Abstract

Insulin-dependent diabetes (IDD) is strongly associated with certain HLA class II (Ia) antigens. The frequency of DR2 is significantly reduced in IDD; among DR2 + patients, the frequency of the subtype specificity Dw2 defined with homozygous typing cells (HTCs) is significantly reduced compared to DR2 + controls, and the specificity LD-MN2, which we have defined using primed lymphocyte typing reagents, is significantly increased. We have studied DNA restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLP) of DR2-LD-MN2 + individuals and homozygous typing cells carrying specificities antigenically related to LD-MN2. Using a number of different restriction enzymes, a characteristic pattern of fragments could be defined for DR2-LD-MN2 using both DQ β and DR β cDNA probes. This pattern was shared with some but not all of the antigenically related HTCs, and was distinct from that of DR2-Dw2. The RFLP pattern of DR2-LD-MN2 obtained with the DQ β probe is identical, except for one band, to that of DR1-Dw1, suggesting that at least some part of the DQ region is identical in these two haplotypes. These results indicate that analysis of RFLP patterns can be used to help identify the genetic regions and, eventually, genes most important in the association of HLA and IDD.

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