Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P01889 (ankylosing spondylitis)
5,717 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

B*2704 and B*2706 are two closely related HLA-B27 subtypes, which differ from the common B*2705 by the Asp > Ser77, Val > Glu152, and Ala > Gly211 amino acid changes. In addition, B*2706 differs from B*2704 by the His > Asp114 and Asp > Tyr116 changes. In spite of their similarity B*2704, but not B*2706, was associated to ankylosing spondylitis in a same population. We have carried out pool sequence analyses of the peptides naturally bound to each of these subtypes, and of several individual peptide ligands. B*2704 and B*2706 shared with B*2705, among other features, their selectivity for Arg2 and their allowance for some aliphatic and aromatic C-terminal residues in their bound peptides. The main features that distinguished both subtypes from B*2705 were: 1) their failure to present peptides with C-terminal basic residues, and 2) their allowance for both polar and nonpolar residues at peptide position 3. A major difference between B*2704 and B*2706 was that C-terminal Tyr was prominent among the peptides bound to B*2704, but was not detected among those from B*2706. The use of Tyr as a C-terminal anchor motif is the only functional feature shared by the disease-associated B*2705, B*2702, and B*2704 subtypes that is absent in B*2706. This suggests that the ability of HLA-B27 to present peptides with C-terminal Tyr might be critical for its association to spondyloarthropathy.
...
PMID:Lack of carboxyl-terminal tyrosine distinguishes the B*2706-bound peptide repertoire from those of B*2704 and other HLA-B27 subtypes associated with ankylosing spondylitis. 909 27

Ankylosing enthesopathy (ANKENT) is a spontaneous mouse joint disease with strikingly similar pathology to human HLA-B27-associated enthesopathies such as ankylosing spondylitis. In C57Bl/10 mice, transgenic HLA-B*2702 as well as H2 genes have been shown to be relative risk factors for ANKENT. To investigate the role of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I expression in disease pathogenesis, ANKENT occurrence was compared among beta2-microglobulin (beta2m) knockout littermates with or without transgenes for HLA-B*2702 and human beta2m. In the knockout phenotype lacking beta2m, ANKENT occurrence is significantly reduced (P = 0.016). In the absence of beta2m, B*2702 is not detected on the cell membrane, nor does it increase the risk for ANKENT. This means that the previous finding that HLA-B*2702 increases susceptibility to ANKENT in C57Bl/10 mice cannot be ascribed to a transgene insertion effect. Rather, in order to increase disease susceptibility, B*2702 must be coexpressed with mouse beta2m (mo-beta2m). In contrast, when HLA-B*2702 is expressed with beta2m of human origin, disease susceptibility is not affected. Thus, both H2(b)-derived class I heterodimers and HLA-B*2702/mo-beta2m heterodimers contribute to ANKENT susceptibility.
...
PMID:The role of MHC class I heterodimer expression in mouse ankylosing enthesopathy. 914 86

Patient HLA-B27 typing is widely performed as an aid to the diagnosis of several diseases, particularly ankylosing spondylitis. Typing by flow cytometry, using monoclonal antibodies, has been shown to be a potentially useful alternative to classical serology on account of its speed, simplicity and economy. However, we required a flow cytometry typing procedure that would accurately differentiate HLA-B27 (Bw4) from B2708 (Bw6) and not be confounded by other HLA-B7/B27 cross-reactive group antigens. Accordingly, we evaluated the simultaneous use of two monoclonal antibody preparations, ABC-m3-FITC (anti-B27 + weak B7)/BB7.1-PE (anti-B7) and FD705-FITC (anti-B27), by testing a highly selected panel of 62 reference lymphocytes containing examples of all HLA-B7/B27 cross-reactive group antigens, including: HLA-B42, B47, B48, B73, B703, B2702, B2705 and B2708. In addition, 268 whole blood samples from routine patient requests for B27-associated disease typing were tested in parallel with HLA-B typing using the standard complement-dependent microlymphocytoxicity test. The detailed specificity of the three monoclonal antibodies was established and the products of HLA-B*2702, B*2705 and B*2708 were found to be readily differentiated from each other and all other HLA-B7/B27 cross-reactive HLA-B antigens.
...
PMID:Routine HLA-B27 typing by flow cytometry: differentiation of the products of HLA-B*2702, B*2705 and B*2708. 958 42

Characterization of non-B27 susceptibility genes will be required to know the pathogenesis of AS. The aim of this study was to examine whether ankylosing spondylitis (AS) susceptibility is controlled by B27 alone rather than B27 haplotypes and, whether other closely related class I loci, such as MICA and TNFA genes might play a role in AS. Three hundred eleven B27-positive samples from Caucasoid, Asian, and African populations were selected and genotypes were carried out by PCR/SSOP (HLA-B27 and HLA-C), PCR/SSP (MICA-TM polymorphism in the transmembrane region), PCR/SSCP (MICA alleles), and PCR-RFLP (TNF-alpha). Of these, 161 were AS patients, chosen in order to investigate the contribution of TNFA and MICA loci to AS in HLA-B27 positive individuals. Some findings can be concluded from the study: (a) No significant differences of TNF-alpha promoter alleles at position -308 and -238 (A/G) were found between AS patients and B27 matched alleles from healthy controls; (b) strong linkage disequilibrium was found between the B27 and the MICA alleles. The MICA-A4 was found to be in association with B*2705,02,03 and 08; MICA-A5 with B*2704 and B*2707 and MICA-A.5.1 with B*2706; (c) no significant differences of MICA alleles were found between AS and controls carrying the B27-associated alleles, and therefore no evidence is provided for an additional role of MICA gene in AS susceptibility; (d) there are a striking correlations between the structure of B27 extended haplotypes (from MICA region to HLA-C) and the ethnic distribution of these subtypes. The results of differential linkage disequilibrium with HLA-B27 subtypes suggest that B27 itself remains the primary gene for AS susceptibility, and TNFA and MICA are not involved in the pathogenesis of the disease.
...
PMID:HLA-B27 alone rather than B27-related class I haplotypes contributes to ankylosing spondylitis susceptibility. 1071 5

HLA-B27 is a serologic specificity that encompasses 20 different alleles-HLA-B*2701 to B*2720. These alleles are also called subtypes of HLA-B27, and they have evolved from the B*2705 subtype, mostly from changes in exons 2 and 3 (which encode the alpha 1 and alpha 2 domains of the peptide binding groove, respectively). Occurrence of ankylosing spondylitis (AS) or related spondyloarthropathy (SpA) has thus far been documented in subjects possessing any one of the first 10 subtypes. However, B*2706 in Southeast Asian and B*2709 in the Italian island population of Sardinia may have a relatively much weaker association with AS. The 10 most recent subtypes have not yet been studied for disease association. There may exist a hierarchical ranking, resulting, in part, from differences in other co-inherited genetic factors, or due to environmental factors; eg, B*2705 is clearly disease-associated throughout the world, but not among the West Africans of Senegal and Gambia. It is important to investigate whether certain subtypes show any preferential association with some of the clinical features or forms of AS and related SpA among the various ethnic/racial populations and geographic regions of the world. This may help to identify the polymorphic positions of HLA-B27 that may have a disease-predisposing role.
...
PMID:Update: the twenty subtypes of HLA-B27. 1091 Jan 73

With the mapping of the human genome having been completed, our ability to investigate and ideally better understand the genetic basis of rheumatic diseases is advancing at a rapid pace. Substantial evidence strongly favors a direct role for HLA-B27 in genetic susceptibility to ankylosing spondylitis and related spondyloarthropathies, although the underlying molecular basis has yet to be identified. HLA-B27 contributes only 16 to 50% of the total genetic risk for the disease, clearly indicating that other genes must be involved. However, no other putative disease genes have yet been absolutely proven. Potential genes include MHC (HLA class II, low molecular weight proteasome [LMP], transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP), tumor necrosis factor [TNF]-alpha, and major histocompatibility complex class I chain-related gene A (MICA), as well as non-MHC genes (IL-1RA, IL-6, IL-10, and CYP2D6). Genome-wide screens have identified other chromosomal areas of interest: 1p, 2q, 6p, 9q, 10q, 16q, and 19q. However, different studies have given conflicting results. HLA-B27 itself is a serologic specificity, which encompasses 25 different alleles that encode 23 different products (proteins): HLA-B*2701 to B*2723. These alleles may have evolved from the most widespread subtype, B*2705, and two of them, B*2706 in Southeast Asia and B*2709 in Sardinia, seem not to be associated with ankylosing spondylitis. The distinction between the disease associated and nonassociated subtypes may provide clues to the actual role of B27 in disease pathogenesis.
...
PMID:HLA-B27 and genetic predisposing factors in spondyloarthropathies. 1155 26

The association between HLA-B27 and the spondyloarthropathies (SpAs) is so strong that it is supposed that the HLA-B27 molecule plays a pathogenetic role. In whites and Indonesians, the frequency of HLA-B27 is about 10%; in Chinese it is about 8%; and in Japanese it is only about 1%. The prevalence of SpA in the Chinese is at least 0.2%, but in native Indonesians, Philippinos, and Malaysians, SpA is rarely seen. Twenty-three subtypes (B*2701-B*2723) have been distinguished. These subtypes are not equally distributed over the world. In most countries the distribution of the subtypes among HLA-B27 SpA patients is the same as that among the normal HLA-B27-positive population. In China, the subtype B*2704 is frequent and the prevalence of SpA is high. Native Indonesians, however, mostly have subtype B*2706, and SpA is rarely seen in this population. It was shown that B*2706, probably like B*2709 in Sardinia, is not associated with SpA. The difference between the SpA-associated and non-SpA-associated subtypes is limited to only two amino acid residues (114 and 116) at the bottom of the peptide-binding groove of HLA-B27. This small difference between health and disease rewards studies for different peptide-binding capacities and may help us characterize the peptides that are involved in the pathogenesis of SpA. The differences in disease associations in these countries also have clinical implications. In Southeast Asia, HLA-B27 typing without subtyping has less clinical usefulness than in parts of the world where B*2706 is rarely seen. When native Indonesians, Malaysians, or Philippinos are suspected of having ankylosing spondylitis or a related SpA, it is worth asking if they had white or Chinese ancestors. If native HLA-B27-positive Indonesians (with subtypes other than B*2706) develop SpA, the clinical features are not different from those in other parts of the world. In the Chinese population on the mainland and in Taiwan, juvenile SpA is frequently seen. The onset is often a peripheral arthritis or enthesitis.
...
PMID:Spondyloarthropathies in eastern Asia. 1155 29

HLA-B27 is a serologic specificity that encompasses 25 different alleles that encode 23 different products (proteins): HLA-B*2701 to B*2723. These alleles are also called subtypes of HLA-B27, and they may have evolved from the most widespread subtype, B*2705. These subtypes are distinguished from changes mostly in exons 2 and 3, which encode the alpha 1 and alpha 2 domains of the B27 molecule, respectively. Occurrence of ankylosing spondylitis (AS) or related spondyloarthropathy (SpA) has thus far been documented in subjects possessing any one of the first ten (B*2701 to B*2710) subtypes studied. However, B*2706 in Southeast Asian and B*2709 in the Italian island population of Sardinia seem not to be associated with AS. The 13 most recent subtypes have not yet been studied for disease association. It is important to investigate which of them are and are not associated with AS and related SpA, and whether certain subtypes show any preferential association with some of the clinical features or forms of these diseases among the various ethnic/racial populations and geographic regions of the world. This is expected to provide clues as to the mechanism of disease association, and one of the strongest reasons to study the B27 subtypes is to learn the effects of the sequence variations on the peptide-binding specificity of the molecule. Among these peptides may be the putative arthritogenic peptide(s).
...
PMID:HLA-B27 polymorphism. 1170 3

A polymerase chain reaction-sequence-specific primer (PCR-SSP) method which distinguishes all B27 alleles described at present (B*2701-23) has been developed. The distribution of B27 alleles was characterised in six different Asian populations. HLA-B*2705, 02, 04, 07, 22 (formerly B*2706) subtypes found in Asian populations differ in their ethnic distribution, which may be the result of different genetic and geographic origins. Furthermore, two novel B27 alleles were found in this study. B*2714 was identified in two Siberians, one of whom was a patient with ankylosing spondylitis. B*2715 was found in two patients with ankylosing spondylitis in Thais. These associations have not previously been reported in either ethnic group.
...
PMID:New insights regarding HLA-B27 diversity in the Asian population. 1178 78

HLA-B*2704 is strongly associated with ankylosing spondylitis. B*2706, which differs from B*2704 by two amino acid changes, is not associated with this disease. A systematic comparison of the B*2704- and B*2706-bound peptide repertoires was carried out to elucidate their overlap and differential features and to correlate them with disease susceptibility. Both subtypes shared about 90% of their peptide repertoires, consisting of peptides with Arg(2) and C-terminal aliphatic or Phe residues. B*2706 polymorphism influenced specificity at three anchor positions: it favored basic residues at P3 and POmega-2 and impaired binding of Tyr and Arg at POmega. Thus, the main structural feature of peptides differentially bound to B*2704 was the presence of C-terminal Tyr or Arg, together with a strong preference for aliphatic/aromatic P3 residues. This is the only known feature of B*2704 and B*2706 that correlates to their differential association with spondyloarthropathy. The concomitant presence of basic P3 and POmega-2 residues was observed only among peptides differentially bound to B*2706, suggesting that it impairs binding to B*2704. Similarity between peptide overlap and the degree of cross-reaction with alloreactive T lymphocytes suggested that the majority of shared ligands maintain unaltered antigenic features in the context of both subtypes.
...
PMID:The peptide repertoires of HLA-B27 subtypes differentially associated to spondyloarthropathy (B*2704 and B*2706) differ by specific changes at three anchor positions. 1187 71


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 Next >>