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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Italian Greyhound puppy with muscle disease and weak walk at 4 months

By Christen, Matthias et al.·Published in Genes·2021·Institute of Genetics·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Nonsense Variant in an Italian Greyhound with Congenital Muscular Dystrophy.

Species:
dog
Movement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A 4-month-old male Italian Greyhound was brought in for poor growth and an unusual walking pattern that included short strides and muscle wasting. Blood tests showed high levels of a muscle enzyme, and further tests confirmed a muscle disease. A genetic analysis revealed a specific mutation linked to congenital muscular dystrophy (CMD), which affects muscle strength and function. Unfortunately, this condition is serious, and the dog may require ongoing care to manage symptoms, as there is currently no cure for CMD.

People also search for: Italian Greyhound muscle disease · puppy poor growth symptoms · congenital muscular dystrophy in dogs

Abstract

A 4-month-old, male Italian Greyhound with clinical signs of a neuromuscular disease was investigated. The affected dog presented with an abnormal short-strided gait, generalized muscle atrophy, and poor growth since 2-months of age. Serum biochemistry revealed a marked elevation in creatine kinase activity. Electrodiagnostic testing supported a myopathy. Histopathology of muscle biopsies confirmed a dystrophic phenotype with excessive variability in myofiber size, degenerating fibers, and endomysial fibrosis. A heritable form of congenital muscular dystrophy (CMD) was suspected, and a genetic analysis initiated. We sequenced the genome of the affected dog and compared the data to that of 795 control genomes. This search revealed a private homozygous nonsense variant in, XM_022419950.1:c.3285G>A, predicted to truncate 65% of the open reading frame of the wild type laminin α2 protein, XP_022275658.1:p.(Trp1095*). Immunofluorescent staining performed on muscle cryosections from the affected dog confirmed the complete absence of laminin α2 in skeletal muscle.loss of function variants were shown to cause severe laminin α2-related CMD in humans, mouse models, and in one previously described dog. Our data together with current knowledge on other species suggest thenonsense variant as cause for the CMD phenotype in the investigated dog.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34828429/