The frequencies of HLA class I and class II alleles and haplotypes of 104 healthy unrelated Tunisians were analyzed by high-resolution PCR-reverse dot blot hybridization, and was compared with other Mediterranean and Sub-Saharan Africans using genetic distances measurements, Neighbor-joining dendrograms, correspondence, and extended haplotypes analysis. The most frequent HLA class I A alleles were A*02, A*24, and A*30, while the most frequent B alleles were B*44, followed by B*50, B*51, and B*07. Among HLA class II DRB alleles analyzed, the most frequent were DRB1*0301, DRB1*0701, DRB1*1501, followed by DRB1*1303 and DRB1*0102; for DQB1, they were DQB1*0301 and DQB1*0201. Three-locus haplotype analysis revealed that A*03-B*07-DRB1*1503 and A*02-B*44-DRB1*0402 were the most common HLA class I and II haplotypes in this population. Compared with other communities, our result indicate that Tunisians are very related to North Africans and Western Europeans, particularly Iberians, and that Tunisians, Algerians, and Moroccans are close to Berbers suggesting little genetic contribution of Arabs who populated the area in 7th to 8th century AD. The similarities and differences between Tunisians and neighboring and related communities in HLA genotype distribution provide basic information for further studies of the MHC heterogeneity among Mediterranean and North African countries, and as reference for further anthropological studies.
The polymorphism of HLA class II genes (HLA-DRB, DQB, DPB) was investigated in 101 Tunisians using polymerase chain reaction. (PCR) amplification and reverse dot blot (RDB) hybridization. Allele and haplotype frequencies, as well as DRB1-DQB1 linkage disequilibria, were calculated. A total of 26 DRB1 alleles were detected and the most prevalent variant was DRB1*0301 with an allelic frequency at 21.87%. In the DR1 group, DRB1*0102 was most frequent than DRB1*0101. In the DR4 group, DRB1*0403 was the most common allele and was associated with DQB1*0402. Interestingly this DRB1-DQB1 association has not been observed in other populations. With regard to the DR8 group, DRB1*0804 was the unique variant detected, whereas with the DR13 specificity, the most common variant was DRB1*1303 in Algerians also. Although the DQB1 polymorphism analysis showed an allelic distribution very close to that observed in caucasoids, many DRB1-DQB1 associations which have not been reported in studies of other populations, were described. Finally at the DPB1 locus DPB1*1701 and *1301 allele frequencies distinguish clearly this Tunisian sample from a French caucasoïd panel of 83 subjects. In conclusion, a specific distribution of HLA components in terms of gene and haplotype frequencies characterizises this Tunisian population. This specific pattern may reflect the great ethnic diversity of this community. All these informations may be helpful in the future for HLA and disease association studies.
When compared with European and African data, Tunisian samples demonstrated the presence of the common signs of these two ancestries (FY*2 and FY*X for the first population; and FY*2 silent for the last one). These data confirm the mixed roots of this urban Tunisian population already suggested by numerous studies on other haematological markers.
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