Primary biliary cirrhosis is a chronic cholestatic disease, thought to
be immune-mediated with genetic susceptibility encoded in the major h
istocompatibility complex. In northern Europeans, the best established
associations are with HLA-DR8 and the complement allele, C4B2. These
associations could be due to a single susceptibility locus on an exten
ded haplotype linking HLA-DR8 and C4B2 or to both HLA-DR8 and C4B2 in
dependently conferring disease susceptibility. C4B2 genotyping was per
formed on 64 patients with primary biliary cirrhosis and 61 controls m
atched for ethnic background and frequency of HLA-DR8. C4B2 was associ
ated with HLA-DR8 (p < 0.05) in PBC. No difference in the frequency of
C4B2 was detected between control and disease populations, suggesting
that HLA-DR8 and C4B2 are in linkage disequilibrium and that C4B2 is
not a susceptibility locus for PBC. Taq I polymorphisms were screened
in the disease and control populations with the cosmid probe G91, loca
ted midway between the HLA-DR and complement loci. One G91 restriction
fragment (G91A) was found to be associated with both HLA-DR8 and C4B2
, at equal frequency in health and disease, providing evidence of an H
LA-DR8-G98A-C4B2 extended haplotype. The frequency of G91A was the sam
e in the disease and control populations, suggesting that G91A does no
t confer disease susceptibility. These findings establish G91 as the t
elomeric boundary for disease susceptibility associated with HLA-DR8,
encoded on chromosome six. These studies help define the immunogenetic
susceptibility locus for primary biliary cirrhosis.