| Literature DB >> 24377085 |
Kevin Y Urayama1, Pamela D Thompson2, Malcolm Taylor3, Elizabeth A Trachtenberg4, Anand P Chokkalingam5.
Abstract
The enduring suspicion that infections and immunologic response may play a role in the etiology of childhood leukemia, particularly acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), is now supported, albeit still indirectly, by numerous epidemiological studies. The cumulative evidence includes, for example, descriptive observations of a peculiar peak incidence at age 2-5 years for ALL in economically developed countries, clustering of cases in situations of population mixing associated with unusual patterns of personal contacts, associations with various proxy measures for immune modulatory exposures early in life, and genetic susceptibility conferred by variation in genes involved in the immune system. In this review, our focus is the extended major histocompatibility complex (MHC), an approximately 7.6 Mb region that is well-known for its high-density of expressed genes, extensive polymorphisms exhibiting complex linkage disequilibrium patterns, and its disproportionately large number of immune-related genes, including human leukocyte antigen (HLA). First discovered through the role they play in transplant rejection, the classical HLA class I (HLA-A, -B, and -C) and class II (HLA-DR, HLA-DQ, and HLA-DP) molecules reside at the epicenter of the immune response pathways and are now the targets of many disease susceptibility studies, including those for childhood leukemia. The genes encoding the HLA molecules are only a minority of the over 250 expressed genes in the xMHC, and a growing number of studies are beginning to evaluate other loci through targeted investigations or utilizing a mapping approach with a comprehensive screen of the entire region. Here, we review the current epidemiologic evidence available to date regarding genetic variation contained within this highly unique region of the genome and its relationship with childhood ALL risk.Entities:
Keywords: childhood leukemia; epidemiology; genetic susceptibility; human leukocyte antigen; major histocompatibility complex
Year: 2013 PMID: 24377085 PMCID: PMC3859964 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2013.00300
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Schematic map (not to scale) of the 7.6 Mb extended human MHC (xMHC) on the short (p) arm of human chromosome 6. The HLA class I gene cluster includes the three expressed classical class I genes, HLA-A, HLA-B, and HLA-C, and is located telomeric of the class III region. The HLA class II gene cluster is located centromeric of the HLA class III region. Of the over 250 known expressed loci of the xMHC, the relative locations of only those that have appeared in previous studies of childhood ALL are indicated.
Studies evaluating the association between HLA genetic variation and ALL risk specifically in children.
| Reference | Region | Study population | Locus | Main results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| von Fliedner et al. ( | Switzerland | 31 ALL; 123 controls | HLA-DR (antigen) | DRw7 over-represented in childhood ALL compared to controls | Adult ALL and AML results also available in report |
| Evidence of increased DRw7 homozygosity in patients vs. controls | |||||
| Davey et al. ( | USA | 94 ALL; 376 controls | HLA-A (antigen) HLA-B (antigen) | HLA-A and HLA-B antigens: no difference in distribution between groups | HLA-A9 associated with first remission duration and survival |
| von Fliedner et al. ( | Switzerland | 55 Families with child affected with ALL | HLA-A (antigen) | HLA sharing among parents of leukemic children was increased for HLA-B ( | Mating of certain shared alleles in HLA is associated with risk in offspring |
| HLA-B (antigen) | |||||
| HLA-C (antigen) | |||||
| HLA-DR (antigen) | |||||
| Muller et al. ( | Germany | 142 ALL (75, aged <11 years) | HLA-A (antigen) HLA-B (antigen) HLA-C (antigen) HLA-DR (antigen) | HLA-Cw7: higher frequency in ALL compared to both control groups (corrected | |
| 280 Local controls | |||||
| 1,053 Caucasian controls | Difference was strong in ALL age ≥11 years compared to controls; in children (age <11), not significant after correction | ||||
| Cameron et al. ( | Trinidad, West Indies | 10 ALL; controls | HLA-A (antigen) HLA-B (antigen) HLA-C (antigen) | HLA-B40: higher frequency in ALL compared to controls ( | |
| HLA-B5: no carriers in cases, but 37.8% in controls ( | |||||
| Taylor et al. ( | United Kingdom | 63 BCP-ALL; 92 adult and 82 infant controls | HLA-DPB1 (4-digit allele) | ||
| Patients are three to four times more likely to be heterozygous for | |||||
| Dearden et al. ( | United Kingdom | 62 BCP-ALL; 76 newborn controls | HLA-DQB1 (4-digit allele) | ||
| Amino-acid motifs evaluated | |||||
| Taylor et al. ( | United Kingdom | 62 BCP-ALL; 78 newborn controls | 4-Digit allele | Male-specific associations: | Association with specific HLA-DQA1 and HLA-DQB1 amino-acid motifs evaluated |
| HLA-DQA1 HLA-DQB1 | |||||
| Ghodsi et al. ( | United Kingdom | 94 BCP-ALL; 136 infant controls | HLA-C (typed for NK1 or NK2 ligand) | NK1 and NK2 frequencies showed no statistically significant difference between ALL and controls | Excess of NK2 homozygous patients compared to controls, particularly in females |
| Dorak et al. ( | United Kingdom | 114 ALL; 325 newborn controls | 2-Digit allelic type: HLA-DRB1 HLA-DRB4 (DR53) HLA-DRB3 (DR52) HLA-DRB5 (DR51) | Male-specific associations | |
| Taylor et al. ( | United Kingdom | 529–687 BCP-ALL depending on study; 864 newborn controls, 409 childhood solid tumors | HLA-DPB1 (4-digit allele and supertype) | Results indicated in table are for BCP-ALL Other ALL sub-types (pro-B ALL, T-ALL, unclassifiable) also evaluated Amino-acid motifs evaluated Multiple comparisons considered in all analyses | |
| Dorak et al. ( | Turkey | 114 ALL; 118 controls | 2-Digit allelic type: | Male-specific associations | Adult ALL results also available in report |
| HLA-DRB1 | |||||
| HLA-DRB4 (DR53) | |||||
| HLA-DRB3 (DR52) | |||||
| HLA-DRB5 (DR51) | |||||
| Yari et al. ( | Iran | 22 ALL; 466 controls | HLA-DRB1 (2-digit allele) | Adult ALL results also available in report | |
| Moderate case-control difference in frequency for | |||||
| Wang et al. ( | China | 162 ALL; 1,000 cord blood controls | HLA-DRB1*15 | ||
| HLA-DRB5 | |||||
| Morrison et al. ( | United Kingdom Mexico | UK: 114 ALL; 388 newborn controls Mexico: 100 ALL; 253 adult controls | HLA-DRA (rs3135388, DRB1*1501 proxy) HLA-C (rs9264942, Cw5 proxy) Class III loci SKIV2L (rs419788) TNXB (rs3130342) Non-MHC locus | Female-specific associations | Focused on loci associated with multiple sclerosis and systemic lupus erythematosus Associations for SKIV2L and TNXB were attenuated after adjusting for HLA-DRA |
| IFNG (rs2069727) | |||||
| Ozdilli et al. ( | Turkey | 100 ALL; 90 AML; 100 controls | HLA-A (antigen) HLA-B (antigen) HLA-DRB1 (allele, 2-digit) | HLA-A23: RR = 0.21 (0.04–1.03) HLA-B7: RR = 0.35 (0.13–0.96) | Gender-specific ALL associations suggested AML associated with HLA-A11, HLA-B38, -B49, and - |
| Hosking et al. ( | United Kingdom | 824 BCP-ALL; 4,737 adult controls | 4-Digit allelic types: HLA-A | No statistically significant associations after correction for multiple testing Six alleles associated at an uncorrected | HLA alleles imputed using a reference database of SNP haplotypes carrying known HLA alleles |
| HLA-B | |||||
| HLA-C | |||||
| HLA-DQA1 | |||||
| HLA-DQB1 | |||||
| HLA-DRB1 | |||||
| Klitz et al. ( | USA | 2,438 medically refractory ALL; 41,750 adult donor controls | 2-Digit allelic types: | Continuum of risk associations observed for | |
| HLA-A | |||||
| HLA-B | |||||
| HLA-DRB1 | |||||
| Orouji et al. ( | Iran | 107 ALL; 110 controls | HLA-DQB1 (allele) | DQ2 (*02:01): RR = 0.75, | DQ5 also found associated with adult ALL in this study |
| DQ5 (*05:01–*05:04): RR = 1.89, | |||||
| DQ7 (*03:01, *03:04): RR = 1.48, | |||||
| Urayama et al. ( | USA | 585 ALL; 848 controls | 4-Digit allele types: | Interaction observed between | |
| HLA-DPA1 | |||||
| HLA-DPB1 |
.
.
Figure 2Risk of medically refractory childhood ALL according to 2-digit HLA alleles at . The vertical scale is in ln(Odds) with odds values listed alone the top highlighted in blue for favorable and orange for predisposing-allele.
HLA class II .
| DPB1 supertype | NCCLS% | UKCCS% | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cases | Controls | Cases | Controls | |
| DP2 (GEG) | 24.8 | 24.5 | 18.3 | 13.3 |
| DP4 (GKG) | 79.2 | 80.9 | 82.9 | 72.4 |
| DP6 (LED) | 14.2 | 15.0 | 11.6 | 12.9 |
| DP3 (LKD) | 19.5 | 20.2 | 20.9 | 20.9 |
| DP8 (GED) | 3.4 | 2.2 | 2.4 | 0.8 |
| DP1 (GKD) | 16.2 | 12.7 | 13.5 | 17.7 |
UKCCS, United Kingdom Childhood Cancer Study; NCCLS, Northern California Childhood Leukemia Study.
.
.