Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Progressive retinal atrophy gene found in Finnish Lapphund dogs
By Aguirre-Hernández, Jesús et al.·Published in BMC veterinary research·2007·University of Cambridge, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: The Finnish lapphund retinal atrophy locus maps to the centromeric region of CFA9.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A Finnish Lapphund was found to have progressive retinal atrophy, a condition that leads to vision loss. Researchers identified a specific genetic marker linked to this eye disease on chromosome 9, which helps explain why some dogs in this breed develop vision problems. By studying DNA from affected dogs and their relatives, they confirmed that the same genetic mutation is present in both Finnish and Swedish Lapphunds. This discovery can help breeders make informed decisions to reduce the incidence of this condition in these breeds.
People also search for: Finnish Lapphund eye problems · progressive retinal atrophy in dogs · dog genetic testing for vision loss
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dogs have the second largest number of genetic diseases, after humans. Among the diseases present in dogs, progressive retinal atrophy has been reported in more than a hundred breeds. In some of them, the mutation has been identified and genetic tests have allowed the identification of carriers, thus enabling a drastic reduction in the incidence of the disease. The Finnish lapphund is a dog breed presenting late-onset progressive retinal atrophy for which the disease locus remains unknown. RESULTS: In this study we mapped the progressive retinal atrophy locus in the Finnish lapphund using a DNA pooling approach, assuming that all affected dogs within the breed share the same identical-by descent-mutation as the cause of the disease (genetic homogeneity). Autosomal recessive inheritance was also assumed, after ruling out, from pedigree analysis, dominant and X-linked inheritance. DNA from 12 Finnish lapphund cases was mixed in one pool, and DNA from 12 first-degree relatives of these cases was mixed to serve as the control pool. The 2 pools were tested with 133 microsatellite markers, 3 of which showed a shift towards homozygosity in the cases. Individual genotyping with these 3 markers confirmed homozygosity for the GALK1 microsatellite only (chromosome 9). Further individual genotyping with additional samples (4 cases and 59 controls) confirmed the association between this marker and the disease locus (p < 0.001). Closely related to this breed are the Swedish lapphund and the Lapponian herder for which a small number of retinal atrophy cases have been reported. Swedish lapphund cases, but not Lapponian herder cases, had the same GALK1 microsatellite genotype as Finnish lapphund cases. CONCLUSION: The locus for progressive rod-cone degeneration is known to be close to the GALK1 locus, on the telomeric region of chromosome 9, where the retinal atrophy locus of the Finnish lapphund has been mapped. This suggests that the disease in this breed, as well as in the Swedish lapphund, may correspond to progressive rod-cone degeneration. This would increase the number of known dog breeds having this particular form of progressive retinal atrophy.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17623091/