TY - JOUR KW - Genes, MHC Class II KW - HLA-DR3 Antigen KW - Histocompatibility Antigens Class II KW - Histocompatibility Testing KW - Humans KW - leprosy KW - Tuberculin KW - Tuberculin Test AU - Eden W AU - Vries R R AU - Stanford J L AU - Rook G A AB -

Multiple skin testing with mycobacterial antigenic preparations reveals distinct reaction patterns, which might be relevant to the development of mycobacterial disease in man. Previous work has shown that HLA-DR associated factors correlate with the position of a leprosy patient in the immunopathological spectrum of leprosy. This study was undertaken to see whether these skin test patterns in healthy persons do show any association with HLA-DR types. Out of a group of 74 healthy Caucasoid individuals HLA-DR3 was observed to be absent from the 16 individuals who did not respond to any of the mycobacterial antigens tested. This is a striking difference from the distribution of HLA-DR3 both among the 17 individuals who responded to all mycobacterial antigens tested (P = 0.005) and the 41 individuals who responded to some but not all antigens (P = 0.015). These data show that an HLA-DR3 associated genetic factor controls, albeit indirectly, skin test responsiveness to mycobacterial antigens. It may be significant that this same HLA-DR determinant is implicated in deciding the type of disease to be developed by a leprosy patient.

BT - Clinical and experimental immunology C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6407794?dopt=Abstract DA - 1983 May IS - 2 J2 - Clin. Exp. Immunol. LA - eng N2 -

Multiple skin testing with mycobacterial antigenic preparations reveals distinct reaction patterns, which might be relevant to the development of mycobacterial disease in man. Previous work has shown that HLA-DR associated factors correlate with the position of a leprosy patient in the immunopathological spectrum of leprosy. This study was undertaken to see whether these skin test patterns in healthy persons do show any association with HLA-DR types. Out of a group of 74 healthy Caucasoid individuals HLA-DR3 was observed to be absent from the 16 individuals who did not respond to any of the mycobacterial antigens tested. This is a striking difference from the distribution of HLA-DR3 both among the 17 individuals who responded to all mycobacterial antigens tested (P = 0.005) and the 41 individuals who responded to some but not all antigens (P = 0.015). These data show that an HLA-DR3 associated genetic factor controls, albeit indirectly, skin test responsiveness to mycobacterial antigens. It may be significant that this same HLA-DR determinant is implicated in deciding the type of disease to be developed by a leprosy patient.

PY - 1983 SP - 287 EP - 92 T2 - Clinical and experimental immunology TI - HLA-DR3 associated genetic control of response to multiple skin tests with new tuberculins. UR - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1535848/pdf/clinexpimmunol00158-0051.pdf VL - 52 SN - 0009-9104 ER -