The Seventh Histocompatibility Workshop:1977

  The Seventh Histocompatibility Workshop, organized by Walter Bodmer and held at Oxford in September of 1977, carried forward a number of investigations: the serological study of the newly-described Ia (Immune-associated) determinants that were present on B cells but not on T cells, the relationship between the Ia specificities and Dw determinants defined by MLR and Dw homozygous typing cell (HTC) testing, the continued study of specificities belonging to the previously-defined HLA-A, B and C loci, and a study of a limited number of diseases to define their relationship with HLA-A, B, Dw and/or Ia specificities. For this workshop, the world was divided into 20 regions, each with its own regional officer, since there were too many participating laboratories to permit a central organization or data analysis. A total of 150 laboratories participated, studying 360 antisera, a panel of 13,000 lymphocytes covering all of the world's major racial groups, and 54 homozygous typing cells. Based on workshop results, the HLA-DR locus, later shown to be part of the loosely-defined "Ia" antigen system, was officially defined, and a total of 26 new specificities were assigned WHO designations. In addition, evidence of a second Ia locus, termed MT by some laboratories and MB by others, began to emerge from this workshop. A total of 19 new HLA specificities were given WHO designations following the workshop, including the first seven antigens of the HLA-DR locus (DR1-DR7).  
  Reference: Bodmer WF, Batchelor JR, Bodmer JG, Festenstein H, Morris PJ, eds. Histocompatibility Testing 1977. Copenhagen: Munksgaard, 1978.

The Eighth Histocompatibility Workshop: 1980

  The Eighth Histocompatibility workshop, organized by Paul Terasaki and held in Los Angeles in February of 1980, was comprised of 130 participating laboratories testing 720 sera against 37,763 different cells. These studies allowed the HLA-DR locus to be more clearly defined and provided additional clarification of the newly-defined "MB" and "MT" specificities, which in subsequent workshops were shown to be encoded by genes of the HLA-DQ locus. There was also a cellular component, in which 31 laboratories used 115 selected homozygous typing cells to test cells from 2,565 individuals and 411 families. Because a large number of families were studied throughout the workshop, the data reference tables prepared from the results, giving gene, antigen and haplotype frequencies in 34 different ethnic groups, remained the standard benchmark throughout the next decade. Components of the workshop also dealt with the relationship between histocompatibility testing and transplantation outcome and studied the relationship between HLA and susceptibility to diseases such as diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis. A total of 14 new specificities were given WHO designations following the eighth workshop.  
  Reference: Terasaki PI, ed. Histocompatibility Testing 1980. Los Angeles: UCLA Tissue Typing Laboratory, 1980.  

The Ninth Histocompatibility Workshop: 1984

The Ninth Histocompatibility Workshop, organized by Ekkehard Albert and Wolfgang Mayr and held in Munich and Vienna in May of 1984, was comprised of 220 participating laboratories, organized into 21 regions throughout the world, testing 766 sera against cells derived from 2,300 families. Investigations into the association between HLA and susceptibility to 14 different diseases were continued. Based on data from the workshop, 14 HLA-A and B locus specificities were upgraded to full HLA status and 19 HLA-A, B, DR and DQ specificities were given provisional WHO designations (e.g., HLA-Aw66, Bw73, DRw13 and DQw3). The HLA-DQ locus was formally defined, replacing several local designations (DC, MB, MT) that had been used to describe alleles encoded by genes of this locus. At the workshop conference in Vienna, several papers describing the use of restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) method to study HLA at the DNA level were presented, demonstrating the power and utility of DNA technology in HLA typing and paving the way for its use in subsequent workshops. In this workshop, the HLA-DP locus, with six specificities, was formally described, based on cellular typing using T cell clones.  
  Reference: Albert ED, Baur MP, Mayr WR, eds. Histocompatibility Testing 1984. Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag, 1984.

The Tenth Histocompatibility Workshop: 1987

  The Tenth Histocompatibility Workshop, organized by Bo Dupont and held in New York City in November of 1987, had a number of specific objectives, including the standardization of assays used to characterize HLA genes and their products at the molecular, genetic, biochemical and cellular level, and the development of a reference panel of B-lymphoblastoid cell lines for factors of the HLA system. The workshop was divided into eight components, including serology, biochemistry, cellular and DNA sections. The serology component was organized into 34 different Antigen Groups to study antigen clusters of similar specificity. A total of 362 laboratories participated in the workshop. A large number of new HLA specificities were defined in this workshop by a variety of techniques: 62 new specificities were defined by serology; 94 alleles were defined by biochemistry (one-dimensional iso-electric focusing); and seven T-cell defined HLA-Dw specificities were defined using T cell clones. This workshop was the first to implement DNA-based HLA typing with the RFLP Southern blot methodology using a standard panel of cDNA probes for HLA class I and class II, with separate analysis of DRA, DRB, DQA, DQB, DPA and DPB. A total of 80 laboratories used RFLP to analyze the core workshop cell line panel as well as local samples. RFLP patterns were defined which corresponded with the serologically defined HLA class II alleles. Thus, DNA typing was established as a method for typing of HLA. Some changes in HLA nomenclature were made to accommodate the designation of HLA alleles, based on amino acid sequences deduced from gene sequences. The reference panel of 107 B-lymphoblastoid cell lines remains a reference resource for well-characterized HLA material to this day.

 
Reference: Dupont B, ed. Immunobiology of HLA. Histocompatibility Testing 1987, Vol. I, and Immunogenetics and Histocompatibility, Vol II. Springer-Verlag, New York, 1988.

The Eleventh Histocompatibility Workshop: 1991

  The Eleventh Histocompatibility Workshop, organized by Kimiyoshi Tsuji and held in Yokohama, Japan in November of 1991, included 524 laboratories (of whom 244 submitted data for central analysis) from 53 different countries. The workshop was organized into six general components: serology, DNA typing, complement studies, anthropology, disease association, and transplantation. This workshop saw the widespread introduction of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technology with sequence specific oligonucleotide probe (SSOP) hybridization as an HLA-DNA typing method. A total of 195 laboratories worldwide used the standard workshop panel of HLA class II primers and probes in transplantation, disease association and anthropological studies. Eighty-five of the B-lymphoblastoid cell lines from the 10th IHWS reference panel were typed to the allele level for class II loci with the workshop PCR/SSOP reagents. In addition, a number of other HLA-DNA typing or matching techniques using PCR-amplified DNA were described, including the reverse dot blot, PCR-RFLP, hybridization protection, PCR heteroduplex formation, single-strand conformational polymorphism (SSCP) and direct sequencing assays. At the conclusion of the Workshop, it was decided that, in the future, all serological specificities would be named on the basis of correlation with an identified sequence, eliminating the need for a provisional "w" in the specificity designation. The report on Nomenclature for Factors of the HLA System, 1991, published in the workshop proceedings, listed 41 A-locus, 61 B-locus, 18 C-locus, 61 DRB1-locus, 14 DQA1-locus, 19 DQB1-locus, 8 DPA1-locus and 38 DPB1-locus alleles. The 87 new HLA allele sequences identified in the 11th Workshop provided further documentation of the extraordinary diversity of the HLA complex that can be detected by the multiplicity of DNA typing methods now available.  
Reference: Tsuji K, Aizawa M, Sasazuki T, eds. HLA 1991. New York: Oxford University Press, 1992.  

The Twelfth Histocompatibility Workshop: 1996

The Twelfth Histocompatibility Workshop, organized by Dominique Charron and held in St. Malo and Paris in June of 1996, consisted of seven major components: anthropology; HLA and cancer; transplantation; HLA and disease; new HLA genes; allele and haplotype societies; and DNA sequencing. Although serologic, biochemical and cellular methods were also studied, the focus of the workshop was the continued development and implementation of DNA-based typing methods for the analysis of HLA specificities at the allele level. PCR/SSOP typing, developed during the 11th Workshop, was used in the allele and haplotype society format to identify and characterize several new class II alleles. DNA sequencing-based typing for class I and class II genes was also investigated in several laboratories. A modification of the sequence specific priming (SSP) typing method, termed Amplification Refractory Mutation System (ARMS) typing, was used in the anthropology component to achieve low to medium resolution typing of HLA-A, B and C genes and high resolution typing of HLA-A*02 alleles. Important data on the distribution of A*02 alleles in various human populations was derived from these studies. Use of the ARMS method was also instrumental in a more comprehensive study of HLA-C alleles than had been possible by serologic methods, providing data on HLA-B/C linkage associations and clarifying a large number of Cw "blank" antigen assignments. Although final analysis of 12th Workshop data has yet to be completed, typing results for more than 26,000 individuals had been submitted by the end of May, 1996. Of this total, the anthropology component reported data on 11,650 individuals derived from 111 different populations.  
  Reference: Charron, D, ed. Genetic Diversity of HLA. Functional and Medical Implications. France: EDK, 1996
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Author: Eric Mickelson. Special thanks to Paul Terasaki.

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