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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Inherited bleeding disorder like hemophilia B in Hovawart dogs

By Brenig, Bertram et al.·Published in Haematologica·2019·University of G&#xf6, Germany·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Christmas disease in a Hovawart family resembling human hemophilia B Leyden is caused by a single nucleotide deletion in a highly conserved transcription factor binding site of thegene promoter.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A family of Hovawart dogs experienced serious bleeding issues due to a genetic condition similar to hemophilia B, which is a bleeding disorder in humans. Five male dogs in the family had recurrent hemorrhagic episodes and were found to have very low levels of a crucial blood-clotting protein. Genetic testing revealed a specific deletion in their DNA that affected the production of this protein. This condition is rare in dogs, and the affected dogs may require special care to manage their bleeding episodes.

People also search for: Hovawart bleeding disorder · dog hemophilia B symptoms · treatment for dog bleeding issues

Abstract

Hemophilia B is a classical monogenic, X-chromosomal, recessively transmitted bleeding disorder caused by genetic variants within the coagulation factor IX gene (). Although hemophilia B has been described in dogs, it has not yet been reported in the Hovawart breed. Here we describe the identification of a Hovawart family transmitting typical signs of an X-linked bleeding disorder. Five males were reported to suffer from recurrent hemorrhagic episodes. A blood sample from one of these males with only 2% of the normal concentration of plasma factor IX together with samples from seven relatives were provided. Next-generation sequencing of the mother and grandmother revealed a single nucleotide deletion in thepromoter. Genotyping of the deletion in 1,298 dog specimens including 720 Hovawarts revealed that the mutant allele was only present in the aforementioned Hovawart family. The deletion is located 73 bp upstream of thestart codon in the conserved overlapping DNA binding sites of hepatocyte nuclear factor 4α (HNF-4α) and androgen receptor (AR). The deletion only abolished binding of HNF-4α, while AR binding was unaffected as demonstrated by electrophoretic mobility shift assay using human HNF-4α and AR with double-stranded DNA probes encompassing the mutant promoter region. Luciferase reporter assays using wildtype and mutated promoter fragment constructs transfected into Hep G2 cells showed a significant reduction in expression from the mutant promoter. The data provide evidence that the deletion in the Hovawart family caused a rare type of hemophilia B resembling human hemophilia B Leyden.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30846504/