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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

New type of progressive eye disease found in German Spitz dogs

By Bortolini, Mariza et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2023·Department of Veterinary Medicine, Brazil·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Preliminary characterization of a novel form of progressive retinal atrophy in the German Spitz dog associated with a frameshift mutation in GUCY2D.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of German Spitz dogs was found to have a new form of progressive retinal atrophy (PRA), which caused vision problems in affected puppies. Symptoms included impaired vision in low and bright light, and some puppies showed abnormal eye movements. Tests revealed that the dogs had significant issues with their retinal function, although the structure of their retinas appeared normal at first. A genetic mutation was identified as the cause of this condition. Unfortunately, as the dogs aged, they experienced some thinning of the retina.

People also search for: German Spitz eye problems · progressive retinal atrophy in dogs · dog vision loss treatment

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinical, preliminary electroretinographic and optical coherence tomography features of a newly identified form of progressive retinal atrophy (PRA) in German Spitzes, and identify the causal gene mutation. ANIMALS: Thirty-three client-owned German Spitz dogs were included. PROCEDURES: All animals underwent a full ophthalmic examination, including vision testing. In addition, fundus photography, ERG, and OCT were performed. A DNA-marker-based association analysis was performed to screen potential candidate genes and the whole genomes of four animals were sequenced. RESULTS: Initial fundus changes were pale papilla and mild vascular attenuation. Oscillatory nystagmus was noted in 14 of 16 clinically affected puppies. Vision was impaired under both scotopic and photopic conditions. Rod-mediated ERGs were unrecordable in all affected dogs tested, reduced cone-mediated responses were present in one animal at 3 months of age and unrecordable in the other affected animals tested. Multiple small retinal bullae were observed in three clinically affected animals (two with confirmed genetic diagnosis). OCT showed that despite loss of function, retinal structure was initially well-preserved, although a slight retinal thinning developed in older animals with the ventral retina being more severely affected. Pedigree analysis supported an autosomal recessive inheritance. A mutation was identified in GUCY2D, which segregated with the disease (NM_001003207.1:c.1598_1599insT; p.(Ser534GlufsTer20)). Human subjects with GUCY2D mutations typically show an initial disconnect between loss of function and loss of structure, a feature recapitulated in the affected dogs in this study. CONCLUSION: We identified early-onset PRA in the German Spitz associated with a frameshift mutation in GUCY2D.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36872573/