4.4 Article

HLA-E diversity unfolded: Identification and characterization of 170 novel HLA-E alleles

Journal

HLA
Volume 97, Issue 5, Pages 389-398

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tan.14195

Keywords

genotyping; HLA‐ E; next‐ generation sequencing; novel allele

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HLA-E, a nonclassical HLA class Ib gene, has lower diversity compared to classical HLA genes. Research on this gene has led to the discovery of numerous new alleles, significantly increasing the number of HLA-E alleles in the database.
HLA-E is a member of the nonclassical HLA class Ib genes. Even though it is structurally highly similar to the classical HLA class Ia genes, it is less diverse and only 45 alleles and 12 proteins were known in December 2019 (IPD-IMGT/HLA, release 3.38.0). Since 2017, we have genotyped over 3 million voluntary stem cell donors for HLA-E by sequencing the most relevant allele-determining bases of exons 2 and 3. As expected, most donors harbor the two predominant alleles HLA-E*01:01 and/or HLA-E*01:03. However, in 1666 (0.05%) of our samples we detected 345 distinct novel HLA-E sequences. The most frequent one was identified in 162 samples and has by now been named HLA-E*01:114. To characterize these novel alleles in full-length, we used both short-read Illumina and long-read PacBio sequencing to obtain fully phased and highly accurate sequences. This resulted in 234 submissions to IPD-IMGT/HLA comprising 170 novel HLA-E alleles, which encode for 93 novel HLA-E proteins, as well as 64 confirmations or sequence extensions. Consequently, the number of HLA-E alleles in the database (release 3.42.0) has now increased to 256 HLA-E alleles and 110 HLA-E proteins.

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