468 research outputs found
Polymorphism of the tumor necrosis factor beta gene in systemic lupus erythematosus
We investigated the Nco I restriction fragment
length polymorphism (RFLP) of the tumor necrosis
factor beta (TNFB) gene in 173 patients with systemic
lupus erythematosus (SLE), 192 unrelated
healthy controls, and eleven panel families, all of German
origin. The phenotype frequency of the TNFB*I
allele was significantly increased in patients compared
to controls (63.6% vs 47.1%, RR = 1.96, p <0.002).
The results of a two-point haplotype statistical analysis
between TNFB and HLA alleles show that there is linkage
disequilibrium between TNFB*I and HLA-A1,
Cw7, B8, DR3, DQ2, and C4A DE. The frequency of
TNFB*I was compared in SLE patients and controls in
the presence or absence of each of these alleles.
TNFB*I is increased in patients over controls only in
the presence of the mentioned alleles. Therefore, the
whole haplotypeA1, Cw7, B8, TNFB* I, C4A DE, DR3,
DQ2 is increased in patients and it cannot be determined
which of the genes carried by this haplotype is
responsible for the susceptibility to SLE. In addition,
two-locus associations were analyzed in 192 unrelated
healthy controls for TNFB and class I alleles typed by
serology, and for TNFB and class II alleles typed by
polymerase chain reaction/oligonucleotide probes. We
found positive linkage disequilibrium between
TNFB*I and the following alleles: HLA-A24, HLA-B8,
DRBI*0301, DRBI*ll04, DRBI*1302, DQAI*0501, DQBI*0201, DQBI*0604, and DPBI*OIO1. TNFB*2
is associated with HLA-B7, DRBI*1501, and
DQB I *0602
HLA-G: expression in human keratinocytes in vitro and in human skin in vivo
Classical, polymorphic major histocompatibility complex class I molecules are
expressed on most nucleated cells.They present peptides at the cell surface and,
thus, enable the immune system to scan peptides for their antigenicity. The
function of the other, nonclassical class I molecules in man is controversial.
HLA-G which has been shown by transfection experiments to be expressed at the
cell surface, is only transcribed in placental tissue and in the fetal eye.Therefore, a
role of HLA-G in the control of rejection of the allogeneic fetus has been
discussed. We found that HLA-G expression is induced in keratinocytes by
culture in vitro. Three different alternative splicing products of HLA-G can be
detected: a full length transcript, an mRNA lacking exon 3 and a transcript devoid
of exon 3 and 4. Reverse transcription followed by polymerase chain reaction also
revealed the presence of HLA-G mRNA in vivo in biopsies of either diseased or
healthy skin
Interobserver Reliability in Describing Radiographic Lung Changes After Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy
Purpose Radiographic lung changes after stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) vary widely between patients. Standardized descriptions of acute (≤6 months after treatment) and late (\u3e6 months after treatment) benign lung changes have been proposed but the reliable application of these classification systems has not been demonstrated. Herein, we examine the interobserver reliability of classifying acute and late lung changes after SBRT.
Methods and materials A total of 280 follow-up computed tomography scans at 3, 6, and 12 months post-treatment were analyzed in 100 patients undergoing thoracic SBRT. Standardized descriptions of acute lung changes (3- and 6-month scans) include diffuse consolidation, patchy consolidation and ground glass opacity (GGO), diffuse GGO, patchy GGO, and no change. Late lung change classifications (12-month scans) include modified conventional pattern, mass-like pattern, scar-like pattern, and no change. Five physicians scored the images independently in a blinded fashion. Fleiss\u27 kappa scores quantified the interobserver agreement.
Results The Kappa scores were 0.30 at 3 months, 0.20 at 6 months, and 0.25 at 12 months. The proportion of patients in each category at 3 and 6 months was as follows: Diffuse consolidation 11% and 21%; patchy consolidation and GGO 15% and 28%; diffuse GGO 10% and 11%; patchy GGO 15% and 15%; and no change 49% and 25%, respectively. The percentage of patients in each category at 12 months was as follows: Modified conventional 46%; mass-like 16%; scar-like 26%; and no change 12%. Uniform scoring between the observers occurred in 26, 8, and 14 cases at 3, 6, and 12 months, respectively.
Conclusions Interobserver reliability scores indicate a fair agreement to classify radiographic lung changes after SBRT. Qualitative descriptions are insufficient to categorize these findings because most patient scans do not fit clearly into a single classification. Categorization at 6 months may be the most difficult because late and acute lung changes can arise at that time
Lack of hybridization between Yersinia enterocolitica and HLA-B27 DNA
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