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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Congenital hypothyroidism with goiter from SLC5A5 mutation

By Soler Arias, E A et al.·Published in Domestic animal endocrinology·2018·Hospital Escuela de Medicina Veterinaria·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Congenital dyshormonogenic hypothyroidism with goiter caused by a sodium/iodide symporter (SLC5A5) mutation in a family of Shih-Tzu dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A family of Shih-Tzu dogs had a genetic issue causing congenital hypothyroidism with goiter, which led to a moderate growth delay in one adult dog. Both affected dogs also developed heart problems at a young age. A specific mutation in the SLC5A5 gene, responsible for iodide transport in the thyroid, was identified as the cause. Unfortunately, one dog had to undergo surgery for thyroid cancer, while the other showed signs of thyroid tissue abnormalities after passing away. This case highlights a new genetic cause of hypothyroidism in dogs.

People also search for: Shih-Tzu growth delay · dog goiter symptoms · congenital hypothyroidism in dogs · thyroid cancer in dogs · heart problems in young dogs

Abstract

An iodide transport defect (ITD) in the thyroid gland was determined to cause congenital dyshormonogenic hypothyroidism with goiter (CDHG) in 2 members of a family of Shih-Tzu dogs. Strikingly, both dogs were also diagnosed with dilated cardiomyopathy at 24 and 1.5 mo of age. The only sign of hypothyroidism was a moderate growth delay in the adult dog. The ITD was recognized by the absence of uptake of technetium-99m in the salivary glands (sg) and goiter observed by scintigraphy. In the same scan, radiopharmaceutical uptake was found in the anterior mediastinum of both dogs and in the right axillary lymph node in the oldest dog. A follicular thyroid carcinoma was diagnosed by histopathology after thyroidectomy of the older dog. An adenomatous goiter with ectopic thyroid tissue, and degenerative changes in myocardium were the findings after necropsy in the youngest dog. A homozygous mutation of the intron 9 splice acceptor site of SLC5A5 gene, encoding the sodium/iodine symporter (NIS), was found in the DNA of one of the affected dogs. The mutation was a single base transition of guanine > adenine (G > A) at position 45,024,672 of dog chromosome 20 (CFA20). Five of eight healthy dogs, including both parents of one of the dogs exhibiting CDHG, were heterozygous A/G, and the other 3 were homozygous for the wild-type allele G/G. No sequence variant was found in thyroid peroxidase of the affected dog. Congenital dyshormonogenic hypothyroidism with goiter in this family is an autosomal recessive trait. Our findings are the first evidence of an SLC5A5 mutation in dogs and establish a new genetic cause of CDHG.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29777899/