Genetic hemochromatosis and HLA linkage
β Scribed by Lawrie W. Powell; Janez Ferluga; June W. Halliday; Mark L. Bassett; Maija Kohonen-Corish; Sue Serjeantson
- Book ID
- 104704602
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1987
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 309 KB
- Volume
- 77
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0340-6717
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β¦ Synopsis
We previously reported five families with primary, genetic (idiopathic) hemochromatosis in whom HLA typing of subjects indicated that a homozygous-heterozygous mating had almost certainly occurred and in whom inheritance of the disease trait was best explained by an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance. However, in one family, two children apparently homozygous for hemochromatosis did not manifest overt evidence of the disease, and alternative explanations were postulated, including autosomal dominant inheritance in this family. Subsequent study of the family members, including repeat HLA-DR serology with more recently defined antisera and DNA genotyping at the HLA-DR locus has, we believe, provided the true explanation for the previous apparent anomaly and adds further evidence for the tight linkage of the disease to the HLA-A locus.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The authors have studied HLA class I polymorphism in an attempt to identify a genomic marker of the hemochromatosis gene. Five enzymes were used (HindIII, EcoRI, EcoRV, PvuII, and HincII) in 47-106 unrelated patients and 71-91 controls. Both populations were HLA-typed. The relationship between the r
Hereditary hemochromatosis (HH), which affects some 1 in 400 and has an estimated carrier frequency of 1 in 10 individuals of Northern European descent, results in multi-organ dysfunction caused by increased iron deposition, and is treatable if detected early. Using linkage-disequilibrium and full h