Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Genetic mutation causes progressive brain disease in Golden Retrievers
By Gilliam, D et al.·Published in Molecular genetics and metabolism·2015·Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Golden Retriever dogs with neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis have a two-base-pair deletion and frameshift in CLN5.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of Golden Retriever siblings started showing signs of a serious brain disease at just 15 months old. Their symptoms included unsteady movements, anxiety, pacing, circling, tremors, aggression, vision problems, and seizures. Genetic testing revealed a mutation linked to this neurodegenerative condition, which caused the dogs to progressively worsen. Sadly, some affected dogs had to be euthanized due to the severity of their symptoms. Researchers are now working to preserve the genetic material of unaffected family members to potentially breed dogs without this mutation in the future.
People also search for: Golden Retriever seizures · dog neurological disease symptoms · CLN5 mutation in dogs
Abstract
We studied a recessive, progressive neurodegenerative disease occurring in Golden Retriever siblings with an onset of signs at 15 months of age. As the disease progressed these signs included ataxia, anxiety, pacing and circling, tremors, aggression, visual impairment and localized and generalized seizures. A whole genome sequence, generated with DNA from one affected dog, contained a plausibly causal homozygous mutation: CLN5:c.934_935delAG. This mutation was predicted to produce a frameshift and premature termination codon and encode a protein variant, CLN5:p.E312Vfs*6, which would lack 39 C-terminal amino acids. Eighteen DNA samples from the Golden Retriever family members were genotyped at CLN5:c.934_935delAG. Three clinically affected dogs were homozygous for the deletion allele; whereas, the clinically normal family members were either heterozygotes (n = 11) or homozygous for the reference allele (n = 4). Among archived Golden Retrievers DNA samples with incomplete clinical records that were also genotyped at the CLN5:c.934_935delAG variant, 1053 of 1062 were homozygous for the reference allele, 8 were heterozygotes and one was a deletion-allele homozygote. When contacted, the owner of this homozygote indicated that their dog had been euthanized because of a neurologic disease that progressed similarly to that of the affected Golden Retriever siblings. We have collected and stored semen from a heterozygous Golden Retriever, thereby preserving an opportunity for us or others to establish a colony of CLN5-deficient dogs.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25934231/