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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

COLQ gene variant linked to muscle weakness in Devon Rex and Sphynx

By Gandolfi, Barbara et al.·Published in Animal genetics·2015·Department of Veterinary Medicine and Surgery, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: COLQ variant associated with Devon Rex and Sphynx feline hereditary myopathy.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of Devon Rex and Sphynx cats showed signs of muscle weakness, trouble swallowing, and fatigue during exercise due to a genetic condition called congenital myasthenic syndrome (CMS). Muscle tests revealed various issues, and a specific genetic variant was identified as the cause. Genetic testing can help confirm the diagnosis and identify carrier cats, which is important for breeders and owners. Understanding this condition can lead to better treatment options for affected cats.

People also search for: Devon Rex muscle weakness · Sphynx cat swallowing problems · congenital myasthenic syndrome in cats

Abstract

Some Devon Rex and Sphynx cats have a variably progressive myopathy characterized by appendicular and axial muscle weakness, megaesophagus, pharyngeal weakness and fatigability with exercise. Muscle biopsies from affected cats demonstrated variable pathological changes ranging from dystrophic features to minimal abnormalities. Affected cats have exacerbation of weakness following anticholinesterase dosing, a clue that there is an underlying congenital myasthenic syndrome (CMS). A genome-wide association study and whole-genome sequencing suggested a causal variant for this entity was a c.1190G>A variant causing a cysteine to tyrosine substitution (p.Cys397Tyr) within the C-terminal domain of collagen-like tail subunit (single strand of homotrimer) of asymmetric acetylcholinesterase (COLQ). Alpha-dystroglycan expression, which is associated with COLQ anchorage at the motor end-plate, has been shown to be deficient in affected cats. Eighteen affected cats were identified by genotyping, including cats from the original clinical descriptions in 1993 and subsequent publications. Eight Devon Rex and one Sphynx not associated with the study were identified as carriers, suggesting an allele frequency of ~2.0% in Devon Rex. Over 350 tested cats from other breeds did not have the variant. Characteristic clinical features and variant presence in all affected cats suggest a model for COLQ CMS. The association between the COLQ variant and this CMS affords clinicians the opportunity to confirm diagnosis via genetic testing and permits owners and breeders to identify carriers in the population. Moreover, accurate diagnosis increases available therapeutic options for affected cats based on an understanding of the pathophysiology and experience from human CMS associated with COLQ variants.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26374066/