Investigating associations between HLA DQA1 ~ DQB1 haplotypes, H. pylori infection, metaplasia, and anti-CagA IgA seropositivity in a Turkish gastritis cohort
Helicobacter pylori was reported as an important cause of gastritis, and gastric ulcers and CagA oncoprotein-producing H. pylori subgroups were blamed to increase the severity of gastritis. Disparities were reported in that the presence of serum anti-CagA IgA was not parallel with CagA-positive H. p...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Immunogenetics (New York) 2024-02, Vol.76 (1), p.1-13 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Helicobacter pylori
was reported as an important cause of gastritis, and gastric ulcers and CagA oncoprotein-producing
H. pylori
subgroups were blamed to increase the severity of gastritis. Disparities were reported in that the presence of serum anti-CagA IgA was not parallel with CagA-positive
H. pylori
cohabitation. We hypothesized that the HLA-DQA1 ~ DQB1 haplotypes in human populations include protective haplotypes that more effectively present immunogenic CagA peptides and susceptible haplotypes with an impaired capacity to present CagA peptides. We recruited patients (
n
= 201) admitted for gastroendoscopy procedures and performed high-resolution HLA-DQA1 and DQB1 typing. Serum anti-CagA IgA levels were analyzed by ELISA (23.0% positive), and
H. pylori
was classified as positive or negative in gastric mucosal tissue slides (72.6% positive). The HLA DQA1*05:05 allele (29.1%) and HLA DQB1*03:01 allele (32.8%) were found at the highest frequency among gastritis patients of Turkish descent. In HLA DQA1*05:05 ~ DQB1*03:01 double homozygous (7.3%) and heterozygous (40.7%) haplotype carriers, the presence of anti-CagA IgA decreased dramatically, the presence of
H. pylori
increased, and the presence of metaplasia followed a decreasing trend. The DQ protein encoded by HLA DQA1*05:05-DQ*03:01 showed a low binding affinity to the CagA peptide when binding capacity was analyzed by the NetMHCIIPan 4.0 prediction method. In conclusion, HLA DQA1 ~ DQB1 polymorphisms are crucial as host defense mechanisms against CagA
H. pylori
since antigen binding capacity plays a crucial role in anti-CagA IgA production. |
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ISSN: | 0093-7711 1432-1211 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00251-023-01325-5 |