HNA-3 gene frequencies in Brazilians and a new polymerase chain reaction–restriction fragment length polymorphism method for HNA-3a/3b genotyping
Abstract
Background
HNA-3 antigens are the result of a rs2288904 single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the CTL2, and the HNA-3a and HNA-3b variants are encoded by a guanine and adenine at Nucleotide Position 461. Anti-HNA-3 are involved in severe transfusion-related acute lung injury reactions and in neonatal alloimmune neutropenia. Since the distribution of the HNA-3 system was unknown in South Americans, in this study we determined the frequency of the HNA-3 alleles in Brazilians.
Study Design and Methods
DNA of 500 blood donors, 120 Xikrin Amerindians, 74 Japanese individuals, and 124 African Brazilians were genotyped for rs2288904 by a polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-restriction fragment length polymorphism assay. The PCR product was digested with enzyme Taqα1, specific to nucleotide guanine (HNA-3a).
Results
The results showed that the frequencies of the HNA-3a/HNA-3b alleles were 0.81/0.19 in blood donors, 1.00/0.00 in Amerindians, 0.63/0.37 in Japanese, and 0.85/0.15 in African Brazilians. All 81 individuals genotyped as HNA-3a/a did not present the SNP c.457T by molecular sequencing.
Conclusion
The frequencies of HNA-3 genotypes in Brazilian blood donors is similar to that described in Caucasians; however, all Amerindians were HNA-3a/a, African Brazilians showed a lower frequency of HNA-3b/b, and Japanese had a higher prevalence of HNA-3b/b, suggesting that they may be at risk for developing anti-HNA-3a alloantibodies.