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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

British Shorthair kittens with spine and bone deformities

By Rudd Garces, Gabriela et al.·Published in Genes·2021·Institute of Genetics·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Frameshift Variant in British Shorthair Cats with Complex Skeletal Dysplasia.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

Two British Shorthair kittens were brought to the vet because they were having trouble walking due to serious skeletal issues. X-rays showed that their spines had deformities and narrowing of the spinal canal, which can lead to pressure on the spinal cord. Genetic testing revealed a specific mutation that likely caused these bone problems. Unfortunately, the kittens' condition is linked to their inbreeding, and the findings suggest that this genetic issue could lead to similar problems in other cats from the same lineage.

People also search for: British Shorthair kitten walking problems · cat skeletal dysplasia symptoms · genetic issues in inbred cats

Abstract

We investigated a highly inbred family of British Shorthair cats in which two offspring were affected by deteriorating paraparesis due to complex skeletal malformations. Radiographs of both affected kittens revealed vertebral deformations with marked stenosis of the vertebral canal from T11 to L3. Additionally, compression of the spinal cord, cerebellar herniation, coprostasis and hypogangliosis were found. The pedigree suggested monogenic autosomal recessive inheritance of the trait. We sequenced the genome of an affected kitten and compared the data to 62 control genomes. This search yielded 55 private protein-changing variants of which only one was located in a likely functional candidate gene,, encoding latent transforming growth factor β binding protein 3. This variant, c.158delG or p.(Gly53Alafs*16), represents a 1 bp frameshift deletion predicted to truncate 95% of the open reading frame. LTBP3 is a known key regulator of transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) and is involved in bone morphogenesis and remodeling. Genotypes at the:c.158delG variant perfectly co-segregated with the phenotype in the investigated family. The available experimental data together with current knowledge onvariants and their functional impact in human patients and mice suggest:c.158delG as a candidate causative variant for the observed skeletal malformations in British Shorthair cats. To the best of our knowledge, this study represents the first report of-related complex skeletal dysplasia in domestic animals.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34946872/