J.‐P. Li
Gulf Coast Regional Blood Center
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Publication
Featured researches published by J.‐P. Li.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Xiao-Yang Zhou; Fa-Ming Zhu; J.‐P. Li; Wei Mao; De-Mei Zhang; Meng-Li Liu; Ai-Lian Hei; Da-Peng Dai; Ping Jiang; X. Shan; Bo-Wei Zhang; Chuan-Fu Zhu; Jie Shen; Zhihui Deng; Zheng-Lei Wang; Wei-Jian Yu; Qiang Chen; Yan-Hui Qiao; Xiang-Ming Zhu; Rong Lv; Guo-Ying Li; Guo-Liang Li; Heng-Cong Li; X. Zhang; Bin Pei; Li-Xin Jiao; Gang Shen; Ying Liu; Zhi-Hui Feng; Yu-Ping Su
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is a widely used and effective therapy for hematopoietic malignant diseases and numerous other disorders. High-resolution human leukocyte antigen (HLA) haplotype frequency distributions not only facilitate individual donor searches but also determine the probability with which a particular patient can find HLA-matched donors in a registry. The frequencies of the HLA-A, -B, -C, -DRB1, and -DQB1 alleles and haplotypes were estimated among 169,995 Chinese volunteers using the sequencing-based typing (SBT) method. Totals of 191 HLA-A, 244 HLA-B, 146 HLA-C, 143 HLA-DRB1 and 47 HLA-DQB1 alleles were observed, which accounted for 6.98%, 7.06%, 6.46%, 9.11% and 7.91%, respectively, of the alleles in each locus in the world (IMGT 3.16 Release, Apr. 2014). Among the 100 most common haplotypes from the 169,995 individuals, nine distinct haplotypes displayed significant regionally specific distributions. Among these, three were predominant in the South China region (i.e., the 20th, 31st, and 81sthaplotypes), another three were predominant in the Southwest China region (i.e., the 68th, 79th, and 95th haplotypes), one was predominant in the South and Southwest China regions (the 18th haplotype), one was relatively common in the Northeast and North China regions (the 94th haplotype), and one was common in the Northeast, North and Northwest China (the 40th haplotype). In conclusion, this is the first to analyze high-resolution HLA diversities across the entire country of China, based on a detailed and complete data set that covered 31 provinces, autonomous regions, and municipalities. Specifically, we also evaluated the HLA matching probabilities within and between geographic regions and analyzed the regional differences in the HLA diversities in China. We believe that the data presented in this study might be useful for unrelated HLA-matched donor searches, donor registry planning, population genetic studies, and anthropogenesis studies.
PLOS ONE | 2014
X.-F. Li; X. Zhang; Yang Chen; K.-L. Zhang; Xiang-Jun Liu; J.‐P. Li
HLA-A, -B and -DRB1 allele frequencies and their haplotype frequencies in 21,918 Chinese residents living in Liaoning Province, who were registered as volunteer donors of China Marrow Donor Registry, were investigated. They are composed of 93.37% Han Chinese, 5.1% Manchus, 0.57% Mongols, 0.46% Hui persons, 0.29% Koreans and 0.14% Xibe ethnic group. In total eighteen different HLA-A alleles, forty-eight different HLA-B alleles and fourteen different HLA-DRB1 alleles have been identified. Their frequencies are in agreement with the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. For Han Chinese in Liaoning, 1,534 different HLA-A-B-DRB1 haplotypes were identified, with a frequency of higher than 0.01%. A*30-B*13-DRB1*07, A*02-B*46-DRB1*09 and A*02-B*13-DRB1*12 are the most frequent haplotypes among Liaoning Han. While Liaoning Han, Liaoning Manchu, Liaoning Mongol, Liaoning Hui and Liaoning Korean share the northern Han characteristic haplotypes, all minority ethnic groups with the exception of Liaoning Manchu have developed their own unique HLA profiles. This dataset characterizes the HLA allele and haplotype frequencies in the Liaoning area and suggests that it is different from those in other parts of China and ethnic groups, which implicates transplant donor searching strategies and studies on population genetics.
Tissue Antigens | 2009
J.‐P. Li; X.-F. Li; Y. Chen; X. Zhang; X.‐Z. Liu
A new human leukocyte antigen (HLA) A allele, HLA-A*3020, was found during routine HLA genotyping by polymerase chain reaction-sequence specific oligonucleotide probes and sequencing-based typing. The A*3020 allele has one nucleotide change at position 294 of exon 2 from the closest matching allele A*300101, resulting in an amino acid change from D (GAC) to E (GAA) at codon 98.
Tissue Antigens | 2012
Wei Zhang; X.-F. Li; X. Zhang; J.‐P. Li; Zhiqing Li
The human leukocyte antigen HLA-A*31:22 allele shows a single nucleotide change at position 245 (A > C) of exon 2 from the closest matching allele HLA-A*31:01:02.
Tissue Antigens | 2012
J.‐P. Li; X.-F. Li; K.-L. Zhang; X. Zhang; X.‐Z. Liu
The HLA-B*40:74 allele has two nucleotide changes at positions 103 and 106 of exon 2 from the closest matching allele HLA-B*40:01:01.
Diabetes | 2018
Jie Shen; Tingwei Guo; Tao Wang; Yisong Zhen; Xiao Ma; Yuan Wang; Z. Zhang; Jian-Ping Cai; Wei Mao; Fa-Ming Zhu; J.‐P. Li; Zhen-Lei Wang; De-Mei Zhang; Meng-Li Liu; X. Shan; Bo-Wei Zhang; Chuan-Fu Zhu; Zhihui Deng; Wei-Jian Yu; Qiang Chen; Guo-Liang Li; Tao Yang; Shan Lu; Q. Q. Pan; Su Fan; X. Y. Wang; Xing Zhao; Xin-Yun Bi; Yan-Hui Qiao; Pin-Can Su
Strong associations between HLA alleles and infectious and autoimmune diseases are well established. Although obesity is also associated with these diseases, the relationship between HLA and obesity has not been systematically investigated in a large cohort. In the current study, we analyzed the association of HLA alleles with BMI using data from 1.3 million healthy adult donors from the Chinese Marrow Donor Program (CMDP). We found 23 HLA alleles, including 12 low-resolution and 11 high-resolution alleles, were significantly associated with BMI after correction for multiple testing. Alleles associated with high BMI were enriched in haplotypes that were common in both Chinese and European populations, whereas the alleles associated with low BMI were enriched in haplotypes common only in Asians. Alleles B*07, DRB1*07, DRB1*12, and C*03:02 provided the strongest associations with BMI (P = 6.89 × 10−10, 1.32 × 10−9, 1.52 × 10−9, and 4.45 × 10−8, respectively), where B*07 and DRB1*07 also had evidence for sex-specific effects (Pheterogeneity = 0.0067 and 0.00058, respectively). These results, which identify associations between alleles of HLA-B, DRB1, and C with BMI in Chinese young adults, implicate a novel biological connection between HLA alleles and obesity.
Tissue Antigens | 2006
J.‐P. Li; Y. Chen; X. Zhang; X.-F. Li; X.‐Z. Liu
Tissue Antigens | 2005
X.‐Z. Liu; J.‐P. Li; L.‐P. Chi; X.-F. Li; X. Zhang
Tissue Antigens | 2007
J.‐P. Li; A. M. Lazaro; Y. Xiao; J. Ng; Carolyn Katovich Hurley
Tissue Antigens | 2011
X.‐Z. Liu; X.-F. Li; X. Zhang; K.-L. Zhang; J.‐P. Li