Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byKaitlyn Speight Modified over 10 years ago
1
HLA TYPING D Middleton MDSC175: Transplantation Science for Transplant Clinicians (Online) POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE A MEMBER OF THE RUSSELL GROUP CONTINUING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
2
2 HLA TYPING Genes and Chromosomes The MHC is a cluster of genes located on the short arm of chromosome 6. Class I genes (HLA-A,-B & -Cw) encode antigens which present peptide to CD8 + T-cells. Class II genes (HLA-DR,-DQ & -DP) encode antigens which present peptide to CD4 + T-cells. Many Class III genes (e.g TNF-alpha, C2 & C4 complement genes) are involved in aspects of the immune response.
3
3 HLA TYPING
4
4 Major Histocompatibility Complex Chromosome 6 TelLong armCenShort armTel 6p21.1-21.3 Class IIClass IIIClass I DPDMDQDRC4C2Hsp70TNFBCEAGF HLA Region Gene map of the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region Expert Reviews in Molecular Medicine © 2003 Cambridge University Press Bf
5
5 HLA TYPING HLA Polymorphisms Most polymorphic system in the genome Related to function of peptide presentation Most polymorphism in peptide binding region driven by natural selection High level of coding (non-synonymous) mutations in PBR Some alleles common (gene freq >0.1%), others rare Ethnic variations
6
6 HLA TYPING HLA Class I Gene (A,B,C) 456 5’UT SS 33 TM C1 C2 C3 2 1 22 378 11 polymorphism in exons 2 & 3 encoding 1 and 2 domains molecular domains α2α2 β 2 - microglobulin α3α3 α1α1 Peptide binding cleft
7
7 HLA TYPING HLA Class II B Gene (of the Class II A genes, only DPA and DQA are significantly polymorphic) 345 5’UT SS 2 2 TM/C C polymorphism in exon 2 encoding 1 domain 21 11 3’UT molecular domains β2β2 α1α1 Peptide binding cleft β1β1 α2α2
8
8 HLA TYPING Linkage Disequilibrium The observation that two or more alleles at two are more loci in a population are associated more or less frequently than would be predicted from their individual frequencies. The non-random association of MHC alleles in a population.
9
9 HLA TYPING Structure HLA Class I polypeptide chain with 3 domains + 2 microglobulin α2α2 β 2 - microglobulin α3α3 α1α1 Peptide binding cleft
10
10 HLA TYPING Structure Class II β2β2 α1α1 Peptide binding cleft β1β1 α2α2
11
11 HLA TYPING HLA Nomenclature HLA-A*02:::1010102N HLA Prefix Gene Field 1; allele group Field 3; used to show a synonymous DNA Substitution within the coding region Field 3; used to show a synonymous DNA Substitution within the coding region Field 2; specific HLA protein Field 4; used to show differences in a non-coding region Separator Field Separators Hyphen used to separate gene name from HLA prefix Suffix used to denote changes in expression © SGE Marsh 04/10
12
12 HLA TYPING Why HLA Type?
13
13 HLA TYPING HLA A+B+DR Mismatches First Cadaver Kidney Transplants 1985-2000 Collaborative Transplant Study
14
14 HLA TYPING HLA A+B+DR Mismatches Deceased Donor Kidney Transplants 2005-2010 Collaborative Transplant Study
15
15 HLA TYPING DNA Typing HLA-DRB Mismatches Cadaver Kidney Transplants 1985-2000 0 Mismatch HLA-DR Serology Collaborative Transplant Study
16
16 HLA TYPING HLA A+B+DR Mismatches First Orthotopic Heart Transplants 1985-2000 Collaborative Transplant Study
17
17 HLA TYPING HLA-A+B+DR Mismatches First Liver Transplants 1988-2000 Collaborative Transplant Study
18
18 HLA TYPING HLA A+B+DR Mismatches First Cadaver Kidney Transplants 1985-2000 Cold Ischemia ≤6 Hours Collaborative Transplant Study
19
19 HLA TYPING Cold Ischemia Time – Shared/Local First Cadaver Kidney Transplants 1985-2000 0 and 6 HLA-A+B+DR Mismatches Collaborative Transplant Study
20
20 HLA TYPING Inheritance Chart
21
21 HLA TYPING Kidney Transplants First Grafts 1995-2004 Collaborative Transplant Study
22
22 HLA TYPING Unrelated Living Donors 1995-2005 HLA-A+B+DR Mismatches Europe or North America Collaborative Transplant Study
23
23 HLA TYPING HLA-A+B+DR Mismatches Deceased Donor Kidney Transplants 1985-2005 Collaborative Transplant Study
24
24 HLA TYPING Donor Age Related Donor Kidneys, First Grafts 1995-2005 Collaborative Transplant Study
25
25 HLA TYPING Donor Age Deceased Donors, First Grafts 1995-2005 Collaborative Transplant Study
26
26 HLA TYPING HLA-A+B+DR Mismatches Deceased Donor Kidneys Transplants 1985-2005 Donor Age <40 Collaborative Transplant Study
27
27 HLA TYPING How to HLA Type
28
28 HLA TYPING SSP Primer matchPrimer mis-match 5’3’ 5’ 3’ 5’ Amplification No Amplification Positive control Specific products Agarose gel visualisation
29
29 HLA TYPING PCR-SSP Phenotype
30
30 HLA TYPING HLA Typing by PCR-SSOP Single generic PCR (using conserved sequence for primers) Hybridisation with multiple oligonucleotide probes on solid support (tray/membrane/bead) Positive/negative hybridisation identifies presence/absence of allele or allele group
31
31 HLA TYPING Principle of PCR-SSOP (using HLA-A as an example) EXON 2EXON 3 A*01 A*02 A*03 A*11 A*24 allele-specific probe sequences conserved sequence ( = 1 generic PCR per locus) intron 2
32
32 HLA TYPING HLA Typing by PCR-SSOP 1. patient DNA locus specific PCR (e.g. one primer is biotin labelled) 2. single stranded PCR product (NaOH or asymmetric PCR) 3. hybridise with specific probes bound to tray/membrane/ Luminex beads 4. detection of bound DNA (e.g. streptavidin)
33
33 HLA TYPING PCR-SSOP by Luminex Polystyrene beads of uniform size are used as the solid phase Each bead is dyed with two different fluorochromes – ratio Gives 100 distinctively coloured bead populations SSO’s attached to Luminex beads, multiplex reactions
34
34 HLA TYPING
35
35 HLA TYPING 2 nd Generation Sequencing High seq capacity allowing parallel analysis of amplicons for all relevant exons 250bp read spans most of relevant regions Pooling of amplicons from different individuals (48) needed to make cost effective Software needed for phasing of the amplicons and to filter out related sequence reads- coamplified Tissue Antigens 74,393-403
36
36 HLA TYPING Which Method to Use Clinical Urgency Clinical Resolution Sample numbers Budget Equipment availability Staff skills Combination of methods
37
37 HLA TYPING
38
38 HLA TYPING Matching 1 Difference in AA. What is important? Quantity Position = Function Which Loci Resolution required By epitopes not by current nomenclature Rationalisation of alleles we test for
39
39 HLA TYPING Matching 2 Different approach for different patients Difference immunogenicity of HLA mismatches Genetic factors influencing immune response? (including innate response and immunosuppressive sensitivity) Intelligent mismatching Acceptable mismatch program
40
40 HLA TYPING Number of HLA Antigens and Alleles 1968-2008
41
41 HLA TYPING AllelePopulation Phenotype Frequency (%) Allele Frequency (3 decimals) Sample Size A*0201American Samoa0.13051 A*0201Argentina Gran Chaco Eastern Toba46.40.304135 A*0201Argentina Gran Chaco Mataco Wichi40.90.21649 A*0201Argentina Gran Chaco Western Toba Pilaga60.00.40019 A*0201Argentina Toba Rosario34.90.19286 A*0201Australia New South Wales0.261134 A*0201Australian Aborigine Cape York Peninsula0.175103 A*0201Australian Aborigine Groote Eylandt0.10775 A*0201Australian Aborigine Kimberly0.11141 www.allelefrequencies.net
42
42 HLA TYPING www.allelefrequencies.net Allele: A*0201 Frequency Distribution
43
43 HLA TYPING HLA Alleles In N. Ireland Population (n=1000) 1994 HLA-A30/9033.3% HLA-B50/25419.7% HLA-C23/7829.5% HLA-DRB133/21615.2% 2009 30/7334.1% 50/11154.5% 23/3925.9% 33/6085.4%
44
44 HLA TYPING Summary of Results Very Rare (%)Rare (%)Frequent (%) Locus Number0 1, 2, 3 (inc. seq. confirmation) >3 All 313539.825.234.9 A 73344.323.132.6 B 111539.325.735.1 C 39143.724.332.0 DRB1 60834.926.838.3 DQB1 9544.226.329.5 DQA1 3420.632.447.1 DPA1 2748.122.229.6 DPB1 13231.127.341.7
45
45 HLA TYPING NMDP Analysis Single MM (low or high res) at HLA-A,B,C,DRB1 associated with higher mortality Single MM at HLA-B and C better tolerated MM at 2 or more loci compounded the problem MM at DQ or DP not associated with survival
46
46 HLA TYPING Months after transplant 01224364860 Probability of Overall Survival by HLA Matching for Early Disease Stage Curtesy of Stephanie Lee (2008 BMT Tandem Meetings) Log-rank p-value = < 0.0001 8/8 HLA Matched (n=835) 7/8 HLA Matched (n=379) 50% 39% 28% 6/8 HLA Matched (n=241) 1.0 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0 Survival
47
A MEMBER OF THE RUSSELL GROUP FACULTY OF HEALTH & LIFE SCIENCES – CPD Institute for Learning & Teaching Faculty of Health & Life Sciences Room 2.16A, 4th Floor Thompson Yates Building Brownlow Hill Liverpool L69 3GB www.liv.ac.uk/learning-and-teaching/cpd
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.