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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Muscle stiffness in Australian Cattle Dog linked to new CLCN1 gene

By Finnigan, Daniel F et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2007·Department of Biomedical Sciences, Canada·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A novel mutation of the CLCN1 gene associated with myotonia hereditaria in an Australian cattle dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A purebred Australian Cattle Dog was brought in for muscle stiffness and enlargement after exercise, which made it difficult for the dog to relax its muscles. The veterinarian diagnosed the dog with a genetic muscle disorder called myotonia hereditaria, confirmed through tests and a muscle biopsy. Genetic analysis revealed a mutation in the CLCN1 gene, which affects muscle function. This case is significant as it is the first documented instance of myotonia in this breed, and a genetic test was developed to help identify other dogs that may carry this mutation.

People also search for: Australian Cattle Dog muscle stiffness · myotonia hereditaria in dogs · genetic testing for dog muscle disorders

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Heritable myotonia is a genetic muscle disorder characterized by slow relaxation of skeletal muscles. The main clinical signs are skeletal muscle stiffness, especially after vigorous contraction, and muscle hypertrophy. Muscle stiffness may be enhanced by inactivity, and often is relieved by exercise. Myotonia can be inherited in an autosomal dominant or recessive manner (Thomsen- or Becker-type myotonia, respectively). In mice, goats, Miniature Schnauzer dogs, and most affected humans, the disorder is caused by mutations in CLCN1, which encodes the skeletal muscle voltage-gated chloride channel, Cl1C-1. HYPOTHESIS: We hypothesized that an Australian Cattle Dog with generalized muscle stiffness and hypertrophy examined at the Ontario Veterinary College would have a mutation in the CLCN1 gene. ANIMALS: A pure-bred Australian Cattle Dog from Ontario, Canada, was used. METHODS: Based on clinical signs and electromyographic test results, a diagnosis of myotonia hereditaria was made, and a muscle biopsy was collected for genetic analysis. RESULTS: Sequence data obtained from the affected dog confirmed that it was homozygous for a single base insertion in the CLCN1 coding sequence. This mutation would result in a truncated ClC-1 protein being expressed, which, based on molecular evidence from other studies, would result in functionally compromised chloride conduction in the skeletal muscles of the animal. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: To the authors' knowledge, this report describes the Ist case of myotonia in an Australian Cattle Dog and represents the 1st non-Schnauzer canine myotonia to be genetically characterized. In addition, we developed a polymerase chain reaction-based genetic screen to detect heterozygotes with this mutation in the at-large Australian Cattle Dog population.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17552451/