Christophe Picard recounts the adventures of Muslim sailors who competed with Greek and Latin seamen for control of the 7th-century Mediterranean. By the time Christian powers took over trade routes ...in the 13th century, a Muslim identity that operated within, and in opposition to, Europe had been shaped by encounters across the sea of the caliphs.
Defining worldwide human genetic variation is a critical step to reveal how genome plasticity contributes to disease. Yet, there is currently no metric to assess the representativeness and ...completeness of current and widely used data on genetic variation. We show here that Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) genes can serve as such metric as they are both the most polymorphic and the most studied genetic system. As a test case, we investigated the 1,000 Genomes Project panel. Using high-accuracy in silico HLA typing, we find that over 20% of the common HLA variants and over 70% of the rare HLA variants are missing in this reference panel for worldwide genetic variation, due to undersampling and incomplete geographical coverage, in particular in Oceania and West Asia. Because common and rare variants both contribute to disease, this study thus illustrates how HLA diversity can detect and help fix incomplete sampling and hence accelerate efforts to draw a comprehensive overview of the genetic variation that is relevant to health and disease.
Red blood cell (RBC) transfusion, limited by patient alloimmunization, demands accurate blood group typing. The Rh system requires specific attention due to the limitations of serological phenotyping ...methods. Although these have been compensated for by molecular biology solutions, some RhCE ambiguities remain unresolved. The RHCE mRNA length is compatible with full-length analysis and haplotype discrimination, but the RHCE mRNA analyses reported so far are based on reticulocyte isolation and molecular biology protocols that are fastidious to implement in a routine context. We aim to present the most efficient reticulocyte isolation method, combined with an RT-PCR sequencing protocol that embraces the phasing of all haplotype configurations and identification of any allele. Two protocols were tested for reticulocyte isolation based either on their size/density properties or on their specific antigenicity. We show that the reticulocyte sorting method by antigen specificity from EDTA blood samples collected up to 48 h before processing is the most efficient and that the combination of an RHCE-specific RT-PCR followed by RHCE allele-specific sequencing enables analysis of cDNA RHCE haplotypes. All samples analyzed show full concordance between RHCE phenotype and haplotype sequencing. Two samples from the immunohematology laboratory with ambiguous results were successfully analyzed and resolved, one of them displaying a novel RHCE allele (RHCE*03 c.340C>T).
Sea of the Caliphs Picard, Christophe; Elliott, Nicholas
2018, 2018-01-21
eBook
Christophe Picard recounts the adventures of Muslim sailors who competed with Greek and Latin seamen for control of the 7th-century Mediterranean. By the time Christian powers took over trade routes ...in the 13th century, a Muslim identity that operated within, and in opposition to, Europe had been shaped by encounters across the sea of the caliphs.
•Quantification of chimerism by crystal digital PCR (cdPCR)and next-generation sequencing (NGS) Devyser are sensitive and accurate methods.•There are correlation and concordance between cdPCR or NGS ...Devyser and ddPCR.•cdPCR and NGS Devyser allow genotyping and monitoring in a single technique.•ADVYSER (Devyser NGS) is a complete software suite for interpreting genotyping and monitoring.•Whereas NGS Devyser is designed for large series, cdPCR is sufficiently flexible for control and emergency situations.
Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is a curative treatment for most hematologic diseases. To evaluate the level of donor engraftment, chimerism must be carefully monitored after HSCT. Short tandem repeats, quantitative PCR (qPCR), and, more recently, digital PCR (dPCR) are widely used to determine the proportions of donor and recipient cells after HSCT. The screening and quantification of chimerism have been evaluated by 2 new methods: a ready-to-use next-generation sequencing (NGS)-based method using the Devyser ChimerismNGS kit and an original combination of the Stilla crystal digital PCR (cdPCR) platform with 3-color multiplexing capacity using GenDX KMRtrack reagents. The genotyping of 4 HSCT pairs by cdPCR using 11 triplex mixes of the GenDX KMRtype kit was consistent at 98.8% with qPCR. Informative samples (n = 20) from 6 donor-recipient pairs and 1 external proficiency test demonstrated the reliability of the results (0.1% to 50%) for the 2 methods. The methods are also highly sensitive (0.1%) and accurate. The chimerism values of the 2 methods are correlated and concordant with those of the reference methods. In addition, the ADVYSER software (Devyser) is user-friendly and well adapted to chimerism monitoring. In conclusion, these 2 innovative methods are easy to perform and user-friendly in all molecular, hematology, and immunogenetic laboratories and allow the genotyping and monitoring of chimerism with high performance and sensitivity.
Quantification of chimerism showing the proportion of the donor in a recipient is essential for the follow-up of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation but can also be useful to document an immune ...tolerance situation after solid organ transplantation. Historically, chimerism has been quantified from genomic DNA, but with technological advances, chimerism from donor-derived cell-free DNA seems particularly relevant in solid organ transplantation.
The reference method was until recently the short tandem repeat technique, but new innovative techniques as digital PCR (dPCR) and NGS, have revolutionized the quantification of chimerism, such as the so-called microchimerism analysis. After a short review of chimerism methods, a comparison of chimerism quantification data for two new digital PCR systems (QIAcuity™ dPCR (Qiagen
) and QuantStudio Absolute Q (ThermoFisher
) and two NGS-based chimerism quantification methods (AlloSeq HCT™ (CareDx
) and NGStrack™ (GenDX
)) was performed.
These new methods were correlated and concordant to routinely methods (r²=0.9978 and r²=0.9974 for dPCR methods, r²=0.9978 and r²=0.9988 for NGS methods), and had similar high performance (sensitivity, reproductibility, linearity).
Finally, the choice of the innovative method of chimerism within the laboratory does not depend on the analytical performances because they are similar but mainly on the amount of activity and the access to instruments and computer services.
Lung transplantation is often complicated by acute and/or chronic rejection leading to graft-function loss. In addition to the HLA donor-specific antibodies (HLA-DSA), a few autoantibodies are ...correlated with the occurrence of these complications. Recently, antibodies directed against non-classical HLA molecules, HLA-G, -E, and -F have been detected in autoimmune diseases, like systemic lupus erythematosus. Non-classical HLA molecules are crucial in the immunological acceptance of the lung graft, and some of their isoforms, like HLA-G*01:04 and -G*01:06, are associated with a negative clinical outcome. The aim of this study is to determine the frequency of detection of HLA-G antibodies in lung transplant recipients (LTRs) and their impact on the occurrence of clinical complications. After incubating the cell lines SPI-801, with and without three different HLA-G isoform expression, with sera from 90 healthy blood donors and 35 LTRs (before and after transplantation), HLA-G reactivity was revealed using reagents from commercial monoclonal antibody immobilization of platelet antigen assay (MAIPA ApDIA®). Only one serum from one blood donor had specific reactivity against the HLA-G transduced lines. Non-specific reactivity in many sera from LTRs was observed with transduced- and wild-type cell lines, which may suggest recognition of an autoantigen expressed by the SPI-801 cell line. In conclusion, this study allowed the development of a specific detection tool for non-denatured HLA-G antibodies. These antibodies seem uncommon, both in healthy subjects and in complicated LTRs. This study should be extended to patients suffering from autoimmune diseases as well as kidney and heart transplant recipients.
Antibodies play a crucial role in activating protective immunity against malaria by interacting with Fc-gamma receptors (FcγRs). Genetic variations in genes encoding FcγRs can affect immune cell ...responses to the parasite. In this study, our aim was to investigate whether non-coding variants that regulate FcγR expression could influence the prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum infection. Through bioinformatics approaches, we selected expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) for FCGR2A, FCGR2B, FCGR2C, FCGR3A, and FCGR3B genes encoding FcγRs (FCGR), in whole blood. We prioritized two regulatory variants, rs2099684 and rs1771575, located in open genomic regions. These variants were identified using RegVar, ImmuNexUT, and transcription factor annotations specific to immune cells. In addition to these, we genotyped the coding variants FCGR2A/rs1801274 and FCGR2B/rs1050501 in 234 individuals from a malaria-endemic area in Burkina Faso. We conducted age and family-based analyses to evaluate associations with the prevalence of malarial infection in both children and adults. The analysis revealed that the regulatory rs1771575-CC genotype was predicted to influence FCGR2B/FCGR2C/FCGR3A transcripts in immune cells and was the sole variant associated with a higher prevalence of malarial infection in children. In conclusion, this study identifies the rs1771575 cis-regulatory variant affecting several FcγRs in myeloid and neutrophil cells and associates it with the inter-individual capacity of children living in Burkina Faso to control malarial infection.
Red blood cell (RBC) transfusion remains a critical component in caring for the acute and chronic complications of sickle cell disease (SCD). Patient alloimmunisation is the main limitation of ...transfusion, which can worsen anaemia and lead to delayed haemolytic transfusion reaction or transfusion deadlock. Although biological risk factors have been identified for immunisation, patient alloimmunisation remains difficult to predict. We aimed to characterise genetic alloimmunisation factors to optimise the management of blood products compatible with extended antigen matching to ensure the self-sufficiency of labile blood products. Considering alloimmunisation in other clinical settings, like pregnancy and transplantation, many studies have shown that HLA Ib molecules (HLA-G, -E, and -F) are involved in tolerance mechanism; these molecules are ligands of immune effector cell receptors (LILRB1, LILRB2, and KIR3DS1). Genetic polymorphisms of these ligands and receptors have been linked to their expression levels and their influence on inflammatory and immune response modulation. Our hypothesis was that polymorphisms of HLA Ib genes and of their receptors are associated with alloimmunisation susceptibility in SCD patients. The alloimmunisation profile of thirty-seven adult SCD patients was analysed according to these genetic polymorphisms and transfusion history. Our results suggest that the alloimmunisation of SCD patients is linked to both HLA-F and LILRB1 genetic polymorphisms located in their regulatory region and associated with their protein expression level.