| Literature DB >> 2573589 |
M J Sheehy1, L M Meske, C A Emler, J R Rowe, M H Neme de Gimenez, C A Ingle, A Chan, M Trucco, T W Mak.
Abstract
We performed a multiple-affected-sib study to determine if T-cell receptor alpha-chain alleles affect susceptibility to insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Restriction fragment length polymorphisms were used to follow the segregation of allelic T-cell receptor alpha complexes within the families. The segregation of T-cell receptor alpha alleles in 29 multiplex families revealed no significant tendency for affected sibs to share T-cell receptor alpha-chain alleles more often than would be expected by chance alone (p greater than 0.2). In contrast, the same type of analysis for HLA alleles easily detected the well-known linkage of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus susceptibility to the HLA complex (p = 0.003). We suggest that the importance of HLA alleles in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus susceptibility and the lack of importance of T-cell receptor alpha alleles result from the different strategies by which HLA and T-cell receptor molecules achieve antigen-binding diversity: multiple loci and allelic diversity in the case of HLA; combinatorial, junctional, and N-region diversity in the case of the T-cell receptor. In this paper we also describe three new restriction fragment length polymorphisms of the T-cell receptor alpha complex and a new method for testing the significance of linkage in multiple-affected-sib studies.Entities:
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Year: 1989 PMID: 2573589 DOI: 10.1016/0198-8859(89)90004-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Immunol ISSN: 0198-8859 Impact factor: 2.850