Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Hereditary nerve disease found again in Scandinavian Alaskan malamute
By Jäderlund, Karin Hultin et al.·Published in Acta veterinaria Scandinavica·2017·Department of Companion Animal Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Re-emergence of hereditary polyneuropathy in Scandinavian Alaskan malamute dogs-old enemy or new entity? A case series.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of Alaskan malamute dogs from Scandinavia and the USA were found to have a hereditary nerve disease called polyneuropathy, which affects their movement and coordination. Researchers discovered that both recent and historical cases of this disease shared the same genetic mutation, indicating that it has been passed down through generations from a common ancestor. This means that the disease has been silently present in the breed for decades. Understanding this genetic link can help breeders make informed decisions to reduce the risk of this condition in future litters.
People also search for: Alaskan malamute nerve disease · hereditary polyneuropathy in dogs · dog genetic testing for polyneuropathy
Abstract
A homozygous mutation has been identified in the N-myc downstream-regulated gene 1 (NDRG1) in recent cases of polyneuropathy in Alaskan malamute dogs from the Nordic countries and USA. The objective of the present study was to determine if cases diagnosed 30-40 years ago with polyneuropathy in the Alaskan malamute breed in Norway had the same hereditary disease as the recent cases. Fourteen historical cases and 12 recently diagnosed Alaskan malamute dogs with hereditary polyneuropathy, and their parents and littermates (n = 88) were included in this study (total n = 114). After phenotyping of historical and recent cases, NDRG1 genotyping was performed using DNA extracted from archived material from five Norwegian dogs affected by the disease in the late 1970s and 1980s. In addition, pedigrees were analysed. Our study concluded that historical and recent phenotypic polyneuropathy cases were carrying the same NDRG1-mutation. The pedigree analysis showed that all affected Alaskan malamute cases with polyneuropathy could be traced back to one common ancestor of North American origin. By this study, a well-documented example of the silent transmission of recessive disease-causing alleles through many generations is provided, demonstrated by the re-emergence of a phenotypically and genetically uniform entity in the Scandinavian Alaskan malamute population.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28464941/