Three different Venezuelan Amerindian tribes were studied for human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DPA1 and DPB1 allelic variability using polymerase chain reaction-sequence-specific oligonucleotide probes (PCR-SSOP) and sequence-based typing in a selected group of samples. These tribes are geographically (two from the Perija Mountain range and one from the Orinoco Delta) and linguistically distinct: the Bari (from Campo Rosario and Saymaidoyi villages) and the Warao have been classified within the Chibcha linguistic family, whereas the Yucpa (from the Aroy, Marewa, and Peraya villages) are Carib speaking. Venezuelan Indians, like other Native American tribes, show a markedly reduced number of different HLA-DP alleles (range, 2-7) and haplotypes (range, 4-11) in comparison with neighboring Venezuelan mestizo and other non-Indian populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOligotyping performed among ethnically mixed Venezuelan patients with myasthenia gravis (MG) and controls has revealed positive associations of HLA class I A*31, B*08, B*39, B*40, C*15, C*17, and class II DRB1*09 and negative associations of DQB1*06 and DQA1*02 with the disease. Sequential removal of human leukocyte antigen B (HLA-B) alleles when relative predispositional effects (RPEs) were looked for demonstrated that B*08 is the allele group with the largest contribution in the overall MG patients followed by B*39 and B*40. Several specificities (A*31, B*08, C*17, DRB1*03, DQA1*05, and DQB1*02) indicated increased frequencies among patients with thymic hyperplasia versus patients without hyperplasia or controls.
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