We determined the HLA frequency distribution in a sample of 100 Bubi individuals born on the island of Bioko (Equatorial Guinea). HLA-A, -B and -C typing was performed by serology and PCR-SSP. DRB1/3/4/5, DQB1 and DQA1 alleles were determined by PCR-SSOP. The HLA allele distribution of this population group resembles those found in other Bantu-speaking groups; however, the higher frequency of A30, A32, B44, DRB1*1301 in the Bubi with respect to other Bantu groups and the absence of DR4 deserve special mention. The cloning and sequencing of class I and II genes in this population allowed the description of five new allelic variants: B*4407, Cw*0706, Cw*1801, Cw*1802 and DQB1*0612 and five confirmatory sequences: B*3910, B*5703, B*8101, Cw*1203 and Cw*1701. The following new HLA-C,B haplotypes have been found in Bubi: Cw*08-B*57, Cw*18-B*57, Cw*0302-B*53, Cw*07-B*53 and Cw*1601-B*63. The most frequent seven-locus haplotype is: A*30-Cw*17-B*42-DRB1*1102-DRB3*0202-DQA1*05-DQB1 *0301. In terms of genetic distance, the Bubi are closer to other Bantu groups than to West African populations.
SummaryOver 1000 kidney transplant patients were tested for cytotoxic antibodies before transplantation.It was found that patients with preformed antibodies had a significantly poorer outcome than those without antibodies in terms of clinical ranks and survival. This effect was over and above the instances of hyperacute failures previously shown to be associated with preformed cytotoxins.Among patients who received second transplants from cadaver donors, an extremely high failure-rate was observed in patients who had developed antibodies following the first graft, whereas if antibodies were not present, the failure-rate was comparable with that of first transplants done in patients without antibodies.By analysis of survival curves using logarithmic plots, it is postulated that pre-immunization has its greatest effect in the early 3-6 month high risk period and magnifies incompatibilities which occur with unrelated cadaver donors.
We have studied the HLA-class I and class II antigen distribution in a sample of 75 Spanish Gypsies and 74 Spanish non-Gypsies by serology, restriction fragment length polymorphism, and protein chain reaction and hybridization with allele-specific oligonucleotide probes. When both population samples are compared, we find that Gypsies have a statistically significantly higher frequency of A1, A11, B61, Cw6, DQ5 and haplotypes DR16 DQ5 Dw21 and DR14 DQ5 Dw9 DR52b. Frequency of A3, A29, B44, DR4, DQ2, DQ8 and haplotypes DR1 DQ5 and DR7 DQ2 DB17 DR53 are significantly lower in this ethnic group. The analysis of the serological data in the two populations demonstrates that Cw6 can be split into long Cw6 (Cw6.1) and short Cw6 (Cw6.2). Haplotype A1-Cw6-B61-DR14-DQ5 is the most characteristic in Gypsies, with a frequency of 13%. Estimation of the genetic distances shows that Spanish Gypsies are closer to Indian Caucasoid populations than to the Spanish non-Gypsy population. HLA data support the proposed historical origin of this ethnic group.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.