Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How cataracts and lens luxation run in Jack Russell Terriers
By Oberbauer, Anita M et al.·Published in American journal of veterinary research·2008·Department of Animal Science, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Inheritance of cataracts and primary lens luxation in Jack Russell Terriers.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A study found that cataracts and primary lens luxation (a condition where the lens of the eye dislocates) are common inherited eye problems in Jack Russell Terriers. The research involved nearly 3,000 dogs and showed that these conditions are highly heritable, meaning they can be passed down through generations. Importantly, cataracts in these dogs were not linked to a specific genetic mutation. To help improve eye health in Jack Russell Terriers, breeders are encouraged to select against these conditions when choosing which dogs to breed.
People also search for: Jack Russell Terrier cataracts treatment · primary lens luxation in dogs · inherited eye problems in Jack Russell Terriers
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To characterize heritability and mode of inheritance of cataracts and primary lens luxation in Jack Russell Terriers. ANIMALS: 872 Jack Russell Terriers from which buccal epithelial cells were collected and phenotypes for cataracts and lens luxation were determined and an additional 1,898 Jack Russell Terriers without phenotypic information used to complete pedigree relationships and that were included in the analyses. PROCEDURES: Narrow-sense heritabilities and genetic correlation for cataracts and lens luxation were modeled by use of threshold analysis, whereas complex segregation analysis was used to characterize mode of inheritance. For the analyses, dogs < 6 years old, unless confirmed as having cataracts or lens luxation, were classified as an unknown phenotype. The possible involvement of an HSF4 mutation in cataracts was determined by DNA sequencing. RESULTS: Cataracts and primary lens luxation were highly heritable and genetically correlated, and neither was controlled by a single gene. Cataracts were not associated with an HSF4 mutation. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Analysis of the data indicated that concerted selection against both cataracts and primary lens luxation when choosing breeding animals can be used to improve ocular health in Jack Russell Terriers.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18241019/