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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

New gene variants linked to kidney malformation in dogs

By Whiteley, Mary H et al.·Published in PloS one·2011·DOGenes Inc., Canada·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Novel allelic variants in the canine cyclooxgenase-2 (Cox-2) promoter are associated with renal dysplasia in dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study found that certain genetic changes in the Cox-2 gene may be linked to renal dysplasia (RD), a kidney disease in dogs. Researchers looked at affected dogs, including a family of Lhasa Apsos, and discovered specific mutations that could affect how the Cox-2 gene works. These mutations were present in dogs of various breeds with RD, suggesting that they might play a role in the disease's unusual inheritance pattern. Understanding these genetic factors could help in diagnosing and managing RD in dogs more effectively.

People also search for: dog kidney disease symptoms · Lhasa Apso renal dysplasia · Cox-2 gene in dogs · dog kidney disease treatment

Abstract

Renal dysplasia (RD) in dogs is a complex disease with a highly variable phenotype and mode of inheritance that does not follow a simple Mendelian pattern. Cox-2 (Cyclooxgenase-2) deficient mice have renal abnormalities and a pathology that has striking similarities to RD in dogs suggesting to us that mutations in the Cox-2 gene could be the cause of RD in dogs. Our data supports this hypothesis. Sequencing of the canine Cox-2 gene was done from clinically affected and normal dogs. Although no changes were detected in the Cox-2 coding region, small insertions and deletions of GC boxes just upstream of the ATG translation start site were found. These sequences are putative SP1 transcription factor binding sites that may represent important cis-acting DNA regulatory elements that govern the expression of Cox-2. A pedigree study of a family of Lhasa apsos revealed an important statistical correlation of these mutant alleles with the disease. We examined an additional 22 clinical cases from various breeds. Regardless of the breed or severity of disease, all of these had one or two copies of the Cox-2 allelic variants. We suggest that the unusual inheritance pattern of RD is due to these alleles, either by changing the pattern of expression of Cox-2 or making Cox-2 levels susceptible to influences of other genes or environmental factors that play an unknown but important role in the development of RD in dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21346820/