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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Eurasier dogs with cerebellar hypoplasia have VLDLR gene deletion

By Gerber, Martina et al.·Published in PloS one·2015·Institute of Genetics·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A deletion in the VLDLR gene in Eurasier dogs with cerebellar hypoplasia resembling a Dandy-Walker-like malformation (DWLM).

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of Eurasier dogs with cerebellar hypoplasia, which causes coordination problems, were found to have a genetic mutation linked to this brain development issue. Researchers identified a specific deletion in the VLDLR gene that appears to cause the symptoms associated with Dandy-Walker-like malformation (DWLM). This genetic change leads to a non-progressive form of ataxia, meaning the dogs have trouble with balance and movement but do not worsen over time. Understanding this genetic cause can help breeders and owners be aware of potential health issues in this breed.

People also search for: Eurasier dog cerebellar hypoplasia · dog balance problems · genetic testing for dogs · Dandy-Walker-like malformation in dogs

Abstract

Dandy-Walker-like malformation (DWLM) is the result of aberrant brain development and mainly characterized by cerebellar hypoplasia. DWLM affected dogs display a non-progressive cerebellar ataxia. Several DWLM cases were recently observed in the Eurasier dog breed, which strongly suggested a monogenic autosomal recessive inheritance in this breed. We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) with 9 cases and 11 controls and found the best association of DWLM with markers on chromosome 1. Subsequent homozygosity mapping confirmed that all 9 cases were homozygous for a shared haplotype in this region, which delineated a critical interval of 3.35 Mb. We sequenced the genome of an affected Eurasier and compared it with the Boxer reference genome and 47 control genomes of dogs from other breeds. This analysis revealed 4 private non-synonymous variants in the critical interval of the affected Eurasier. We genotyped these variants in additional dogs and found perfect association for only one of these variants, a single base deletion in the VLDLR gene encoding the very low density lipoprotein receptor. This variant, VLDLR:c.1713delC is predicted to cause a frameshift and premature stop codon (p.W572Gfs*10). Variants in the VLDLR gene have been shown to cause congenital cerebellar ataxia and mental retardation in human patients and Vldlr knockout mice also display an ataxia phenotype. Our combined genetic data together with the functional knowledge on the VLDLR gene from other species thus strongly suggest that VLDLR:c.1713delC is indeed causing DWLM in Eurasier dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25668033/