Non-transmitted maternal HLA DQ2 or DQ8 alleles and risk of Type I diabetes in offspring: the importance of foetal or post partum exposure to diabetogenic molecules
Autor: | M. A. Pani, J. Van Autreve, B. Van der Auwera, Klaus Badenhoop, F. K. Gorus |
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Rok vydání: | 2002 |
Předmět: |
Male
musculoskeletal diseases Offspring Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolism Mothers Human leukocyte antigen Nuclear Family Fathers Genomic Imprinting HLA-DQ Antigens Diabetes mellitus Internal Medicine Humans Medicine Allele Risk factor skin and connective tissue diseases Alleles Sex Characteristics business.industry Haplotype HLA-DQ2 nutritional and metabolic diseases medicine.disease Pedigree Diabetes Mellitus Type 1 In utero Immunology Female business |
Zdroj: | Diabetologia. 45:1340-1343 |
ISSN: | 1432-0428 0012-186X |
Popis: | Type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus results from an immune-mediated destruction of pancreatic beta cells for which HLA haplotypes DR3-DQ2 and DR4-DQ8 represent the strongest genetic risk markers. Mothers of patients with rheumatoid arthritis carry more frequently the HLA DR4-DQ8 haplotype as non-transmitted haplotype than mothers of healthy control subjects. As maternal cells have been shown to persist in their offspring up to 30 years after birth, we investigated whether the association of HLA DR3-DQ2 and DR4-DQ8 with Type I diabetes is purely a genetic effect acting through inheritance or whether it can also act as an environmental factor, for example through foetal exposure in utero to maternal circulating cells.We analysed the non-transmitted parental HLA DQ alleles of 464 families (1367 subjects) with a Type I diabetic offspring. HLA DQ alleles were assessed using sequence-specific primers and allele-specific oligonucleotides hybridisation. A chi-square test was done to compare allele and transmission frequencies in the respective subsets of families.The non-transmitted HLA DR3-DQ2 and DR4-DQ8 were more frequent in mothers than in fathers of all non- DQ2/DQ8 heterozygous diabetic offspring ( p=0.0001) as well as in offspring not carrying any HLA high-risk allele ( p=0.0243). In patients with either risk allele alone, more maternal than paternal non-transmitted risk alleles complemented the constellation to DQ2/DQ8 ( p0.0099).HLA high risk alleles were more frequent among maternal non-inherited (but possibly exposed) alleles than among paternal non-inherited alleles. These results indicate that HLA DR-DQ is an environmental risk factor for Type I diabetes. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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