Significant concentrations of C-3 epimers of 25OHD(2) or 25OHD(3) are commonly found in infants. This can lead to overestimation of 25-OHD levels. Measurements in children less than 1 yr should therefore be performed with an assay that allows accurate detection of 25-OHD in the presence of its C-3 epimers.
Nearly all genes presently mapped to chicken chromosome 16 (GGA 16) have either a demonstrated role in immune responses or are considered to serve in immunity by reason of sequence homology with immune system genes defined in other species. The genes are best described in regional units. Among these, the best known is the polymorphic major histocompatibility complex-B (MHC-B) region containing genes for classical peptide antigen presentation. Nearby MHC-B is a small region containing two CD1 genes, which encode molecules known to bind lipid antigens and which will likely be found in chickens to present lipids to specialized T cells, as occurs with CD1 molecules in other species. Another region is the MHC-Y region, separated from MHC-B by an intervening region of tandem repeats. Like MHC-B, MHC-Y is polymorphic. It contains specialized class I and class II genes and c-type lectin-like genes. Yet another region, separated from MHC-Y by the single nucleolar organizing region (NOR) in the chicken genome, contains olfactory receptor genes and scavenger receptor genes, which are also thought to contribute to immunity. The structure, distribution, linkages and patterns of polymorphism in these regions, suggest GGA 16 evolves as a microchromosome devoted to immune defense. Many GGA 16 genes are polymorphic and polygenic. At the moment most disease associations are at the haplotype level. Roles of individual MHC genes in disease resistance are documented in only a very few instances. Provided suitable experimental stocks persist, the availability of increasingly detailed maps of GGA 16 genes combined with new means for detecting genetic variability will lead to investigations defining the contributions of individual loci and more applications for immunogenetics in breeding healthy poultry.
The chicken major histocompatibility complex (MHC) is commonly defined by serologic reactions of erythrocytes with antibodies specific to the highly polymorphic MHC class I (BF) and MHC class IV (BG) antigens. The microsatellite marker LEI0258 is known to be physically located within the MHC, between the BG and BF regions. DNA from various serologically defined MHC haplotypes was amplified by polymerase chain reaction with primers surrounding this marker. Twenty-six distinctive allele sizes were identified. Some serologically well-defined MHC haplotypes shared a common LEI0258 allele size but could be distinguished either by the addition of information from another nearby marker (MCW0371) or by small indels or single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) differences between the alleles. The association between LEI0258 allele and serologically defined MHC haplotype was very consistent for the same haplotype from multiple sources. Sequence information for the region defined by LEI0258 was obtained for 51 different haplotypes. Two internal repeats whose lengths were 13 and 12 bp, respectively, are the primary basis for allelic variability. Allele size variation ranges from 182 to 552 bp. Four indels and five SNPs in the surrounding sequence provide additional means for distinguishing alleles. Typing with LEI0258 and MCW0371 will be useful in identifying MHC haplotypes in outbred populations of chickens particularly for the initial development of serological reagents.
Infants of women with PCOS were more likely to be large for gestational age. Female offspring of affected women have lower cord blood A levels; other cord blood androgen levels do not differ compared with female control offspring. Cord blood E2 levels are also significantly decreased in PCOS, without any difference in the testosterone to E2 ratio, suggesting decreased fetal or placental production of steroids.
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