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  1. Tao S, Kichula KM, Harrison GF, Farias TDJ, Palmer WH, Leaton LA, et al.
    Immunology, 2021 Apr;162(4):389-404.
    PMID: 33283280 DOI: 10.1111/imm.13289
    Killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs) interact with polymorphic human leucocyte antigen (HLA) class I molecules, modulating natural killer (NK) cell functions and affecting both the susceptibility and outcome of immune-mediated diseases. The KIR locus is highly diverse in gene content, copy number and allelic polymorphism within individuals and across geographical populations. To analyse currently under-represented Asian and Pacific populations, we investigated the combinatorial diversity of KIR and HLA class I in 92 unrelated Malay and 75 Malaysian Chinese individuals from the Malay Peninsula. We identified substantial allelic and structural diversity of the KIR locus in both populations and characterized novel variations at each analysis level. The Malay population is more diverse than Malay Chinese, likely representing a unique history including admixture with immigrating populations spanning several thousand years. Characterizing the Malay population are KIR haplotypes with large structural variants present in 10% individuals, and KIR and HLA alleles previously identified in Austronesian populations. Despite the differences in ancestries, the proportion of HLA allotypes that serve as KIR ligands is similar in each population. The exception is a significantly reduced frequency of interactions of KIR2DL1 with C2+ HLA-C in the Malaysian Chinese group, caused by the low frequency of C2+ HLA. One likely implication is a greater protection from preeclampsia, a pregnancy disorder associated with KIR2DL1, which shows higher incidence in the Malay than in the Malaysian Chinese. This first complete, high-resolution, characterization of combinatorial diversity of KIR and HLA in Malaysians will form a valuable reference for future clinical and population studies.
  2. Pollock NR, Farias TDJ, Kichula KM, Sauter J, Scholz S, Nii-Trebi NI, et al.
    HLA, 2024 Jun;103(6):e15568.
    PMID: 38923286 DOI: 10.1111/tan.15568
    A fundamental endeavor of the International Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics Workshop (IHIW) was assembling a collection of DNA samples homozygous through the MHC genomic region. This collection proved invaluable for assay development in the histocompatibility and immunogenetics field, for generating the human reference genome, and furthered our understanding of MHC diversity. Defined by their HLA-A, -B, -C and -DRB1 alleles, the combined frequency of the haplotypes from these individuals is ~20% in Europe. Thus, a significant proportion of MHC haplotypes, both common and rare throughout the world, and including many associated with disease, are not yet represented. In this workshop component, we are collecting the next generation of MHC-homozygous samples, to expand, diversify and modernize this critical community resource that has been foundational to the field. We asked laboratories worldwide to identify samples homozygous through all HLA class I and/or HLA class II genes, or through whole-genome SNP genotyping or sequencing, to have extensive homozygosity tracts within the MHC region. The focus is non-Europeans or those having HLA haplotypes less common in Europeans. Through this effort, we have obtained samples from 537 individuals representing 294 distinct haplotypes, as determined by their HLA class I and II alleles, and an additional 50 haplotypes distinct in HLA class I or II alleles. Although we have expanded the diversity, many populations remain underrepresented, particularly from Africa, and we encourage further participation. The data will serve as a resource for investigators seeking to characterize variation across the MHC genomic region for disease and population studies.
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