B D Tait

Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

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Publications (65)308.96 Total impact

  • Article: The effect of folinic acid on methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase polymorphisms in methotrexate-treated allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplants.
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    ABSTRACT: This study examined the contribution single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of the 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) gene have on clinical outcomes in hematopoietic stem cell transplant patients treated with the antiproliferative drug methotrexate. Two common SNPs, 677C>T and 1298A>C, were genotyped by polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment-length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) from samples obtained from patient DNA samples. Eleven clinical outcomes including survival and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) were assessed against donor and recipient MTHFR genotypes against pretransplantation variables. Folinic acid (FA) as treatment for oral mucositis toxicity was used at investigator discretion in 72 of 140. Donor MTHFR 1298AA genotype was associated with decreased 5-year survival (P = .03) and event-free survival (EFS) (P = .02) in patients withheld FA. Donor MTHFR 677CC genotype was associated with earlier GVHD (P = .003), and more severe acute GVHD (P = 0.02). FA was significantly associated with decreased survival (P = 0.02) in patients given a donor MTHFR 677CT transplant. FA was significantly associated with decreased survival (P = .04), EFS (P = .009) in patients given a donor MTHFR 1298AC transplant MTHFR gene polymorphisms indicate a potentially useful gene for donor selection where more than one donor is available. Use of FA following transplantation should be reconsidered in the context of patient and donor MTHFR genotypes.
    Biology of blood and marrow transplantation: journal of the American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation 09/2011; 18(5):722-30. · 3.15 Impact Factor
  • Article: Rapid screening for the detection of HLA-B57 and HLA-B58 in prevention of drug hypersensitivity.
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    ABSTRACT: HLA-B57 and HLA-B58 are major histocompatibility class (MHC)-I allotypes that are potentially predictive of important clinical immune phenotypes. HLA-B*5701 is strongly associated with hypersensitivity to the HIV drug abacavir, liver toxicity from the antibiotic flucloxacillin and is a marker for slow progression of HIV AIDS. HLA-B*5801 is associated with hypersensitivity to allopurinol used to treat hyperuricaemia and recurrent gout. Here we describe a monoclonal antibody (mAb) specific for HLA-B57 and HLA-B58 that provides an inexpensive and sensitive screen for these MHC-I allotypes. The usefulness of HLA-B57 screening for prediction of abacavir hypersensitivity was shown in three independent laboratories, including confirmation of the mAb sensitivity and specificity in a cohort of patients enrolled in the PREDICT-1 trial. Our data show that patients who test negative by mAb screening comprise 90%-95% of all individuals in most human populations and require no further human leukocyte antigen (HLA) typing. Patients who test positive by mAb screening should proceed to high-resolution typing to ascertain the presence of HLA-B*5701 or HLA-B*5801. Hence, mAb screening provides a low-cost alternative to high-resolution typing of all patients and lends itself to point-of-care diagnostics and rapid ascertainment of low-risk patients who can begin immediate therapy with abacavir, flucloxacillin or allopurinol.
    Tissue Antigens 07/2011; 78(1):11-20. · 2.59 Impact Factor
  • Article: Rapid screening for the detection of HLA‐B57 and HLA‐B58 in prevention of drug hypersensitivity
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    ABSTRACT: HLA-B57 and HLA-B58 are major histocompatibility class (MHC)-I allotypes that are potentially predictive of important clinical immune phenotypes. HLA-B*5701 is strongly associated with hypersensitivity to the HIV drug abacavir, liver toxicity from the antibiotic flucloxacillin and is a marker for slow progression of HIV AIDS. HLA-B*5801 is associated with hypersensitivity to allopurinol used to treat hyperuricaemia and recurrent gout. Here we describe a monoclonal antibody (mAb) specific for HLA-B57 and HLA-B58 that provides an inexpensive and sensitive screen for these MHC-I allotypes. The usefulness of HLA-B57 screening for prediction of abacavir hypersensitivity was shown in three independent laboratories, including confirmation of the mAb sensitivity and specificity in a cohort of patients enrolled in the PREDICT-1 trial. Our data show that patients who test negative by mAb screening comprise 90%–95% of all individuals in most human populations and require no further human leukocyte antigen (HLA) typing. Patients who test positive by mAb screening should proceed to high-resolution typing to ascertain the presence of HLA-B*5701 or HLA-B*5801. Hence, mAb screening provides a low-cost alternative to high-resolution typing of all patients and lends itself to point-of-care diagnostics and rapid ascertainment of low-risk patients who can begin immediate therapy with abacavir, flucloxacillin or allopurinol.
    Tissue Antigens 04/2011; 78(1):11 - 20. · 2.59 Impact Factor
  • Article: Solid phase HLA antibody detection technology--challenges in interpretation.
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    ABSTRACT: The introduction into routine diagnostic laboratories of solid phase assays for human leukocyte antigen (HLA) antibody detection has resulted in the application of new laboratory matching algorithms in clinical organ transplantation which have improved pre-transplant detection of immunization, in turn resulting in avoidance of rejection in many cases which until their introduction would not have been possible using the historical complement dependent serological techniques. There have been two generations of solid phase assays introduced into routine practice, namely, the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) technique and the use of fluorescent beads with HLA molecules bound to their surface which can either be used in conventional flow cytometry or in conjunction with Luminex instrumentation, the latter having become the most popular approach. The use of the fluorescent bead techniques has raised interesting questions both with respect to technical performance and the interpretation of the results obtained. The advantages of bead technology for HLA antibody determination and the technical issues requiring resolution are the subject of this review.
    Tissue Antigens 08/2010; 76(2):87-95. · 2.59 Impact Factor
  • Article: HLA-DRB1 associations with disease susceptibility and clinical course in Australians with multiple sclerosis.
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    ABSTRACT: Human leucocyte antigen (HLA)-DRB1*1501 and other class II alleles influence susceptibility to multiple sclerosis (MS), but their contribution if any to the clinical course of MS remains uncertain. Here, we have investigated DRB1 alleles in a large sample of 1230 Australian MS cases, with some enrichment for subjects with primary progressive (PPMS) disease (n = 246) and 1210 healthy controls. Using logistic regression, we found that DRB1*1501 was strongly associated with risk (P = 7 x 10(-45)), as expected, and after adjusting for DRB1*1501, a predisposing effect was also observed for DRB1*03 (P = 5 x 10(-7)). Individuals homozygous for either DRB1*15 or DRB1*03 were considerably more at risk of MS than heterozygotes and non-carriers. Both the DRB1*04 and the DRB1*01/DRB1*15 genotype combination, respectively, protected against PPMS in comparison to subjects with relapsing disease. Together, these data provide further evidence of heterogeneity at the DRB1 locus and confirm the importance of HLA variants in the phenotypic expression of MS.
    Tissue Antigens 05/2009; 74(1):17-21. · 2.59 Impact Factor
  • Article: Replication of KIAA0350, IL2RA, RPL5 and CD58 as multiple sclerosis susceptibility genes in Australians.
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    ABSTRACT: A recent genome-wide association study (GWAS) conducted by the International Multiple Sclerosis Genetics Consortium (IMSGC) identified a number of putative MS susceptibility genes. Here we have performed a replication study in 1134 Australian MS cases and 1265 controls for 17 risk-associated single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) reported by the IMSGC. Of 16 SNPs that passed quality control filters, four, each corresponding to a different non-human leukocyte antigen (HLA) gene, were associated with disease susceptibility: KIAA0350 (rs6498169) P=0.001, IL2RA (rs2104286) P=0.033, RPL5 (rs6604026) P=0.041 and CD58 (rs12044852) P=0.042. There was no association (P=0.58) between rs6897932 in the IL7R gene and the risk of MS. No interactions were detected between the replicated IMSGC SNPs and HLA-DRB1*15, gender, disease course, disease progression or age-at-onset. We used a novel Bayesian approach to estimate the extent to which our data increased or decreased evidence for association with the six most-associated IMSGC loci. These analyses indicated that even modest P-values, such as those reported here, can contribute markedly to the posterior probability of 'true' association in replication studies. In conclusion, these data provide support for the involvement of four non-HLA genes in the pathogenesis of MS, and combined with previous data, increase to genome-wide significance (P=3 x 10(-8)) evidence of an association between KIAA0350 and risk of disease.
    Genes and immunity 10/2008; 9(7):624-30. · 4.22 Impact Factor
  • Article: SNP mapping and candidate gene sequencing in the class I region of the HLA complex: searching for multiple sclerosis susceptibility genes in Tasmanians.
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    ABSTRACT: This study is an extension to previously published work that has linked variation in the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I region with susceptibility to multiple sclerosis (MS) in Australians from the Island State of Tasmania. Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) mapping was performed on an 865-kb candidate region (D6S1683-D6S265) in 166 Tasmanian MS families, and seven candidate genes [ubiquitin D (UBD), olfactory receptor 2H3 (OR2H3), gamma-aminobutyric acid B receptor 1 (GABBR1), myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG), HLA-F, HLA complex group 4 (HCG4) and HLA-G] were resequenced. SNPs tagging the extended MS susceptibility haplotype were genotyped in an independent sample of 356 Australian MS trios and SNPs in the MOG gene were significantly over-transmitted to MS cases. We identified significant effects on MS susceptibility of HLA-A*2 (OR: 0.51; P = 0.05) and A*3 (OR: 2.85; P = 0.005), and two coding polymorphisms in the MOG gene (V145I: P = 0.01, OR: 2.2; V142L: P = 0.04, OR: 0.45) after full conditioning on HLA-DRB1. We have therefore identified plausible candidates for the causal MS susceptibility allele, and although not conclusive at this stage, our data provide suggestive evidence for multiple class I MS susceptibility genes.
    Tissue Antigens 02/2008; 71(1):42-50. · 2.59 Impact Factor
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    Article: Immunodominance hierarchies and gender bias in direct T(CD8)-cell alloreactivity.
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    ABSTRACT: Allogeneic solid organ transplantation often occurs across multiple donor-recipient HLA mismatches with consequent risk of allograft rejection. However, there is growing evidence that not all HLA mismatches are equivalent in their stimulation of allogeneic T cells making it important to determine which of these might be more significant as predictors of allograft rejection. To this end, we used defined antigen-presenting cell (APC) transfectants expressing single MHC-I allotypes as target cells that could discriminate the relative contribution of individual mismatched MHC-I allotypes to direct T-cell alloreactivity. We demonstrate remarkably reproducible patterns of immunodominance in reactivity across mismatched MHC-I allotypes. These patterns are HLA context-dependent, partly reflecting alloantigenic competition in responder cell responses. In strong alloresponses, we also observed an increased percentage of alloreactive T(CD8) cells in female responders, regardless of the stimulator gender, highlighting HLA-independent factors in the potency of the alloresponse. This approach provides a potential measure of specific alloreactive T cells that could be used in clinical practice for selection of donors, assessment of posttransplant outcomes, modulation of immunosuppression and detection of rejection episodes.
    American Journal of Transplantation 02/2008; 8(1):121-32. · 6.39 Impact Factor
  • Article: cross-reactive anti-viral TCD8 cells detected during a human allograft rejection episode
    American Journal of Transplantation 01/2008; · 6.39 Impact Factor
  • Article: HLA expression and cancer--14th IHIWS immunohistochemistry quality control exercise exchange results.
    S F Chew, C Kanaan, B D Tait
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    ABSTRACT: An immunohistochemistry (IH) quality control exercise was conducted as part of the 14th International HLA (human leukocyte antigen) and Immunogenetics Workshop (IHIWS) HLA Expression and Cancer component. Six laboratories participated and the exercises involved performing IH using three monoclonal antibodies (HC-10, beta2m and SI00) on three sequential paraffin-embedded melanoma sections provided by one laboratory. High-resolution digital photographs of five IH-stained sections were also distributed for interpretation. While there was generally good agreement between laboratories, several differences in staining and interpretation of IH sections were identified and possible reasons given. Interpretation of the high-resolution digital photographs showed a high level of concordance between laboratories. It is suggested that further exercises are conducted as part of future collaborative activities in order to further characterise areas of variability between IH performance and interpretation of results.
    Tissue Antigens 05/2007; 69 Suppl 1:248-51. · 2.59 Impact Factor
  • Article: Fourier transform infrared imaging as a method for detection of HLA class I expression in melanoma without the use of antibody.
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    ABSTRACT: Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I expression in melanoma is usually assessed using immunohistochemical staining. Here we report on the use of Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) hyperspectral imaging, a method widely used in two-dimensional analysis of chemical components, to study HLA class I expression in tissue. Two-dimensional cluster colour images derived from unsupervised hierarchical cluster analysis of FTIR hyperspectral data on melanoma sections were compared with consecutive sections that were immunohistochemically stained for class I expression. HLA-class-I-positive and -negative areas were differentiated by FTIR cluster images in all eight melanoma sections investigated without the need for antibody attachment. FTIR imaging enables the distinction of HLA-class-I-positive from class-I-negative areas in melanoma. This method is accurate, rapid and cost-effective.
    Tissue Antigens 05/2007; 69 Suppl 1:252-8. · 2.59 Impact Factor
  • Article: Donor methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase genotype is associated with graft-versus-host disease in hematopoietic stem cell transplant patients treated with methotrexate.
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    ABSTRACT: Methotrexate (MTX), used as a graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) prophylactic agent in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), exerts its effect via folate cycle inhibition. A critical enzyme involved in folate metabolism is 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR). We examined the association of a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) at position 677 in the MTHFR gene on GvHD outcomes in allogeneic HSCT patients administered MTX. MTHFR genotyping was performed by polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) on 193 HSCT patients and donors. A total of 140 patients were transplanted with an HLA-matched related donor and 53 with an unrelated donor. GvHD outcomes were compared between genotypes by univariate and multivariate analysis. The combined donor 677CT and TT genotypes were associated with a decreased incidence of GvHD (acute and chronic combined) in HSCT recipients with an HLA-matched related donor (75% at 1 year in the CT and TT group compared with 91% in the wild type CC group, P=0.01), increased time to onset of first GvHD (P=0.001) and time to first GvHD treated with systemic therapy (P=0.022). Unrelated donor MTHFR genotype was not associated with outcome parameters and no associations of recipient genotype in either related or unrelated donor cohorts were observed.
    Bone Marrow Transplantation 05/2006; 37(8):773-9. · 3.75 Impact Factor
  • Article: Clinical, laboratory and genetic markers associated with erosions and remission in patients with early inflammatory arthritis: a prospective cohort study.
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    ABSTRACT: We investigated the relationship between clinical, laboratory and genetic markers and outcome measures in 159 patients with recent onset of inflammatory arthritis (IA). The majority of patients were managed in community-based rheumatology practice. Median duration of arthritis at baseline was 3 months with median follow-up of 4.0 years (range 0-10). Markers of disease activity and 1987 ACR criteria for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) were estimated every 6 months for the first 2 years and annually thereafter. Presence of shared epitopes (SE) was established by PCR-based method. Main outcome variables were attainment of remission and presence of erosions on X-rays of hands and feet at 3 years. Remission was seen in 34.3% of patients and was independently related to age 60 and older (odds ratio (OR) 3.2; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.2-8.7) and inversely to the presence of rheumatoid factor (RF) (OR 8.3; 95% CI, 3.2-21.3 for persistent arthritis). Patients with two SE were likely to have persistent arthritis (P=0.006), but this was not significant when corrected for RF. Independent predictors for erosions at 3 years were RF (OR 7.5; 95% CI, 1.9-29.5) and area under the curve for number of swollen joints (OR 1.08; 95% CI, 1.02-1.16). SE status was not predictive of erosions at 3 years (OR 1.6; 95% CI, 0.7-3.7). In univariate analysis, patients possessing DERAA motif on DRB1 were less likely to have erosive disease than without this motif at 4 years (OR 0.21; 95% CI, 0.0-0.9, P=0.037) but this finding was partly explained by adjusting for RF (adjusted OR 0.24; 95% CI 0.04-1.37). In this study of recent onset IA, active disease and RF were associated with poor outcome. Whilst SE did not predict erosive disease, patients with DERAA motif may be protected against erosions whilst the presence of two SE alleles suggests persistence of arthritis.
    Rheumatology International 05/2006; 26(6):500-9. · 1.88 Impact Factor
  • Article: HLA genes associated with autoimmunity and progression to disease in type 1 diabetes.
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    ABSTRACT: Insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (type I DM) is caused by an autoimmune process which culminates in destruction of pancreatic beta cells with resultant loss of insulin production. Preceding the clinical diagnosis of type I DM is a preclinical stage characterized by autoantibodies to insulin, glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) and a tyrosine phosphatase-like molecule (IA-2). We have studied both HLA class I and class 2 allele distributions in diabetic probands and autoantibody positive individuals in members of 452 families recruited for the Australian type I diabetes DNA repository. The results demonstrate that progression to autoimmunity as measured by the appearance of autoantibodies is strongly associated with the class 2 alleles DRB1*03 and DRB*04 and with DRB1*03/04 heterozygosity. In contrast, the progression to clinical disease appears associated with class I alleles A24, A30 and B18 while A1, A28, B14 and B56 appear negatively associated. The class 2 alleles appear to have a minimal role in the progression from autoantibody positivity to clinical disease. These results are consistent with the view that CD4+ T cells responding to peptides in the context of class 2 molecules are responsible for initiating autoantibody production, while the destruction of islet cells leading to clinical expression of the disease is the function of CD8+ T cells recognizing relevant peptides in the context of class I molecules.
    Tissue Antigens 03/2003; 61(2):146-53. · 2.59 Impact Factor
  • Article: HLA genes associated with autoimmunity and progression to disease in type 1 diabetes
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (type I DM) is caused by an autoimmune process which culminates in destruction of pancreatic beta cells with resultant loss of insulin production. Preceding the clinical diagnosis of type I DM is a preclinical stage characterized by autoantibodies to insulin, glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) and a tyrosine phosphatase-like molecule (IA-2). We have studied both HLA class I and class 2 allele distributions in diabetic probands and autoantibody positive individuals in members of 452 families recruited for the Australian type I diabetes DNA repository. The results demonstrate that progression to autoimmunity as measured by the appearance of autoantibodies is strongly associated with the class 2 alleles DRB1*03 and DRB*04 and with DRB1*03/04 heterozygosity. In contrast, the progression to clinical disease appears associated with class I alleles A24, A30 and B18 while A1, A28, B14 and B56 appear negatively associated. The class 2 alleles appear to have a minimal role in the progression from autoantibody positivity to clinical disease. These results are consistent with the view that CD4+ T cells responding to peptides in the context of class 2 molecules are responsible for initiating autoantibody production, while the destruction of islet cells leading to clinical expression of the disease is the function of CD8+ T cells recognizing relevant peptides in the context of class I molecules.
    Tissue Antigens 01/2003; 61(2):146 - 153. · 2.59 Impact Factor
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    Article: Linkage disequilibrium of a type 1 diabetes susceptibility locus with a regulatory IL12B allele.
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    ABSTRACT: Type 1 diabetes (T1D; or insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, IDDM) is an autoimmune disease with both genetic and environmental components. In addition to the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) complex, the single major genetic contributor of susceptibility, an unknown number of other unidentified genes are required to mediate disease. Although many loci conferring susceptibility to T1D have been mapped, their identification has proven problematic due to the complex nature of this disease. Our strategy for finding T1D susceptibility genes has been to test for human homologues of loci implicated in diabetes-prone NOD (non-obese diabetic) mice, together with application of biologically relevant stratification methods. We report here a new susceptibility locus, IDDM18, located near the interleukin-12 (IL-12)p40 gene, IL12B. Significant bias in transmission of IL12B alleles was observed in affected sibpairs and was confirmed in an independent cohort of simplex families. A single base change in the 3' UTR showed strong linkage disequilibrium with the T1D susceptibility locus. The IL12B 3' UTR alleles showed different levels of expression in cell lines. Variation in IL-12p40 production may influence T-cell responses crucial for either mediating or protecting against this and other autoimmune diseases.
    Nature Genetics 03/2001; 27(2):218-21. · 35.53 Impact Factor
  • Article: Screening for preclinical type 1 diabetes in a discrete population with an apparent increased disease incidence.
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    ABSTRACT: Environmental agents are proposed to play a role in triggering or exacerbating pancreatic islet autoimmunity in people genetically predisposed to type 1 diabetes. However, with few exceptions, these agents remain enigmatic. Clues to environmental agents may be found by investigating population/geographic clusters or 'hotspots' of high disease incidence. We were alerted to a small community where the incidence of type 1 diabetes appeared to be five-fold higher than expected. Because type 1 diabetes is now recognized to have a subclinical phase during which anti-islet antibodies can be detected, we aimed to identify and characterize a reservoir of children with subclinical disease in this community. Venous blood samples were collected from 1906/2347 (81%) local school children during one week. Islet cell antibodies (ICAs) were detected in 122 (6.4%) children, 18 (0.9%) being high titer (> or = 20 Juvenile Diabetes Foundation units (JDFu)). On retest, 15 months later, the majority of low titer ICAs were undetectable, whereas high-titer ICAs persisted. The latter were found in two distinct age-related, ethnically similar groups. The younger group, aged 6-9 yr, had antibodies to insulin (IAAs), glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) and tyrosine phosphatase IA2 in addition to ICA, human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genes associated with susceptibility to type 1 diabetes, and lower first-phase insulin responses (FPIRs) to intravenous glucose. The older group, aged 13-16 yr, the age cohort of the index clinical cases, had few antibodies other than ICA, non-susceptibility HLA genes and normal FPIRs. During follow-up, three children, all from the younger group with multiple antibodies and FPIRs less than the first percentile, developed diabetes 4, 6 and 7 yr after screening. The finding of two age groups of subclinical disease suggests that if environmental agents triggered islet autoimmunity they did not act constantly on the community. Furthermore, the absence of multiple autoantibodies and/or HLA susceptibility genes in the older group, the source of index clinical cases, implies they are a residual subgroup with slow or absent progressive beta-cell destruction. This study illustrates that the natural history of type 1 diabetes may be elucidated by analyzing age-related subclinical disease in the general population.
    Pediatric Diabetes 12/2000; 1(4):193-8. · 2.16 Impact Factor
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    Article: Association between rotavirus infection and pancreatic islet autoimmunity in children at risk of developing type 1 diabetes.
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    ABSTRACT: Pancreatic islet autoimmunity leading to type 1 diabetes could be triggered by viruses in genetically susceptible individuals. Rotavirus (RV), the most common cause of childhood gastroenteritis, contains peptide sequences highly similar to T-cell epitopes in the islet autoantigens GAD and tyrosine phosphatase IA-2 (IA-2), suggesting T-cells to RV could trigger islet autoimmunity by molecular mimicry. We therefore sought an association between RV infection and islet autoantibody markers in children at risk for diabetes who were followed from birth. There was a specific and highly significant association between RV seroconversion and increases in any of these antibodies: 86% of antibodies to IA-2, 62% to insulin, and 50% to GAD first appeared or increased with increases in RV IgG or IgA. RV infection may therefore trigger or exacerbate islet autoimmunity in genetically susceptible children.
    Diabetes 09/2000; 49(8):1319-24. · 8.29 Impact Factor
  • Article: Identification of a novel DPB1* allele (DPB1*6901) and the occurrence of HLA haplotypes that extend to DPB1.
    M D Varney, B D Tait
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    ABSTRACT: The sequence of a novel DPB1 allele, DPB1*6901, observed in a Caucasian bone marrow donor phenotype HLA A2; Cw*0501,*1601; B*4402, *4403; DRB1*0401; *07; DQB1*02; *0301; DPB1*0401; *6901, is described. The sequence is consistent with that previously described for DPB1*0601 with the exception of codon 69. The sequence at this codon is consistent with that previously observed only in the DPB1*1101 and *1501 alleles. It is suggested that DPB1*6901 may have arisen as a result of a recombination event occurring between codons 58 and 64 between DPB1*0601 and DPB1*1101. The sequence of DPB1*1501 from codon 64 is not consistent with DPB1*6901. A linkage disequilibria analysis that examined 212 potential bone marrow recipients in which HLA-A to DQ haplotypes had been established by family studies showed linkage disequilibrium between HLA-B, DRB1 and DPB1 in some haplotypes and not others.
    Tissue Antigens 03/2000; 55(2):188-90. · 2.59 Impact Factor
  • Article: Antibodies to type II collagen and HLA disease susceptibility markers in rheumatoid arthritis.
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    ABSTRACT: To seek associations between antibodies to native and denatured type II collagen (NCII and DCII) and HLA in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). One hundred fourteen patients with clinically well-defined RA were HLA-DR and DQ typed. Those who were DR4 positive were subtyped for DRB1*0401-*0408 alleles by polymerase chain reaction using allele-specific oligonucleotide probes. Antibodies to human NCII and DCII (heat-denatured) were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The frequency of HLA alleles was compared in patients grouped according to the presence and absence of antibodies to NCII and DCII. Twenty-seven patients (24%) were positive for antibodies to NCII. There was a significant increase in the frequency of HLA-DR7 in anti-NCII-positive patients compared with anti-NCII-negative patients (30% versus 9%; P = 0.019) and a significant decrease in HLA-DR3 (7% versus 28%; P = 0.044). Repeating the analyses after excluding the 16 patients who were DR7 positive revealed a significant increase in the frequency of HLA-DR1 in anti-NCII-positive patients compared with anti-NCII-negative patients (63% versus 27%; P = 0.045). Moreover, antibodies to NCII were associated with the third hypervariability region susceptibility sequence QRRAA that is present in DRB1*0101, *0404, *0405, and *0408 (84% versus 47%; P = 0.0085); 24 of 27 anti-NCII-positive patients were positive for either DR7, DR1, or DRB1*0404 or *0408. Thirty patients (26%) were positive for antibodies to DCII. There was a significant increase in the frequency of HLA-DR3 in anti-DCII-positive patients compared with anti-DCII-negative patients (40% versus 18%; P = 0.028). The genetic associations between HLA-DR alleles and antibodies to CII in RA patients is in keeping with the collagen-induced arthritis model and implicates autoimmunity to CII as a major component in the multifactorial pathogenesis of RA.
    Arthritis & Rheumatism 12/1999; 42(12):2569-76. · 7.87 Impact Factor

Institutions

  • 2011
    • Monash University
      Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
  • 1994–2011
    • University of Melbourne
      • • Department of Microbiology and Immunology
      • • Department of Medicine
      Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
  • 2000–2010
    • Australian Red Cross
      Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
  • 2009
    • Menzies Research Institute
      Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
  • 1987–2008
    • Royal Melbourne Hospital
      Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
  • 1989–1995
    • The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research
      Melbourne, Victoria, Australia