| Literature DB >> 22715415 |
Annie Menoud1, Monika Welle, Jens Tetens, Peter Lichtner, Cord Drögemüller.
Abstract
We identified a congenital mechanobullous skin disorder in six calves on a single farm of an endangered German cattle breed in 2010. The condition presented as a large loss of skin distal to the fetlocks and at the mucosa of the muzzle. All affected calves were euthanized on humane grounds due to the severity, extent and progression of the skin and oral lesions. Examination of skin samples under light microscopy revealed detachment of the epidermis from the dermis at the level of the dermo epidermal junction, leading to the diagnosis of a subepidermal bullous dermatosis such as epidermolysis bullosa. The pedigree was consistent with monogenic autosomal recessive inheritance. We localized the causative mutation to an 18 Mb interval on chromosome 22 by homozygosity mapping. The COL7A1 gene encoding collagen type VII alpha 1 is located within this interval and COL7A1 mutations have been shown to cause inherited dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (DEB) in humans. A SNP in the bovine COL7A1 exon 49 (c.4756C>T) was perfectly associated with the observed disease. The homozygous mutant T/T genotype was exclusively present in affected calves and their parents were heterozygous C/T confirming the assumed recessive mode of inheritance. All known cases and genotyped carriers were related to a single cow, which is supposed to be the founder animal. The mutant T allele was absent in 63 animals from 24 cattle breeds. The identified mutation causes a premature stop codon which leads to a truncated protein representing a complete loss of COL7A1 function (p.R1586*). We thus have identified a candidate causative mutation for this genetic disease using only three cases to unravel its molecular basis. Selection against this mutation can now be used to eliminate the mutant allele from the Rotes Höhenvieh breed.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22715415 PMCID: PMC3371016 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0038823
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Clinical features of a DEB affected Rotes Höhenvieh calf.
Typical signs are the extensive epidermal loss with ulcerations at the fetlocks (A) and muzzle (B) and dysungulation (C).
Figure 2Histopathological features of DEB.
Biopsy of the ear of case 1: (A) Note that on the lateral borders of the biopsy the epidermis (ep) is missing and, where present, the epidermis is detached from the underlying dermis (de). The epidermis is cleanly separated from the dermis and the basal cells are intact. H&E, 25×. (B) Higher magnification: Note the intact basal cells of the blister roof (br), larger vacuoles (lv) and a small vesicle (sv) along the basement membrane zone and separation of the infundibular epithelium (ie) from the surrounding connective tissue. H&E, 200× (C) Note that the epidermal and infundibular epithelium of the hair follicle (hf) is missing and the surface is covered by homogenous proteinaceous material. H&E, 200×. Biopsy of the right hind leg of case 3: (D) Necrotic superficial dermis (de) characterized by fibrinous exsudation (fe), cellular debris, dense amounts of degenerate inflammatory cells, and hemorrhage. H&E, 100×.
Figure 3Pedigree of Rotes Höhenvieh cattle with DEB.
DNA samples were available only from red labeled cattle. The genotypes for the COL7A1 c.4756C>T exon 49 SNP are given below the symbols. The arrow indicates the cow, which is supposed to be the founder animal. We genotyped all available male offspring of the two carrier bulls Hannibal and Oska and detected 51% and 61% carriers, respectively.
Figure 4Genome-wide homozygosity mapping of the DEB mutation.
After genotyping approximately 777,000 uniformly distributed SNP markers homozygous blocks >0.1 Mb were identified across 3 DEB affected cattle. Only on BTA 22 a very large homozygous block was identified.
Figure 5COL7A1 mutation analysis.
Electropherograms of the COL7A1 c.4756C>T mutation. Representative sequence traces of PCR products amplified from genomic DNA of 3 cattle with the different genotypes are shown. The mutant T allele in homozygous form is present only in DEB affected calves and leads to a premature stop codon.
COL7A1 genotype frequencies.
| Rotes Höhenvieh | Other breeds | ||||
| c.4756C>T Genotype | DEB affected (n = 3) | DEB carrier (n = 4) | Control, related (n = 86) | Control, unknown relationship (n = 57) | Controls (n = 329) |
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| 44 | 57 | |||
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| 4 | 42 | |||
|
| 3 | 329 | |||
Angus (n = 18), Aubrac (n = 1), Ayshire (n = 1), Belgian blue (n = 3), Blonde d'Aquitaine (n = 2), Brown Swiss (n = 35), Charolais (n = 17), Chianina (n = 19), Dutch belted (n = 18), Eringer (n = 16), Evolenard (n = 10), Gelbvieh (n = 1), Galloway (n = 20), Hereford (n = 3), Scotish Highland (n = 4), Holstein (n = 35), Jersey (n = 3), Limousin (n = 17), Montbéliarde (n = 4), Nelore (n = 3), Ongola (n = 1), Piedmontese (n = 2), Pinzgauer (n = 10), Pustertaler Sprinzen (n = 10), Romagnola (n = 18), Salers (n = 1), Simmentaler (n = 38), Tyrolean Grey (n = 18), Domestic Yak (n = 1).