F. Cucca et al., A MALE-FEMALE BIAS IN TYPE-1 DIABETES AND LINKAGE TO CHROMOSOME XP INMHC HLA-DR3-POSITIVE PATIENTS, Nature genetics, 19(3), 1998, pp. 301-302
It is generally assumed that the male:female (M:F) ratio in patients w
ith type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus (IDDM) is 1. A recent
survey, however, revealed that high incidence countries (mainly Europ
ean) have a high M:F ratio and low incidence ones (Asian and African)
have a low M:F ratio(1) We have now analysed the M:F ratio according t
o genotype at the major locus, the major histocompatibility complex (M
HC; IDDM1). There are two main IDDM1 susceptibility haplotypes, HLA-DR
3 and -DR4, which are present in 95% of Caucasian cases(2-4). We repor
t here that in medium/high incidence Caucasian populations from the Un
ited States of America, United Kingdom and Sardinia (1307 cases), the
bias in male incidence is largely restricted to the DR3/X category of
patients (X not equal DR4) with a M:F ratio of 1.7 (P = 9.3 x 10(-7)),
compared with a ratio of 1.0 in the DR4/Y category (Y not equal DR3).
This is additional evidence for significant heterogeneity between the
aetiology of 'DR4-associated' and 'DR3-associated' diabetes(5-13). We
analysed linkage of type 1 diabetes to chromosome X, and as expected,
most of the linkage to Xp13-p11 was in the DR3/X affected sib-pair fa
milies (n=97; peak multipoint Mts at DXS1068 = 3.5, P = 2.7 x 10(-4);
single point MLS = 4.5, P = 2.7 x 10(-5)). This is evidence for aetiol
ogical heterogeneity at the IDDM1/MHC locus and, therefore, in the sea
rch for non-MHC loci in type 1 diabetes, conditioning of linkage data
by HLA type is advised.