17 research outputs found

    Identification of a new HLA-B*39 allele: HLA-B*3924

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    We have identified a new HLA-B*39 allele through polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using sequence-specific primers (SSP) and sequence-based typing of exons 2 and 3. This novel allele was identified in three HLA-identical siblings of Turkish origin. This allele only differs from HLA-B*3903 at a unique single nucleotide substitution (T for C) at position 365 in exon 3 which results in an amino acid change in codon 98 of methionine (ATG) to threonine (ACG). The sequencing enabled the development of a monospecific PCR-SSP reaction which can be used to discriminate between HLA-B*3924 and other B*39 alleles

    Identification of the null HLA-A2 allele, A*0232N

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    We have identified a null HLA-A*02 allele, HLA-A*0232N, by using a combination of serology, flow cytometry, polymerase chain reaction using sequence-specific primers (PCR-SSP) and full-length sequencing. The null HLA-A2 allele was identified in an Asian individual originally typed by serology as an apparently homozygous HLA-A3, B51. Subsequent genotyping by PCR-SSP identified the genotype as HLA-A*0201, *0301, B*51, Cw*1402. The serological type and lack of detectable HLA-A2 was confirmed using monoclonal antibody typing reagents. Flow cytometry studies failed to identify any cell surface HLA-A2 expression on the patient 19s peripheral blood lymphocytes. Genotyping using a PCR-SSP set designed to detect null alleles revealed the mutation had not been previously described. Full-length sequencing of the allele identified an allele which was subsequently named HLA-A*0232N. This allele is identical to HLA-A*0201 except for a novel point mutation (T for C) at position 493 which creates a premature stop codon. The sequencing enabled the development of a monospecific A*0232N PCR-SSP reaction which was used to screen 973 DNA samples: no further examples of A*0232N were identified

    Identification of a new allele, HLA-DRB1*1360, on a DRB5 haplotype in a Brazilian individual

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    The application of DNA-based methods for human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genotyping has revealed an ever-increasing degree of polymorphism within the HLA-DRB loci and has resulted in the discovery of new alleles. We have identified a new DRB1 allele that was subsequently named DRB1*1360 by the WHO Nomenclature Committee. This allele is unusual for a DRB1*13 allele, as it is present on a DRB5 haplotype rather than the normal DRB3 haplotype found in association with DRB1*13 alleles
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