Identification of nonsynonymous polymorphisms in the superantigen-coding region of IDDMK1,222 and a pilot study on the association between IDDMK1,222 and type 1 diabetes

8Citations
Citations of this article
7Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

To investigate the possible involvement of IDDMK1,222/HERV-K18 in childhood type 1 diabetes mellitus, we identified two nonsynonymous A/G polymorphisms in the superantigen-coding region of IDDMK1,222 at the 290- and 461-nucleotide (nt) positions from the initial methionine codon and compared their frequencies in 74 Japanese patients with type 1 diabetes and in 54 nondiabetic controls. Although the G substitution was observed more frequently at either site in the patients than it was in the controls (7% vs. 4% at 290nt, and 29% vs. 20% at 461nt), the differences were not statistically significant. A weak significance of difference in the frequency of 461G was obtained only in an early-onset group of patients manifesting the disease at 5 years of age or less (n = 24) when compared with controls (38% vs. 20%; P = 0.03). However, in addition to the common absence of a particular allele among the expected four alleles, remarkable differences in allele frequencies were present between Japanese and European populations. This first trial investigating the association of IDDMK1,222 with type 1 diabetes presents intriguing suggestions for the role of this region in the etiology of autoimmune and infectious diseases.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Kinjo, Y., Matsuura, N., Yokota, Y., Ohtsu, S., Nomoto, K., Komiya, I., … Takasu, N. (2001). Identification of nonsynonymous polymorphisms in the superantigen-coding region of IDDMK1,222 and a pilot study on the association between IDDMK1,222 and type 1 diabetes. Journal of Human Genetics, 46(12), 712–716. https://doi.org/10.1007/s100380170005

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free