Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Thyroid gene mutations found in cats with hyperthyroidism like humans
By Watson, S G et al.·Published in Journal of Endocrinology·2005·View original on Crossref →
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Original publication title: Somatic mutations of the thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor gene in feline hyperthyroidism: parallels with human hyperthyroidism
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of 50 hyperthyroid cats was studied to understand the genetic changes linked to their condition. Hyperthyroidism is common in cats and can cause symptoms like increased thirst, weight loss, and hyperactivity. Researchers found various mutations in a specific gene related to thyroid function, with many cats showing multiple mutations. This discovery helps explain how hyperthyroidism develops in cats and highlights its similarities to a similar condition in humans. Understanding these genetic changes could lead to better treatments for affected cats.
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Abstract
Hyperthyroidism is the most common endocrinopathy in cats, and is both clinically and histopathologically very similar to human toxic nodular goitre (TNG). Molecular studies on human TNG have revealed the presence of mis-sense mutations in the thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor (TSHR) gene, most frequently in exon 10. Our hypothesis was that similar mutations exist in hyperthyroid cats. Genomic DNA was extracted from 134 hyperplastic/ adenomatous nodules (from 50 hyperthyroid cats), and analysed for the presence of mutations in exon 10 of the TSHR gene. 11 different mutations were detected, one silent and 10 mis-sense, of which nine were somatic mutations. 28 of the 50 cats (67/134 nodules) had at least one mis-sense mutation. The mis-sense mutations were Met-452→Thr in 17 cats (35 nodules), Ser-504→Arg (two different mutational forms) in two cats (two nodules), Val-508→Arg in one cat (three nodules), Arg-530→Gln in one cat (two nodules), Val-557→Leu in 13 cats (36 nodules), Thr-631→Ala or Thr-631→Phe (each mutation seen in one nodule of one cat), Asp-632→Tyr in six cats (10 nodules) and Asp-632→His in one cat (one nodule). Five of these mutations have been associated previously with human hyperthyroidism. Of the 41 cats for which more than one nodule was available, 14 had nodules with different mutations. The identification of a potential genetic basis for feline hyperthyroidism is novel, increases our understanding of the pathogenesis of this significant feline disease, and confirms its similarity to TNG.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.1677/joe.1.06277