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. 1982 Nov;5(3):215-23.
doi: 10.1016/0198-8859(82)90134-3.

Population studies of HLA-linked SB antigens and their relative importance in primary MLC typing. Analysis of HLA-D homozygous typing cells and normal heterozygous populations

Population studies of HLA-linked SB antigens and their relative importance in primary MLC typing. Analysis of HLA-D homozygous typing cells and normal heterozygous populations

G Pawelec et al. Hum Immunol. 1982 Nov.

Abstract

SB phenotyping was undertaken on 96 HLA-D homozygous typing cells (HTCs) and 129 normal unselected heterozygous donors in the German population, using Interleukin-2-propagated primed lymphocyte typing (PLT) reagents. The results showed that the SB antigens in the normal population behave as a system of alleles at a single locus in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (p approximately equal to 0.20). Estimated gene frequencies in the German population appeared to be significantly different (p less than 0.002) from the North American Caucasian population: the principal differences were increased frequencies of the specificities SB1 and SB4, and decreased frequencies of blanks. Of HLA heterozygous donors 41% typed for two distinct SB specificities; 57% typed for one; and 2% were blank. In the HTC group, 20% typed for two specificities; 68% typed for one; and 12% were blank. Thus, a significant proportion of HLA-D homozygous test cells were, nonetheless, heterozygous for HLA-linked SB antigens. Performance of checkerboard mixed leukocyte cultures (MLCs) between 16 SB typed HLA-Dw3 HTCs, however, did not indicate that the observed mutual or one-way responses were influenced in any simple way by SB antigens; neither heterozygosity nor assumed homozygosity for SB antigens appeared to influence the frequency of MLC typing responses of HLA-Dw3-positive donors on these HTCs. These results add further confirmation of the genetic and functional independence of the SB gene product(s) and the HLA-D/DR gene product(s).

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