Family studies of IgA deficiency |
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Authors: | Alan N. Wilton Trevor J. Cobain Associate Professor Roger L. Dawkins |
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Affiliation: | (1) Departments of Clinical Immunology, Royal Perth Hospital and The Queen Elizabeth II Medical Centre, Perth, Western Australia;(2) Department of Clinical Immunology, The Queen Elizabeth II Medical Centre, 6009 Nedlands, Western Australia |
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Abstract: | Seventeen immunoglobulin A (IgA)-deficient subjects and other members from 13 families were examined at HLA-A, B and DR, C4A, C4B, and Bf loci. Of the 29 independent haplotypes in the IgA-deficient: subjects, 22 included deletions, duplications, or defects at the C4 or 21-hydroxylase loci. It is suggested that there may be a gene regulating serum IgA concentrations in this same region of chromosome 6. Three main supratypes explain most of the previously reported tHLA associations with IgA deficiency. These are A1, Cw7, B8, C4AQ0, C4B1, BfS, DR3, Bw65(14), C4A2, C4B1/2, BfS, and Bw57(17), C4A6, C4B1, BfS. All three are proposed to carry a gene for IgA deficiency, while other supratypes carrying the same B allele generally do not. Other supratypes possibly associated with IgA deficiency were also identified. A survey of about 150 individuals with at least 1 of the 3 main supratypes revealed only 2 IgA-deficient subjects, and these were among the 20 that had 2 of these supratypes. This suggests the possibility of a recessive mode of inheritance, with penetrance determined by another factor which is not major histocompatibility complex-linked. All the supratypes found in this group of IgA-deficient subjects would then carry the putative recessive allele for IgA deficiency. |
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