Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Progressive retinal blindness gene found in English Shepherd dogs
By Stanbury, Katherine et al.·Published in Genes·2024·Department of Veterinary Medicine, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Exonic Short Interspersed Nuclear Element Insertion inIs Associated with Autosomal Recessive Progressive Retinal Atrophy in the English Shepherd.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
Two English Shepherds, both around 5 years old, were diagnosed with progressive retinal atrophy (PRA), a genetic eye disease that leads to vision loss and eventually blindness. Despite being tested for known genetic variants, they were found to have a new genetic mutation linked to this condition. Unfortunately, there is no treatment for PRA, but the discovery of this genetic variant means that breeders can now screen for it, helping to prevent future puppies from developing this serious eye problem.
People also search for: English Shepherd eye problems · progressive retinal atrophy in dogs · dog genetic testing for PRA
Abstract
Progressive retinal atrophies (PRAs) are a genetically heterogeneous group of inherited eye diseases that affect over 100 breeds of dog. The initial clinical sign is visual impairment in scotopic conditions, as a consequence of rod photoreceptor cell degeneration. Photopic vision degeneration then follows, due to progression of the disease to the cone photoreceptors, and ultimately results in complete blindness. Two full-sibling English Shepherds were diagnosed with PRA at approximately 5 years old and tested clear of all published PRA genetic variants. This study sought to identify the novel PRA-associated variant segregating in the breed. We utilised a combined approach of whole genome sequencing of the probands and homozygosity mapping of four cases and 22 controls and identified a short interspersed nuclear element within an alternatively spliced exon in. The XP_005626197.1 c.17929_ins210 variant was homozygous in six PRA cases and heterozygous or absent in control dogs, consistent with a recessive mode of inheritance. The insertion is predicted to extend exon 4 by 39 aberrant amino acids followed by an early termination stop codon. PRA is intractable to treatment, so the development of a genetic screening test, based on the associated variant, is significant, because it provides dog breeders/owners with a means of reducing the frequency of the disease variant within this breed as well as minimising the risk of breeding puppies that will develop this blinding disease.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39062732/