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Association of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and class II major histocompatibility complex alleles with the secretion of TNF‐a and TNF‐0 by human mononuclear cells: a possible link to insulin‐dependent diabetes mellitus
549
Citations
47
References
1993
Year
HistocompatibilityHlaHla ImmunogeneticsImmune RegulationImmunologyPathologyDr4 HaplotypeImmune SystemImmune-related Gene PolymorphismInsulin SignalingImmune DysregulationInflammationMetabolic SyndromeTumor Necrosis FactorHematologyHealth SciencesAutoimmune DiseaseAutoimmunityTnfa2 HaplotypeDiabetes ComplicationsCell BiologyPossible LinkDisease MechanismHuman Mononuclear CellsDiabetesTnf LocusHla TypingDiabetes MellitusMedicine
We have investigated the correlation between different tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and class II major histocompatibility complex alleles in the lipopolysaccharide- or phytohemagglutinin-induced secretion of TNF-alpha and TNF-beta by human monocytes and peripheral blood mononuclear cells in 87 unrelated Danish male individuals. Significant differences in TNF-alpha secretory capacity between TNF NcoI restriction fragment length polymorphisms, TNFa and TNFc microsatellite alleles and DR alleles were identified. No correlation with TNF-beta secretory capacity was found for any of the markers studied. TNF genotyping allowed us to define four extended HLA haplotypes which correlate with TNF-alpha secretory capacity. Two of these are DR4 positive: DQw8, DR4, TNFB*1, TNFa6, B44, A2 and DQw8, DR4, TNFB*2, TNFa2, B15, A2. Individuals carrying the TNFB*2, TNFa2 haplotype had a higher TNF-alpha secretory capacity than those carrying the TNFB*1, TNFa6 haplotype. In a group of DR3/DR4 heterozygous patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM), the frequency of the TNFa2 allele was higher than in HLA-DR matched controls, whereas the TNFa6 allele was more frequent in control individuals. In the DR3/DR4 heterozygous diabetic group 12/26 had the alleles combination DQw8, DR4 (Dw4), C4A3, TNFB*2, TNFa2, B15, whereas only 1/18 controls had this haplotype. This diabetogenic haplotype is identical to the DR4 haplotype which correlates with a higher TNF-alpha response. These observations suggest a direct role for the TNF locus in the pathogenesis of IDDM.
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