학술논문

KIR haplotypes are associated with late-onset type 1 diabetes in European–American families
Document Type
article
Source
Genes & Immunity. 17(1)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Genetics
Immunology
Autoimmune Disease
Clinical Research
Diabetes
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Metabolic and endocrine
Age of Onset
Child
Diabetes Mellitus
Type 1
Female
Genetic Association Studies
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
HLA Antigens
Haplotypes
Humans
Male
Receptors
KIR
White People
Language
Abstract
Classical human leukocyte antigens (HLA) genes confer the strongest, but not the only, genetic susceptibility to type 1 diabetes. Killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIR), on natural killer (NK) cells, bind ligands including class I HLA. We examined presence or absence, with copy number, of KIR loci in 1698 individuals, from 339 multiplex type 1 diabetes families, from the Human Biological Data Interchange, previously genotyped for HLA. Combining family data with KIR copy number information allowed assignment of haplotypes using identity by descent. This is the first disease study to use KIR copy number typing and unambiguously define haplotypes by gene transmission. KIR A1 haplotypes were positively associated with T1D in the subset of patients without the high T1D risk HLA genotype, DR3/DR4 (odds ratio=1.29, P=0.0096). The data point to a role for KIR in type 1 diabetes risk in late-onset patients. In the top quartile (age of onset>14), KIR A2 haplotype was overtransmitted (63.4%, odds ratio=1.73, P=0.024) and KIR B haplotypes were undertransmitted (41.1%, odds ratio=0.70, P=0.0052) to patients. The data suggest that inhibitory 'A' haplotypes are predisposing and stimulatory 'B' haplotypes confer protection in both DR3/DR4-negative and late-onset patient groups.