| Literature DB >> 21750681 |
Laura Y Fox-Clipsham1, Stuart D Carter, Ian Goodhead, Neil Hall, Derek C Knottenbelt, Paul D F May, William E Ollier, June E Swinburne.
Abstract
The Fell and Dales are rare native UK pony breeds at risk due to falling numbers, in-breeding, and inherited disease. Specifically, the lethal Mendelian recessive disease Foal Immunodeficiency Syndrome (FIS), which manifests as B-lymphocyte immunodeficiency and progressive anemia, is a substantial threat. A significant percentage (∼10%) of the Fell ponies born each year dies from FIS, compromising the long-term survival of this breed. Moreover, the likely spread of FIS into other breeds is of major concern. Indeed, FIS was identified in the Dales pony, a related breed, during the course of this work. Using a stepwise approach comprising linkage and homozygosity mapping followed by haplotype analysis, we mapped the mutation using 14 FIS-affected, 17 obligate carriers, and 10 adults of unknown carrier status to a ∼1 Mb region (29.8 - 30.8 Mb) on chromosome (ECA) 26. A subsequent genome-wide association study identified two SNPs on ECA26 that showed genome-wide significance after Bonferroni correction for multiple testing: BIEC2-692674 at 29.804 Mb and BIEC2-693138 at 32.19 Mb. The associated region spanned 2.6 Mb from ∼29.6 Mb to 32.2 Mb on ECA26. Re-sequencing of this region identified a mutation in the sodium/myo-inositol cotransporter gene (SLC5A3); this causes a P446L substitution in the protein. This gene plays a crucial role in the regulatory response to osmotic stress that is essential in many tissues including lymphoid tissues and during early embryonic development. We propose that the amino acid substitution we identify here alters the function of SLC5A3, leading to erythropoiesis failure and compromise of the immune system. FIS is of significant biological interest as it is unique and is caused by a gene not previously associated with a mammalian disease. Having identified the associated gene, we are now able to eradicate FIS from equine populations by informed selective breeding.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21750681 PMCID: PMC3131283 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1002133
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Figure 1Identification of locus responsible for FIS by genome-wide association scan.
(A) Manhattan plot of association test results showing the chromosome locations of the 42,536 SNPs which passed quality control against –log10 (P). The red line indicates the threshold for genome-wide significance after Bonferroni correction for multiple testing (P raw = 1.2×10−6), which corresponds to an alpha value of 0.05. (B) Focus on region of ECA26 that shows FIS association. The vertical broken lines indicate the region (29.6–32.2 Mb) which was investigated further by fine-mapping.
Figure 2SNP haplotypes and genes from the region of ECA26 genetically linked and associated with FIS.
(A) The affected SNP haplotype is shown on the left. The affected alleles for three key microsatellite markers are also included. The extent of conserved affected haplotypes present in the 13 affected individuals (A1–13) are indicated with blue bars. Accession numbers (newly identified SNPs) or the local SNP ID number (http://www.broadinstitute.org/ftp/distribution/horse_snp_release/v2/), together with the genome position are given. The minimal 992 kb shared region of homozygosity (29,825 – 30,817 kb) is out-lined in orange. (B) The positions of the 14 ENSEMBL annotated genes within the conserved block are indicated.
Figure 3SLC5A3 amino acid sequences alignments in the region of the FIS mutation.
The amino acid affected by the mutation, indicated with an arrow, is conserved in all placental mammals now sequenced with high coverage (n = 11); the top panel shows alignments of this gene region in a selection of these mammals. The bottom panel shows alignments of this region with other members of the SLC5 gene family in the horse which show structural similarity; the amino acid affected by the mutation is conserved in all of these members.