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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

German Spitz dogs with albinism linked to OCA2 gene variant

By Caduff, Madleina et al.·Published in PloS one·2017·Institute of Genetics·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: OCA2 splice site variant in German Spitz dogs with oculocutaneous albinism.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A German Spitz family had three puppies with unusual light brown coats, blue eyes, and lightly pigmented lips and noses. This unexpected coloring was linked to a genetic variant in the OCA2 gene, which is known to cause albinism in various species. Researchers found that this genetic change was inherited in the affected puppies, while other dogs with normal pigmentation did not have the variant. Understanding this genetic cause can help breeders avoid producing puppies with similar albinism traits in the future.

People also search for: German Spitz albinism · dog blue eyes genetic condition · OCA2 gene in dogs

Abstract

We investigated a German Spitz family where the mating of a black male to a white female had yielded three puppies with an unexpected light brown coat color, lightly pigmented lips and noses, and blue eyes. Combined linkage and homozygosity analysis based on a fully penetrant monogenic autosomal recessive mode of inheritance identified a critical interval of 15 Mb on chromosome 3. We obtained whole genome sequence data from one affected dog, three wolves, and 188 control dogs. Filtering for private variants revealed a single variant with predicted high impact in the critical interval in LOC100855460 (XM_005618224.1:c.377+2T>G LT844587.1:c.-45+2T>G). The variant perfectly co-segregated with the phenotype in the family. We genotyped 181 control dogs with normal pigmentation from diverse breeds including 22 unrelated German Spitz dogs, which were all homozygous wildtype. Comparative sequence analyses revealed that LOC100855460 actually represents the 5'-end of the canine OCA2 gene. The CanFam 3.1 reference genome assembly is incorrect and separates the first two exons from the remaining exons of the OCA2 gene. We amplified a canine OCA2 cDNA fragment by RT-PCR and determined the correct full-length mRNA sequence (LT844587.1). Variants in the OCA2 gene cause oculocutaneous albinism type 2 (OCA2) in humans, pink-eyed dilution in mice, and similar phenotypes in corn snakes, medaka and Mexican cave tetra fish. We therefore conclude that the observed oculocutaneous albinism in German Spitz is most likely caused by the identified variant in the 5'-splice site of the first intron of the canine OCA2 gene.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28973042/