Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Gene mutation linked to inherited blindness in cats
By Menotti-Raymond, Marilyn et al.·Published in Investigative ophthalmology & visual science·2010·National Cancer Institute-Frederick, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Mutation discovered in a feline model of human congenital retinal blinding disease.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of cats with a genetic eye condition called rod-cone dysplasia (Rdy) was studied to understand the cause of their vision problems. These cats showed symptoms similar to young children with congenital blindness. Researchers found a specific mutation in a gene called CRX that was linked to the disease, which affects their ability to see. This discovery not only helps explain the condition in these cats but also provides a model for studying similar eye diseases in humans and testing potential treatments.
People also search for: cat eye problems · congenital blindness in cats · CRX gene mutation in cats · feline retinal disease treatment
Abstract
PURPOSE: To elucidate the gene defect in a pedigree of cats segregating for autosomal dominant rod-cone dysplasia (Rdy), a retinopathy characterized extensively from a clinical perspective. Disease expression in Rdy cats is comparable to that in young patients with congenital blindness (Leber congenital amaurosis [LCA] or retinitis pigmentosa [RP]). METHODS: A pedigree segregating for Rdy was generated and phenotyped by clinical ophthalmic examination methods including ophthalmoscopy and full-field flash electroretinography. Short tandem repeat loci tightly linked to candidate genes for autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa in humans were genotyped in the pedigree. RESULTS: Significant linkage was established to the candidate gene CRX (LOD = 5.56, = 0) on cat chromosome E2. A single base pair deletion was identified in exon 4 (n.546delC) in affected individuals but not in unaffected littermates. This mutation generates a frame shift in the transcript, introducing a premature stop codon truncating the putative CRX peptide, which would eliminate the critical transcriptional activation region. Clinical observations corroborate previously reported clinical reports about Rdy. Results show that the cone photoreceptor system was more severely affected than the rods in the early disease process. CONCLUSIONS: A putative mutation causative of the Rdy phenotype has been described as a single base pair deletion in exon 4 of the CRX gene, thus identifying the first animal model for CRX-linked disease that closely resembles the human disease. As such, it will provide valuable insights into the mechanisms underlying these diseases and their variable presentation, as well as providing a suitable model for testing therapies for these diseases.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20053974/