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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Male Old English Sheepdog with severe hemophilia A from factor VIII

By Lozier, Jay N et al.·Published in Comparative medicine·2016·Department of Laboratory Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Severe Hemophilia A in a Male Old English Sheep Dog with a C→T Transition that Created a Premature Stop Codon in Factor VIII.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A male Old English Sheepdog was diagnosed with severe hemophilia A after experiencing repeated bleeding episodes and joint swelling. Testing revealed that his blood factor VIII levels were extremely low, and genetic analysis identified a specific mutation causing this condition. Despite receiving factor VIII treatment, the dog has not developed antibodies that would interfere with the treatment. This case provides valuable insights into hemophilia A in dogs, which may help in developing better treatments for both dogs and humans.

People also search for: dog hemophilia A treatment · Old English Sheepdog bleeding problems · factor VIII deficiency in dogs

Abstract

Animals with hemophilia are models for gene therapy, factor replacement, and inhibitor development in humans. We have actively sought dogs with severe hemophilia A that have novel factor VIII mutations unlike the previously described factor VIII intron 22 inversion. A male Old English Sheepdog with recurrent soft-tissue hemorrhage and hemarthrosis was diagnosed with severe hemophilia A (factor VIII activity less than 1% of normal). We purified genomic DNA from this dog and ruled out the common intron 22 inversion; we then sequenced all 26 exons. Comparing the results with the normal canine factor VIII sequence revealed a C→T transition in exon 12 of the factor VIII gene that created a premature stop codon at amino acid 577 in the A2 domain of the protein. In addition, 2 previously described polymorphisms that do not cause hemophilia were present at amino acids 909 and 1184. The hemophilia mutation creates a new TaqI site that facilitates rapid genotyping of affected offspring by PCR and restriction endonuclease analyses. This mutation is analogous to the previously described human factor VIII mutation at Arg583, which likewise is a CpG dinucleotide transition causing a premature stop codon in exon 12. Thus far, despite extensive treatment with factor VIII, this dog has not developed neutralizing antibodies ('inhibitors') to the protein. This novel mutation in a dog gives rise to severe hemophilia A analogous to a mutation seen in humans. This model will be useful for studies of the treatment of hemophilia.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27780008/