HLA-G,-E and-F regulatory and coding region variability and haplotypes in the Beninese Toffin population sample
Abstract
HLA-G/E/F genes exhibit immunomodulatory properties and are expressed in placenta. Little attention has been
devoted to the study of these genes in sub-Saharan African populations, which are yet the most diverse. To fill this gap, we evaluated the complete gene variability, approximately 5.1kb for HLA-G (n=149), 7.7kb for HLA
E (n=150) and 6.2kb for HLA-F (n=152) in the remote Beninese Toffin population, using massive parallel
sequencing. Overall, 96, 37 and 68 variable sites were detected along the entire HLA-G,-E and-F, respectively,
arranged into region-specific haplotypes; i.e., promoter haplotypes (16, 19, and 15 respectively), coding hap
lotypes (19, 15, and 29 respectively), 3’ untranslated region (3′UTR) haplotypes (12, 7 and 2, respectively) and
extended haplotypes (33, 31 and 32 respectively). All promoter/coding/3’UTR haplotypes followed the patterns
already described in worldwide populations. HLA-E was the most conserved, exhibiting mainly two full-length
encoded-molecules (E*01:01 and E*01:03), followed by HLA-F, three full-length proteins (F*01:01, F*01:02 and
F*01:03) and HLA-G, four proteins: three full-length (G*01:01, G*01:03 and G*01:04) and one truncated
(G*01:05N). Although HLA-G/E/F alleles in the Toffin population were the most frequently observed worldwide, the frequencies of the coding haplotypes were closely similar to those described for other African populations
