7 research outputs found

    Phenotype Frequencies of Autosomal Minor Histocompatibility Antigens Display Significant Differences among Populations

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    Minor histocompatibility (H) antigens are allogeneic target molecules having significant roles in alloimmune responses after human leukocyte antigenā€“matched solid organ and stem cell transplantation (SCT). Minor H antigens are instrumental in the processes of transplant rejection, graft-versus-host disease, and in the curative graft-versus-tumor effect of SCT. The latter characteristic enabled the current application of selected minor H antigens in clinical immunotherapeutic SCT protocols. No information exists on the global phenotypic distribution of the currently identified minor H antigens. Therefore, an estimation of their overall impact in human leukocyte antigenā€“matched solid organ and SCT in the major ethnic populations is still lacking. For the first time, a worldwide phenotype frequency analysis of ten autosomal minor H antigens was executed by 31 laboratories and comprised 2,685 randomly selected individuals from six major ethnic populations. Significant differences in minor H antigen frequencies were observed between the ethnic populations, some of which appeared to be geographically correlated

    REVIEW OF HLA AND COVID-19 ASSOCIATION STUDIES

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    Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), is reported to vary across different populations in the prevalence of infection, in the death rate of patients, in the severity of symptoms and in the drug response of patients. Among host genetic factors that can influence all these attributes human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genetic system stands out as one of the leading candidates. Case-control studies, large-scale population-based studies, as well as experimental bioinformatics studies are of utmost importance to confirm HLA susceptibility spectrum of COVID-19. This review presents the results of the first case-control and epidemiological studies performed in several populations, early after the pandemic breakout. The results are pointing to several susceptible and protective HLA alleles and haplotypes associations with COVID-19, some of which might be of interest for the future studies in Croatia, due to its common presence in the population. However, further multiple investigations from around the world, as numerous as possible, are needed to confirm or deteriorate these preliminary results

    DISTRIBUTION OF MINOR HISTOCOMPATIBILITY ANTIGENS HA-1, HA-2 AND HA-8 IN THE CROATIAN POPULATION

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    Minor histocompatibility antigens (mHAgs) are polymorphic, endogenously synthetized products recognized by alloreactive T cells in the context of major histocompatibility complex molecules. Recipients of allogeneic bone marrow grafts run the risk of graft-versus-host disease (GvHD), even when the donor is an HLA-identical sibling. This may be caused by disparities in mHAgs between the donor and the recipient, with the antigen present in the recipient and not in the donor. In such cases, T cells in the transplanted donor marrow respond to the recipientā€™s mHAgs. We determined the allele, genotype and phenotype frequencies for mHAgs HA-1, HA-2 and HA-8 in 102 healthy, unrelated individuals previously typed for HLA-A, HLA-B and HLA-DR. We compared the results with existing studies in other populations and found no significant differences between allele, genotype and phenotype frequencies in the Croatian population and frequencies reported for Caucasian population. The results presented will be used for further studies investigating the role of mHAgs in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation

    Mapping the Human Leukocyte Antigen Diversity among Croatian Regions: Implication in Transplantation

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    In the present study, HLA allele and haplotype frequencies were studied using the HLA data of 9277 Croatian unrelated individuals, typed using high-resolution methods for the HLA-A, -B, -C, and -DRB1 loci. The total numbers of observed alleles were 47 for HLA-A, 88 for HLA-B, 34 for HLA-C, and 53 for HLA-DRB1. HLA-Aāˆ—02:01 (29.5%), Bāˆ—51:01 (10.5%), Cāˆ—04:01 (15.8%), and DRB1āˆ—16:01 (10.4%) were the most frequent alleles in the Croatian general population. The three most frequent haplotypes were HLA-Aāˆ—01:01~Cāˆ—07:01~Bāˆ—08:01~DRB1āˆ—03:01 (4.7%), HLA-Aāˆ—03:01~Cāˆ—07:02~Bāˆ—07:02~DRB1āˆ—15:01 (1.7%), and HLA-Aāˆ—02:01~Cāˆ—07:01~Bāˆ—18:01~DRB1āˆ—11:04 (1.5%). Allele and haplotype frequencies were compared between national and regional data, and differences were observed, particularly in the North Croatia region. The data has potential use in refining donor recruitment strategies for national registries of volunteer hematopoietic stem cell donors, solid organ allocation schemes, and the design of future disease and anthropological studies
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