Carmen Alaez
Universidad de Guanajuato
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Publication
Featured researches published by Carmen Alaez.
Human Immunology | 2001
Clara Gorodezky; Carmen Alaez; Miriam N Vázquez-Garcı́a; Gabriela de la Rosa; Eduardo Infante; Sandra Balladares; Rosa Toribio; Elva Pérez-Luque; Linda Muñoz
Mexican Mestizos, who are the result of the admixture of Spanish, Indian, and Black genes, were analyzed for different systems. Three populations from geographical distinct areas were studied: the north (State of Nuevo Leon ), the center (State of Guanajuato), and the highlands (mainly Mexico City). Ten blood group systems (N = 229), STRs (N = 107), HLA-A*, B*, C* (N = 116-167), and DRB1, DQA1, and DQB1 (N = 40, 101, 160, respectively) were analyzed in the samples of the highlands. The three groups cluster together in the same branch: Mestizos from Venezuela, Mediterranean and Jews close to the cluster of Orientals, followed by Amerindians. All markers demonstrate that Indian genes are strongly represented in the highlands: Di(a), O, D(-)(+), s, A*0201, *0206, B*1539 (*1541), *3902, *3905, *3512, *3517, *4002, *4005, Cw*0801, *0304, *0401 among others. Cw*0501, *1203, *1204, and *1601 are of White ancestry. The most frequent haplotypes *0407-*03011-*0302 and *0802-*0401-*0402 are of Indian descent as well. The center and mainly the north show a more Caucasian and Semitic profile. The results demonstrate the high variability resulting from interethnic admixture, suggesting that this mechanism is the main factor responsible for the large diversity found in urban populations.
Human Immunology | 1999
Carmen Alaez; Maria del Pilar Mora; Lourdes Arellanes; Silvia Cano; Elva Pérez-Luque; Miriam Vazquez; Angelica Olivo; Ana Burguete; Arturo Hernández; Miguel Pedroza; Clara Gorodezky
Vogt-Koyanagi-Haradas syndrome (VKH) is an autoimmune disease prevalent in Mongoloids with evident participation of HLA. The aim of this study was to identify the class II DNA sequences involved in the etiopathogenesis of VKH in Mexican Mestizos. This study included 46 VKH patients and 170 controls. 75% were females (mean age at onset of 33.5 years). The disease evolved to chronicity (68%) and 25% of the patients were unresponsive to corticotherapy. DNA typing of HLA-DRB1, DQA1 and DQB1 was done following the 12th International Histocompatibility protocols. VKH was strongly dependent of DRB1 gene; DRB1*04 was found in 78.2% of the patients vs. 50.6% of the controls (p = 0.001). No particular DRB*04 subtype was significantly increased, suggesting that residues E-9 V-11; H-13; H-33 and Y-37 shared by all DR4s are implicated in susceptibility to VKH. However DRB1*0101 (p = 0.009, OR = 4.2) was clearly associated. This allele shares the motif LLEQRRAAG located at position 67-74 and 86 of DRB1 with *0405 associated in Japanese. Two HLA associated mechanisms may be triggering the autoimmune phenomena. One involving critical polymorphic residues expressed in different alleles. Secondly, some peptides may anchor to the conserved residues leaving other sequences to bind to the T cell receptor.
International Journal of Immunogenetics | 2012
Jill A. Hollenbach; Danillo G. Augusto; Carmen Alaez; Ludmila Bubnova; Ingrid Faé; Gottfried F. Fischer; Faviel F. Gonzalez-Galarza; Clara Gorodezky; Lydia Karabon; Piotr Kusnierczyk; Janelle A. Noble; Olga Rickards; Chrissy h. Roberts; Marie Schaffer; Li Shi; Sofia Tavoularis; Elizabeth Trachtenberg; Y. Yao; Derek Middleton
In the last fifteen years, published reports have described KIR gene‐content frequency distributions in more than 120 populations worldwide. However, there have been limited studies examining these data in aggregate to detect overall patterns of variation at regional and global levels. Here, we present a summary of the collection of KIR gene‐content data for 105 worldwide populations collected as part of the 15th and 16th International Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics Workshops, and preliminary results for data analysis.
Human Immunology | 2000
Elva Pérez-Luque; Juan Manuel Malacara; Angélica Olivo-Díaz; Carmen Alaez; Hector Debaz; Miriam Vázquez-Garcia; Ma.Eugenia Garay; Laura Eugenia Nava; Ana Burguete; Clara Gorodezky
To analyze the contribution of MHC class II genes in type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) with end stage renal disease (ESRD), we examined the distribution of HLA-DRB1, DQA1, DQB1 loci in Mexican Mestizos of Central Mexico, using PCR-SSOP and PCR-SSP. Three groups were included: 47 type 2 diabetic ESRD patients; 42 patients with ESRD and 50 type 2 DM patients with no kidney complication. The results were compared with those of 101 controls of the same area. The median since DM was first diagnosed, was 18 years prior to the onset of ESRD. The frequencies of DRB1*1502 and DQB1*0501 were increased in DM patients with ESRD (p = 0.004; RR = 7.4, CI = 1.5-37; EF = 0. 13; p = 0.007; RR = 2.9, CI = 2.3-3.5, EF = 0.21, respectively). In contrast, DRB1*0407 was decreased in the same group (p = 0.0008, RR = 0.2; CI = 0.035-0.70, PF = 0.19). Diabetic patients with DRB1*1502 are 8.8 times more likely to develop ESRD, independently of the duration time of DM. DRB1*1502 contributes to the susceptibility to ESRD while DRB1*0407 is involved in protection. The residue at DRB1-74 differs in these alleles: DRB1*0407 has glutamic acid and DRB1*1502 has an alanine, suggesting that this substitution may be important for both, peptide anchoring and for presentation to the T cells.
Cell Stress & Chaperones | 2010
Esma Ucisik-Akkaya; Charronne F. Davis; Clara Gorodezky; Carmen Alaez; M. Tevfik Dorak
Three heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) genes, HSPA1L, HSPA1A, and HSPA1B, are located within the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class III region. HSPs act as stress signals and regulate natural killer cell response to cancer. HSP70 gene polymorphisms show disease associations partly due to their linkage disequilibrium with HLA alleles. To systematically evaluate their associations with childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), we examined the three functional single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) rs2227956 (T493M) in HSPA1L, rs1043618 in HSPA1A 5′UTR, and rs1061581 (Q351Q) in HSPA1B by TaqMan assays or polymerase chain reaction–restriction fragment length polymorphism in 114 ALL cases and 414 controls from Wales (UK), in 100 Mexican Mestizo ALL cases and 253 controls belonging to the same ethnic group, and in a panel of 82 HLA-typed reference cell line samples. Homozygosity for HSPA1B rs1061581 minor allele G was associated with protection (odds ratio (OR) = 0.37, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.16–0.78; P = 0.007) with gene-dosage effect (additive model) reaching significance (P = 0.0001) in the Welsh case–control group. This association was replicated in the second case–control group from Mexico (OR (recessive model) = 0.49, 95% CI = 0.24–0.96; P = 0.03), and the pooled analysis yielded a strong association (Mantel–Haenszel OR = 0.43, 95% CI = 0.27–0.69, P = 0.0004). The association was stronger in males in each group and in the pooled analysis. A three-SNP haplotype including the major allele A of rs1061581 showed a highly significant increase in Welsh cases compared with respective controls (6.7% vs 1.8%; P = 0.0003) due to the difference between male cases and controls. The protective allele of rs1061581 occurred more frequently on the HLA-DRB3 haplotypes (especially DRB1*03) in the cell line panel, but the HSPA1B association was independent from the HLA-DRB4 association previously detected in the same case–control group from Wales (adjusted P = 0.001). Given the cancer promoting roles played by HSPs intracellularly as well as roles in immune surveillance when expressed on the cell surface and the known correlations between expression levels and the HSP polymorphisms, these results are likely to indicate a primary association and warrant detailed assessment in childhood ALL development.
BMC Medical Genetics | 2008
Carmen Alaez; Ling Lin; Hilario Flores-A; Miriam Vazquez; Andrea Munguia; Emmanuel Mignot; Reyes Haro; Harry Baker; Clara Gorodezky
BackgroundNarcolepsy-cataplexy is characterized by excessive daytime sleepiness with recurrent episodes of irresistible sleep, cataplexy, hallucinations and sleep paralysis. Its aetiology is unknown, but it is positively associated with the human leukocyte antigens (HLA) in all studied populations. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the association of HLA class II DRB1/DQB1 alleles with narcolepsy-cataplexy in Mexican Mestizo patients.MethodsThis is a case-control study of consecutive patients and ethnically matched controls. We included 32 patients diagnosed with typical narcolepsy-cataplexy, of the National Institute of Neurology, of the Institute of Psychiatry and at the Center of Narcolepsy at Stanford University. As healthy controls, 203 Mexican Mestizos were included. DRB1 alleles were identified using sequence based typing. A PCR-SSOP reverse dot blot was used for DQB1 typing. Allele frequency was calculated by direct counting and the significance of the differences was assessed using the Yates Chi square. Odds ratio and confidence intervals were evaluated.ResultsHLA-DRB1*1501 (OR = 8.2; pc < 0.0001) and DQB1*0602 (OR = 8.4; pc < 0.0001) were found positively associated with narcolepsy. When deleting DQB1*0602+ patients from the analysis, DQB1*0301 was also found increased (OR = 2.7; p = 0.035; pc = NS). DQB1*0602/DQB1*0301 genotype was present in 15.6% of the cases (OR = 11.5; p = 0.00035), conferring a high risk. DRB1*0407 (OR = 0.2; p = 0.016 pc = NS) and DQB1*0302(OR = 0.4; p = 0.017, pc = NS) were found decreased in the patients. The gender stratification analysis showed a higher risk in females carrying DRB1*1501 (OR = 15.8, pc < 0.0001) and DQB1*0602 (OR = 19.8, pc < 0.0001) than in males (OR = 5.0 for both alleles; p = 0.012, pc = NS for DRB1 & p = 0.0012, pc = 0.017 for DQB1). The susceptibility alleles found in Mexicans with narcolepsy are also present in Japanese and Caucasians; DRB1*04 linked protection has also been shown in Koreans. A stronger HLA association is suggested in females, in accordance with the sexual dimorphism claimed previously.ConclusionThis knowledge may contribute to a better understanding of the disease pathogenesis in different populations. The evaluation of the risk to develop narcolepsy-cataplexy in carriers of the described alleles/genotypes may also be possible. A larger sample should be analysed in Mexican and in other Hispanic patients to confirm these results.
Human Immunology | 2003
Carmen Alaez; Lourdes Arellanes; Alejandra Vazquez; H. Flores; Patricia Navarro; Miriam Vázquez-Garcia; Clara Gorodezky
The purpose of this study was the investigation of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genes in Mexicans with classical Pars Planitis (CPP). Seventy-nine unrelated patients and 204 healthy controls were studied. HLA-A, -B, and -C typing was done on T cells isolated with immunomagnetic beads. HLA-DRB1, -DQA1, and -DQB1 loci were typed by polymerase chain reaction-sequence-specific oligonucleotide probes. The significance and strength of HLA associations were assessed. Stratification analyses were performed to analyze correlations between HLA alleles and clinical manifestations or gender. The mean age of CPP patients was 10 years old. The disease was recurrent (21.3%); 58% were males and 89.6% were bilaterally affected. A 3-year follow-up demonstrated no other associated disease. DRB1*0802 was significantly increased (odds ratio [OR] = 2.8, etiologic fraction [EF] = 18.96%). In females, HLA-B51 (OR = 9.8) was associated with nonsymmetrical onset and HLA-Cw1 (OR = 4.7) with symmetrical onset; DRB1*0802 was increased in males (OR = 3.9, p =5.0 E-05, EF = 38.3%) and contributed to their symmetrical onset (OR = 4.6, p =4.6 E-06, EF = 29.4%). Corneal peripheral endotheliopathy correlated with DQB1*0602 in females (OR = 17, EF = 47.1%). A susceptibility allele of Amerindian ancestry is responsible for juvenile CPP in Mexicans; HLA-B locus contributes to severity in females and DRB1*0802 in males. CPP should be classified as an heterogeneous illness taking into account ethnicity, and clinical and genetic characteristics.
Human Immunology | 2003
Elva Pérez-Luque; Carmen Alaez; Juan Manuel Malacara; M.Eugenia Garay; Martha Eugenia Fajardo; Laura Eugenia Nava; Clara Gorodezky
The aim of the study was to investigate the participation of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II alleles in the expression of type 2 diabetic and in nondiabetic subjects with and without family history of diabetes. The purpose was to evaluate any HLA association and to look for different patterns of insulin resistance and insulin secretion, comparing subjects with a low probability of developing diabetes, as a result of their family history. We recruited 87 healthy subjects without family history of diabetes, 48 healthy subjects with family history, and 47 type 2 diabetic patients. All of them were Mexican Mestizos of central Mexico. Using a standard 75-g oral glucose tolerance test, insulin resistance was determined and insulin secretion was assessed with the HOMA model. DRB1, DQA1 and DQB1 alleles were typed using polymerase chain reaction-sequence-specific oligonucleotide probe (PCR-SSOP) and sequence specific primers (PCR-SSP). Nondiabetic subjects had similar HOMA-IR and DeltaI 30/DeltaG 30 index (HOMA). A significant decreased frequency of DRB1*0403 (p = 0.01; odds ratio [OR] = 0.20) was demonstrated in type 2 diabetic patients, and DRB1*0701 (p = 0.02; OR = 0.17) in nondiabetics with family history of diabetes. These alleles associated with protection against type 2 diabetes, share glutamic acid at position-74 and were previously demonstrated to contribute to protection against type I diabetes.
Infectious Agents and Cancer | 2013
Sofía Bernal-Silva; Julio Granados; Clara Gorodezky; Carmen Alaez; Hilario Flores-Aguilar; Ricardo M. Cerda-Flores; Geraldina Guerrero-González; Lezmes Valdez-Chapa; José Morales-casas; Juan Francisco González-Guerrero; Hugo A. Barrera-Saldaña
BackgroundPersistent infection with high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) is a major risk factor for malignant lesions and cervical cancer. A widely studied element in the search for genetic factors influencing risk HPV infection diseases is allelic variation of the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) locus. The study was designed to search for HLA susceptibility alleles contributing to the persistence of HPV infection in Mexican women.MethodsA total of 172 subjects were divided into three groups: 1) HPV–persistent patients; 2) HPV–cleared; and 3) HPV–reinfected patients. They were screened for HPV types using a polymerase chain reaction (PCR). PCR-sequence specific oligonucleotide probes (PCR-SSOP) was used for HLA DRB1 and DQB 1 typing.ResultsWe observed that HLA-DQB1*0501 allele might be associated with susceptibility of reinfection with HPV (p = 0.01, OR = 4.9, CI 95% = 1.3 -18.7). Allele frequency of HLA-DRB1*14 was particularly reduced in patients with cancer when compared with the HPV–persistent group (p = 0.04), suggesting that this allele is a possible protective factor for the development of cervical cancer (OR = 2.98). HLA-DRB1*07 might be associated with viral clearance (p = 0.04).ConclusionsGenetic markers for HPV infection susceptibility are different in each population, in Mexicans several HLA-DQB1 alleles might be associated with an enhanced risk for viral persistence. In contrast, DRB1*14, seems to confer protection against cervical cancer.
Human Immunology | 2011
Carmen Alaez; Hilario Flores-A; Luz Elena Concha del Río; Andrea Munguia; A. Rodriguez; David Garcia; Lourdes Arellanes; Clara Gorodezky
Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada syndrome (VKH) is a multisystem autoimmune disorder mediated by cytotoxic T cells targeting melanocytes antigen(s). A strong major histocompatibility complex (MHC) association with HLA-DRB1*04:05 has been demonstrated in different populations. We investigated the contribution of HLA-A*, -B*, -C*, -DRB1*, and -DQB1* genes, belonging to the human leukocyte antigen (HLA), to the expression of VKH and we analyzed the influence of gender on the HLA association. A total of 76 patients and 256 healthy Mexican Mestizo individuals were included. HLA-A, B, C, and DQB1 typing was performed using the polymerase chain reaction, and hybridization was done using sequence specific probes. DRB1 alleles were defined by means of sequence base typing. The frequency of DRB1*04:05 (odds ratio=2.95) and DRB1*04:04 (odds ratio=2.79) were found to be significantly increased in the patients, conferring a similar risk. Gender stratification analysis showed that these alleles were associated with female gender only. No HLA class I or class II alleles were significantly deviated in males. The frequency of DRB1*04:07 was increased in the whole group, upon withdrawal from analysis the DRB1*04:04 and *04:05 positive patients. A trend of DRB1 alleles contributing to the expression of VKH is suggested: DRB1*04:05=*04:04>*04:07>*01:01>*01:02. Although none of the results were significant after the p value was corrected, the data are consistent with those in numerous other studies, suggesting that several different DRB1* alleles may be involved in the etiopathogenesis of the disease by presenting an overlapping set of ocular peptides to the T cells, which in turn may trigger the autoimmune response that is present in the patients.