Aberrant splicing of intron 1 creates a novel null HLA‐B*1501 allele

1999 
: A comparison of serological and DNA HLA class I typing data identified a serological “blank” HLA-B15 antigen in a volunteer donor on the bone marrow registry. Isoelectric focusing and Western blot analysis of a cell line established from this individual confirmed that the HLA-B15 antigen is not expressed at the cell surface. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the HLA-B*15 null allele revealed a 10-bp deletion near the 3′ end of intron 1, when compared to the normal HLA-B*1501 sequence. All of the HLA-B*15 specific cDNA clones examined retained the intron 1 sequence. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and Southern blot analysis demonstrated that the HLA-B*15 mRNA molecule contained the intron 1 sequence, indicating an inability to efficiently splice out intron 1 from the mRNA transcript. The retention of the mutated intron 1 sequence in the mRNA causes a frameshift and premature termination of translation at the start of exon 2, explaining the HLA-B*1501 null phenotype. Our data predicts that the HLA-B*1501 null allele would express a small truncated protein containing the signal sequence fused to an ORF within intron 1 and terminating (out of frame) just within exon 2.
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