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HLA-G1 protein expression is not essential for fetal survival

Authors :
Daniel E. Geraghty
Joan S. Hunt
Mary Ann Walker
Carrie Aldrich
B. Rosinsky
Stephanie Willadsen
Andrea Robertson
Marion S. Verp
Carole Ober
Source :
Placenta. 19(2-3)
Publication Year :
1998

Abstract

HLA-G is a nonclassical, class I HLA gene that is primarily expressed by fetal cells at the maternal-fetal interface and is thought to play a key role in the induction of tolerance in pregnancy. This paper reports the identification of a single base pair deletion at position 1597 (1597de1C) in exon 3 (encoding the α2-domain) of HLA-G on 20 of 272 (7.4 per cent) African American chromosomes, three of 102 (2.9 per cent) Hispanic chromosomes, and none of 134 Caucasian chromosomes. This relatively common frameshift mutation results in amino acid substitutions in all of the residues in the second half of exon 3 including the conserved cysteine at codon 164. An adult individual was identified who was homozygous for this ‘null’ allele, and a first trimester placenta that was homozygous for 1597de1C had no detectable HLA-G1 protein. These data indicate that expression of HLA-G1 protein is not essential for fetal survival.

Details

ISSN :
01434004
Volume :
19
Issue :
2-3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Placenta
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b050ae6c7799f6a0a0cc5dd5d23e6d06