HLA haplotypes in Koreans based on 107 families
1998; Wiley; Volume: 51; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1111/j.1399-0039.1998.tb02973.x
ISSN1399-0039
AutoresM.K. Park, Yeji Hwang, K.S. Park, Katsushi Tokunaga, Tatsuya Akaza, Takeo Juji, S.I. Kim,
Tópico(s)Immune Cell Function and Interaction
ResumoAbstract: There are marked differences in the distribution of HLA haplotypes among different populations, and multilocus HLA haplotypes can best be studied by family analysis. In the present study, 107 Korean families were analyzed for HLA‐A, B, C, DR, and DQ antigens and haplotypes. Allele frequencies of more than 10% for class I antigens were A2, A24, A33, B44, B62, Cw1, Cw7, Cw9, Cw10, and C blank (CBL) and those for class II antigens were DR4, DR8, DR13, DR15, DQ1, DQ3, DQ4 and DQ7. In the analysis of HLA haplotypes, 18 kinds of A‐B‐DR and 11 kinds of A‐C‐B‐DR‐DQ haplotypes occurred at frequencies of more than 1%, comprising 34% and 24% of the total theoretical haplotypes, respectively. The five most common A‐B‐DR haplotypes were exclusively related with the five most common A‐C‐B‐DR‐DQ haplotypes (frequency>2%). These remarkably conserved five‐locus haplotypes in Koreans were A33‐CBL‐B44‐DR13‐DQ1 (5.4%), A24‐Cw7‐B7‐DR1‐DQ1 (3.5%), A33‐Cw7‐B44‐DR7‐DQ2 (3.0%), A33‐Cw10‐B58‐DR13‐DQ1 (2.3%), and A30‐Cw6‐B13‐DR7‐DQ2 (2.3%). Comparison of the distribution of A‐B‐DR haplotypes among East Asian populations revealed that Koreans are closest to Japanese, but show a higher degree of polymorphism in the distribution of HLA haplotypes compared to Japanese. The results obtained in this study will be useful as basic data on Koreans for anthropology and organ transplantation.
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