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Sequence Analysis of the Diabetes-Protective Human Leukocyte Antigen-DQB110602 Allele in Unaffected, Islet Cell Antibody-Positive First Degree Relatives and in Rare Patients with Type 1 Diabetes1
Author(s) -
Alberto Pugliese,
Eiji Kawasaki,
Markus Zeller,
Liping Yu,
Sunanda Babu,
Michele Solimena,
Carlos T. Moraes,
Massimo Pietropaolo,
Robert P. Friday,
Massimo Trucco,
Camillo Ricordi,
Marie Allen,
Janelle A. Noble,
M Kellis,
George S. Eisenbarth
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
the journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.206
H-Index - 353
eISSN - 1945-7197
pISSN - 0021-972X
DOI - 10.1210/jcem.84.5.5684
Subject(s) - human leukocyte antigen , allele , diabetes mellitus , hla dqb1 , haplotype , first degree relatives , type 1 diabetes , type 2 diabetes , genetics , genotype , biology , immunology , medicine , antigen , gene , endocrinology , family history
The human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DQA1*0102/DQB1*0602/DRB1*1501 (DR2) haplotype confers strong protection from type 1 diabetes. Growing evidence suggests that such protection may be mostly encoded by the DQB1*0602 allele, and we reported that even first degree relatives with islet cell antibodies (ICA) have an extremely low diabetes risk if they carry DQB1*0602. Recently, novel variants of the DQB1*0602 and *0603 alleles were reported in four patients with type 1 diabetes originally typed as DQB1*0602 with conventional techniques. One inference from this observation is that DQB1*0602 may confer absolute protection and may never occur in type 1 diabetes. By this hypothesis, all patients typed as DQB1*0602 positive with conventional techniques should carry one of the above diabetes-permissive variants instead of the protective DQB1*0602. Such variants could also occur in ICA/DQB1*0602-positive relatives, with the implication that their diabetes risk could be significantly higher than previously estimated. We therefore sequenced the DQB1*0602 and DQA1*0102 alleles in all ICA/DQB1*0602-positive relatives (n = 8) previously described and in six rare patients with type 1 diabetes and DQB1*0602. We found that all relatives and patients carry the known DQB1*0602 and DQA1*0102 sequences, and none of them has the mtDNA A3243G mutation associated with late-onset diabetes in ICA-positive individuals. These findings suggest that diabetes-permissive DQB1*0602/3 variants may be very rare. Thus, although the protective effect associated with DQB1*0602 is extremely powerful, it is not absolute. Nonetheless, the development of diabetes in individuals with DQB1*0602 remains extremely unlikely, even in the presence of ICA, as confirmed by our further evaluation of ICA/DQB1*0602-positive relatives, none of whom has yet developed diabetes.

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