Use the outline below to guide your study of the material in this
lesson. The outline indicates those topics the instructor feels
are most important for you to learn in the course. You should read
all the pages assigned, open and study the links, and read the terms
in the glossary.
Each locus codes for a molecule composed of A and B amino acid chains
Each locus is polymorphic: there are several alleles of each gene
Genes from both parents are expressed: an individual has an MHC molecule
from each chromosome
Alleles
DR1, 3, and 4 alleles are common in diabetics, but DR2 and 5 are not
Amino acid in the 57th position in the B chain from the DQ locus is
important: diabetes is not associated with a negatively charged aspartic acid
but is associated with a non-charged amino acid such as valine or serine
Location of the 57th amino acid is in the part of the MHC molecule which
binds to an antigen and presents it to a T cell
Tightness of the binding depends on the molecular structure determined by
the amino acid sequence - affects activation of T cells
Hypothesized scenario
Foreign antigen elicits an immune response
Foreign antigen closely resembles a beta cell antigen, e.g., 64-K protein
Class II MHC molecule with tight binding resulting from a "susceptible"
allele causes a vigorous and prolonged immune response to the foreign antigen
Aroused immune system cells enter the pancreas and react to a self
antigen which mimics the foreign antigen
Possible action
Detect autoantibodies before symptoms of diabetes appear
Suppress immune system destruction of beta cells
Selectively eliminate T cells sensitive to beta cell antigens