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Barbara Lisowska-Grospierre, Marie-Claude Fondaneche, Marie-Pierre Rols, Claude Griscelli, Alain Fischer, Two complementation groups account for most cases of inherited MHC class II deficiency, Human Molecular Genetics, Volume 3, Issue 6, June 1994, Pages 953–958, https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/3.6.953
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Abstract
MHC class II immuno-deficiency is a rare autosomal recessive disease due to a defect in transacting genes, which control the expression of the entire family of MHC α and β class II genes. Previous analyses classified cells from eight MHC class ll-deficient patients and four experimental mutant cell lines into four complementation groups, pointing to the existence of a large number of regulatory genes. We conducted fusion experiments with cell lines from two-thirds of all known patients and found that two complementation groups accounted for 20 of the 22 cases studied. These two complementation groups correspond closely to two ethnic groups: most patients of north African origin were classified into one group, while all patients originating from Spain were classified into a second main group. This suggests the existence of restricted number of ancestor mutations leading to this disease.