Autor: |
Koster, H. S., Kenter, M. J. H., D'Amaro, J., Luiten, R. M., Schroeijers, W. E. M., Giphart, M. J., Termijtelen, A. |
Zdroj: |
Immunogenetics; July 1991, Vol. 34 Issue: 1 p12-22, 11p |
Abstrakt: |
The identification of 19 different HLA-DPB1 sequences implicates the existence of more DP specificities than can be typed for with cellular methods. How many of the DPß sequences can be specifically recognized by T cells, and which of the polymorphic regions can contribute to the specificity of allorecognition, is not known. In order to investigate the distribution and the immunological relevance of recently described DPB1 alleles, we have typed a panel of 98 randomly selected Dutch Caucasoid donors for the HLA-DPB1 locus by oligonucleotide typing. Comparison of the typing results with primed lymphocyte typing (PLT) defined DP specificities shows an extremely good correlation. Moreover, additional alleles could be defined by oligonucleotide typing reducing the number of DP blanks in the panel. By selecting the appropriate responder stimulator combinations we were able to show that distinctive PLT reagents against oligonucleotide defined specificities DPB1*0401, DPB1*0402, DPB1*0901, and DPB1*1301 can be generated. To investigate in more detail which part of the DP molecule is responsible for the specificity of T-cell recognition, T-cell clones were generated against HLA-DPw3. The clones were tested for the recognition of stimulators carrying DPB1 alleles which had been defined by oligonucleotide typing and sequence analyses and which differed in a variable degree from DPB1*0301. The recognition patterns demonstrated that differences of one amino acid in polymorphic regions situated either in the beta sheets or alpha helix of the hypothetical model of the HLA class II molecule can eliminate T-cell recognition. Furthermore, sequence analyses revealed a new DPB1 allele designated DPB1*Oos. |
Databáze: |
Supplemental Index |
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