Peter Parham
Publication Details
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Mismatches for two major and one minor histocompatibility antigen correlate with a patient's rejection of a bone marrow graft from a serologically HLA-identical sibling.
Biol Blood Marrow Transplant. 1997; (5): 255-60
We describe the case of a patient with chronic myeloid leukemia who rejected a bone marrow (BM) graft from a sibling donor believed to be HLA identical. Sequencing of the HLA genes showed the mother to be heterozygous for two closely related HLA haplotypes that could not be resolved by serological typing. The donor and the recipient had each inherited a different maternal haplotype resulting in allelic mismatches for the HLA-B35 and the HLA-DR11 genes. T cell cytotoxicity directed towards the donor's B35 allele was detected in the patient, in addition to CTL specificity for an HLA-B7-restricted minor histocompatibility antigen carried by the donor, resulting in three histocompatibility mismatches between the BM donor and the recipient.
