IMGT/HLA Database
Submission Tool
The IMGT/HLA Database Submission
Tool allows direct submission of sequences to the WHO HLA Nomenclature
Committee for Factors of the HLA System. Once accepted the submitted
sequence will be stored in the database and appear in the monthly
updates published in Tissue Antigens, Human Immunology and the International
Journal of Immunogenetics.
Start your submission here
Please read the guidelines below for submitting a new or confirmatory sequence before starting
the submission procedure, as you will be asked to confirm you have read them during the submission process.
Conditions
for acceptance of new allele sequences.
As emphasized in previous reports and releases from the HLA database, there are required conditions for the acceptance of new sequences for official names. Please read the following conditions carefully before submitting sequences.
- Where a sequence is obtained from cDNA or where
PCR products are subcloned prior to sequencing, several clones
should have been sequenced.
- Sequencing should always be performed in both
directions.
- If direct sequencing of PCR amplified material
is performed, products from at least two separate PCR reactions
should have been sequenced.
- In individuals who are heterozygous for a locus,
where one of the alleles is novel, the novel allele must be sequenced
in isolation from the second allele. Thus an allele sequence which
is derived using a sequence based typing (SBT) methodology, where
both alleles of a heterozygous individual are sequenced together,
is insufficient evidence for assignment of an official designation.
- Sequence derived solely from the primers used
to amplify an allele should not be included in the sequence that
is submitted.
- Where possible, a novel sequence should be confirmed
by typing of genomic DNA using a method such as PCR-SSOP or PCR-SSP.
Where a new sequence contains either a novel mutation or a previously
unseen combination of nucleotides (sequence motif), this must
be confirmed by a DNA typing technique. This may require the use
of newly designed probes or primers to cover the new mutation;
these reagents should also be described.
- An accession number in a databank must have been
obtained. Sequences may be submitted to these databases online
at the following addresses:
EMBL: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/embl/Submission/index.html
GenBank: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Genbank/submit.html
DDBJ: http://www.ddbj.nig.ac.jp/submission-e.html
- Full length sequences are preferable though not
essential; the minimum requirements are exons 2 and 3 for an HLA
class I sequence and exon 2 for an HLA class II sequence.
- Where a novel sequence differs only within an intron
or other non-coding part of the gene, a full length sequence must
be obtained, which covers all coding and non-coding regions. In
the absence of a full length genomic sequence from the most closely
related allele, it may be required that this also be sequenced
and submitted before a name can be assigned to the novel sequence.
- Where possible, a paper in which the new sequence
is described should be submitted for publication. Draft publications can be submitted to the database by email or fax (+44 (0) 207 2848331).
- Sequences derived solely from tumour material will not be considered for nomenclature.
- The complete HLA type for HLA-A, -B, -DRB1 genes should be submitted for the material in which a novel allele has been defined. In addition the sample should have been characterised for the second allele at the locus of interest in a heterozygous individual.
- DNA or other material, preferably cell lines,
should, wherever possible, be made available in a publicly accessible
repository or alternatively, at least in the originating laboratory.
Documentation on this will be maintained by the WHO Nomenclature
Committee.
- Submission of a sequence to the Nomenclature Committee
should be performed using the online tool available at /imgt/hla/subs/submit.html.
Researchers will be expected to complete the following questionnaire
relating to the sequence and provide a comparison of their new
sequence with known related alleles. If the sequence cannot be
submitted using the online web tools researchers should contact IMGT/HLA directly for
details of alternative submission methods.
Although at present it is only a recommendation
that full-length sequences of the coding region of novel alleles
be submitted it was widely felt that in the future this should become
a requirement for submission. Such requirement would remove many
of the currently encountered ambiguities in the assignment of names
to alleles for which partial sequences have been submitted and should
not be burdensome as sequencing techniques have improved substantially
since the submission conditions were first devised. In cases where
novel mutations or polymorphisms are detected in non-coding regions
of the gene, it will be a requirement that full-length sequences
be submitted of both the novel allele and its most closely related
allele.
It should be noted with some caution that cells
from which only partial sequences have been obtained may later be
shown to have different or novel alleles when further sequencing
is performed. This is of particular importance in cases where partial
sequences of what appears to be the same allele have been obtained
from several different cells. In such cases, all cells studied have
been listed in this report.
Current practice is that official designations
will be promptly assigned to newly described alleles in periods
between Nomenclature Committee meetings, provided that the submitted
data and its accompanying description meet the criteria outlined
above. A list of the newly reported alleles is published each month
in nomenclature updates in the journals Tissue Antigens, Human Immunology
and the International Journal of Immunogenetics. The listing of
references to new sequences does not imply priority of publication.
The use of numbers or names for alleles, genes or specificities
which pre-empt assignment of official designations by the Nomenclature
Committee is strongly discouraged.
Information
For more information about the database, IMGT/HLA
queries (including website) or to subscribe to the IMGT/HLA mailing
list please contact IMGT/HLA Support. Please see our licence for our terms of use.
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