodologies for finding the best match of donor/recipient pairs to help to prevent MHC-induced
graft-versus-host disease
after bone marrow transplantation.
...
PMID:Relevance of complotyping and subtyping of MHC class I gene products in haplotype definition for allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. 264 82
In this chapter, we have considered the theoretical and practical background of bone marrow transplantation. The immune response and its regulation by genes within the major histocompatibility complex, particularly of the I region of the mouse and of the HLA-D/DR region in man, is of central importance in both graft acceptance (rejection) and
graft-versus-host disease
. Methods which are available for typing alleles at the HLA-A, -C, -B, -DR and complotype (BF, C2, C4A,
C4B
) loci, have been considered in detail. The extent to which recombination affects specific alleles on haplotypes within families is discussed, as is the occurrence of linkage disequilibrium and extended haplotypes in populations of unrelated individuals. Because the HLA-DR and complotype region in man is thought to be critical for the success of bone marrow transplantation, methods for typing of HLA-D by both the HTC and PLT approaches have been examined. Although HLA-D/DR assignments are easily made in normal subjects, they are ambiguous in about 50 per cent of candidates for bone marrow transplantation, including, particularly, patients with aplastic anaemia, leukaemia, and severe combined immunodeficiency. In this setting, it is particularly important to obtain additional information by modification of HLA-D typing procedures and through complotype and GLO allele determinations in all family members. Finally, we can hope that there will be an increased possibility of using non-family donors through methods for removing cytotoxic T cells from donor marrow and through the identification, in the general population, of individuals who are genotypically similar or identical to the recipient. In this regard, the recognition that some 30 per cent of chromosome 6 in caucasians (50 per cent of individuals) bear extended haplotypes, which include a relatively fixed set of alleles particularly in the HLA-B, -DR, complotype and GLO regions, offers considerable promise.
...
PMID:The MHC in human bone marrow allotransplantation. 622 38