A stem cell registry population from Hong Kong, of Chinese ethnicity, was examined for HLA-A and HLA-B alleles using a two-stage sequence-specific oligonucleotide probe system. Comparison of the HLA-A and HLA-B frequencies with different populations showed a close relationship with a Chinese population from Singapore, although there were several differences in the presence/absence of alleles at the HLA-B locus. Having the data available on these registry donors will influence the search strategy and the ongoing compilation of new donors to the registry. In addition, knowing which alleles do/do not occur in this population will aid in the distinction of ambiguities which result from the use of many of the typing kits available.
HLA-A,-B, and-DR frequencies were analysed in populations from Portugal and the Madeira and Cabo Verde Archipelagos, aiming to characterize their genetic composition. Portuguese settlers colonized both Archipelagos in the 15th and 16th centuries. Madeira received many sub-Saharan slaves to work in the sugar plantations, and Cabo Verde served as a pivotal market in the Atlantic slave trade and was populated by individuals coming from the Senegambia region of the West African coast. The population of Madeira shows the highest genetic diversity and the presence of alleles and haplotypes usually linked to sub-Saharan populations, the haplotypes accounting for 3n5 % of the total. Cabo Verde presents typical markers acknowledged to be of European or Ibero-Mediterranean origin, thus revealing the admixture of European settlers with Sub-Saharan slaves. Altogether the number of European haplotypes reaches 15 % of the total. The Portuguese population shows a perceivable and significant heterogeneity both in allele and haplotype frequencies, unveiling a differential input of peoples from different origins. A PCA of the populations studied, plus other relevant ones, clearly shows gene heterogeneity in mainland Portugal as well as the differences and relationships between these populations and Madeira and Cabo Verde.
DNA typing for HLA class II improves the typing quality and this was shown previously to be relevant for kidney graft survival. In this project we addressed the question whether molecular typing for HLA class I also increases the efficacy of HLA matching in kidney transplantation. 215 HLA-A,-B,-DR zero-mismatched donor/recipient pairs as defined by serological typing were selected. Retrospective HLA-A and HLA-B typing was performed both by the PCR-SSP and the PCR-SSOP method. DNA typing for HLA-A revealed discrepant results to serology in 5.7% of the donors and 2.8% of the recipients. HLA-B typing discrepancies were found in 6.6% of the donors and 5.6% of the recipients. 10.4% of the donors and 6.5% of the recipients showed either an HLA-A or an HLA-B discrepancy Nearly one-third of the HLA-A discrepancies affected A19 splits. The most common reason for HLA-A discrepancies was the erroneous assignment of serological blanks, whereas HLA-B errors were caused mainly by the assignment of incorrect specificities. DNA typing allowed the definition of HLA-A and -B split specificities in all 118 "splitable" cases for which only broad specificities were reported based on serological typing. A total of 183 DNA class I compatible transplants had a 15% higher one-year graft survival rate than 32 transplants for which DNA typing revealed a class I incompatibility
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