Background: Previous studies of platelet allele frequencies in Sub-Saharan African populations enabled us to identify discrepancies in HPA-3 typing, suggesting the presence of new mutations and of a greater polymorphism than so far described in other populations.
Objectives: To analyze these discrepancies and to assess the factors leading to potential alloimmunization in these populations.
Samples: Maternal samples from a Beninese woman following in utero death and panels of blood donors from Benin, Cameroon, Congo, and Pygmies from Central Africa.
The frequency of human platelet antigen-1 (HPA-1) to HPA-11w (excluding HPA-8w) and HPA-15 systems was studied in four sub-Saharan populations: Beninese, Congolese (Democratic Republic of Congo Kinshasa), Cameroonians, and Aka pygmies (Central African Republic). No report of HPA prevalence has previously been published concerning these populations which are characterized by the highest HPA-2b gene frequencies of any reported to date (Aka 0.393, Benin 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHLA-DRB1, -DQB1 and -DPB1 polymorphisms were investigated in two African populations, the Basse Lobaye Aka Pygmies of the Central African Republic, and a Bantu-speaking group from the Democratic Republic of Congo Kinshasa. Allelic and haplotypic frequency distributions reveal marked differences between the two populations in spite of their geographical proximity: the Aka exhibit high frequencies for several alleles, especially at the DPB1 locus (0.695 for DPB1*0402), probably due to rapid genetic drift, while the Bantu distributions are more even.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnkylosing spondylitis (AS) is an inflammatory rheumatic disease which is thought to be rarely seen in African Blacks. Its genetic predisposition has been stressed in Caucasians where the HLA-B27 antigen is firmly linked to the disease. In the present study, HLA-B27 antigen was determined in 146 individuals of Bantu root.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpidemiological studies have shown that rheumatic diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus are uncommon in black Africans, and in this population the prevalence and the clinical features of these rheumatic diseases are variable. Environmental and genetic factors have been pointed out to explain this variability. In the present study, HLA-DR genes have been determined in a Zaïrean population in order to compare our results with those found elsewhere in other black populations of the same Bantu origin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA chimpanzee infected with the HIV since 8 months and presenting regularly with antigenemia was inoculated with a candidate vaccine. It received 3 doses, one dose every 15 days. Thirty days after the third injection, we noted the disappearance of the HIV antigens in the serum and its persistence in the lysate of the cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe first experimental immunization of humans against the AIDS retrovirus, HIV-1, was started in a series of HIV seronegative, healthy volunteers in November 1986. For the primary vaccination recombinant vaccinia virus (V25) expressing the complete gp160 env protein of the HTLV-IIIB strain of HIV-1 was introduced by scarification. This elicited a weak primary response which we subsequently attempted to enhance by additional immunizations (boosting), using four different immunization protocols.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe here several African isolates of HIV, compare them to U.S.-European prototype isolates and to each other, correlate the number of isolates with serological results, and provide insights into the disease spectrum associated with HIV infection in Africa.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe selective targets for HTLV-III/LAV, the causal infectious agent of AIDS and AIDS-related complex (ARC), are T4 cells, apparently because the virus receptor is associated with T4 antigen determinants. This accounts for T4 cell depletion in AIDS and for a decrease of IL-2 production by AIDS peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) after in vitro PHA activation. By contrast, T8 cells are not targets for HTLV-III/LAV, since T8 cells from PBL and from long-term cultured T cells (CTC) could not be infected by the virus.
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