Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Newborn Basset Hounds with Blistering Skin Disease and Claw Loss
By Garcia, Teresa Maria et al.Ā·Published in GenesĀ·2020Ā·Department of Biomedical Sciences, United StatesĀ·View original on PubMed ā
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Original publication title: AVariant in a Litter of Neonatal Basset Hounds with Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
Three newborn Basset Hound puppies were found to have serious skin issues, including blisters and ulcers on their noses and paw pads, due to a genetic condition called epidermolysis bullosa (EB). Sadly, two of the puppies died, and one had to be euthanized. Genetic testing revealed a specific mutation linked to the disease, which affects the collagen in their skin. This discovery helps clarify the diagnosis and could be important for understanding and managing this condition in affected dogs.
People also search for: Basset Hound skin problems Ā· puppy blisters treatment Ā· epidermolysis bullosa in dogs
Abstract
We investigated three neonatal Basset Hound littermates with lesions consistent with epidermolysis bullosa (EB), a group of genetic blistering diseases. A clinically normal bitch was bred to her grandfather by artificial insemination. Out of a litter of seven puppies, two affected puppies died and one was euthanized, with these puppies being submitted for diagnostic necropsy. All had multiple bullae and ulcers involving the nasal planum and paw pads, as well as sloughing claws; one puppy also had oral and esophageal ulcers. The complete genome of one affected puppy was sequenced, and 37 known EB candidate genes were assessed. We found a candidate causative variant in, which encodes the collagen VII alpha 1 chain. The variant is a complex rearrangement involving duplication of a 107 bp region harboring a frameshift deletion of 7 bp. The variant is predicted to truncate more than 75% of the open reading frame, p.(Val677Serfs*11). Targeted genotyping of this duplication confirmed that all three affected puppies were homozygous for the duplication, whereas 12 unaffected Basset Hounds did not carry the duplication. This variant was also not seen in the genomes of more than 600 dogs of other breeds.variants have been identified in humans and dogs with dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (DEB). The identifiedvariant therefore most likely represents the causative variant and allows the refinement of the preliminary EB diagnosis to DEB.
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Search related cases āOriginal publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33291836/