Use of pooled DNA samples to detect linkage disequilibrium of polymorphic restriction fragments and human disease: studies of the HLA class II loci.

AUTOR(ES)
RESUMO

A rapid method has been developed and used to search for restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) that are in linkage disequilibrium with disease-associated loci. By using genomic blot-hybridization analysis with DQ beta-chain and DR beta-chain cDNA probes, we examined DNA polymorphisms within the HLA class II loci associated with susceptibility to insulin-dependent mellitus (IDDM). To facilitate the search for informative RFLPs, we compared pooled DNA samples from IDDM patients with pooled DNA samples from randomly selected control individuals, instead of using the conventional approach of examining DNA samples from individuals in two groups. (The conditions under which this approach is useful are treated theoretically in the Appendix.) Several specific polymorphic restriction fragments associated with IDDM were revealed by using this economical and rapid approach. The restriction enzymes and probes identified as informative in this screening were then used to analyze HLA-DR-typed IDDM families, homozygous typing cells, and unrelated individuals to determine the association of the specific restriction fragments with HLA-DR serological type and the frequency in control and IDDM populations. Some individual polymorphic fragments for which the IDDM population was enriched correlated strongly with HLA-DR3, whereas others correlated strongly with HLA-DR4. Some fragments (e.g., a 10-kilobase Taq I fragment detected with the DR beta probe) that were more prevalent in the IDDM population subdivided the serologically defined HLA-DR type and may be informative markers for IDDM susceptibility.

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