| Literature DB >> 25306138 |
Heli Venhoranta1, Hubert Pausch, Krzysztof Flisikowski, Christine Wurmser, Juhani Taponen, Helena Rautala, Alexander Kind, Angelika Schnieke, Ruedi Fries, Hannes Lohi, Magnus Andersson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inherited developmental diseases can cause severe animal welfare and economic problems in dairy cattle. The use of a small number of bulls for artificial insemination (AI) carries a risk that recessive defects rapidly enrich in the population. In recent years, an increasing number of Finnish Ayrshire calves have been identified with signs of ptosis, intellectual disability, retarded growth and mortality, which constitute an inherited disorder classified as PIRM syndrome.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25306138 PMCID: PMC4203880 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-15-890
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1Phenotypic manifestation of PIRM syndrome. Most obvious facial feature in PIRM-syndrome is the ptosis. Abnormal large upper eye lid gives a characteristic appearance to affected animals, almost like they were constantly sleepy (A-D). Affected animals also suffered also from hypotonia (A and B) or were smaller than other age matched calves (C and D). In addition owners reported problems with learning and dependency of special care. All animals were euthanized soon after the pictures were taken.
Figure 2The PIRM syndrome maps to chromosome 17 in the Ayrshire cattle population. Association of the affection status in nine affected and 37 unaffected Ayrshire animals (A). P-values were obtained by calculating Fisher exact tests of allelic association. Autozygosity mapping in nine affected animals (B). Blue and pale blue represent homozygous genotypes (AA and BB), heterozygous genotypes (AB) are displayed in light grey. The solid grey bars represent segments of extended homozygosity in nine affected animals. The red bar indicates the common segment of homozygosity. The shared segment of homozygosity encompasses 14 transcripts among them UBE3B (C). The full list of genes within the 713 kb segment is presented in Additional file 2: Table S2.
Variants compatible with recessive inheritance
| Chromo-some | Chromosomal position (bp) | NCBI assay ID | Reference allele | Alternative allele | Affected gene | Effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 17 | 65,696,110 | rs440561578 | C | T |
| intronic |
| 17 | 65,850,261 | rs467377722 | C | T | --- | --- |
| 17 | 65,905,778 | rs463975690 | A | G |
| intronic |
| 17 | 65,921,497 | rs475678587 | G | A |
| splicing site |
Four SNPs compatible with recessive inheritance were located in the 713 kb segment of extended homozygosity. The functional annotation of the identified polymorphisms was obtained based on the UMD3.1 gene prediction [21].
Figure 3The rs475678587 A mutation in affects splicing. Genomic structure of bovine UBE3B (A). Bovine UBE3B consists of 32 exons (vertical bars) and its translation starts in exon 7. The position of the HECT-domain was determined according to [18]. Wildtype (wt) and mutant (mt) sequence of exon 23 (B). To improve readability, only part of the genomic sequence is shown. The rs475678587 A mutation affects the very last nucleotide of exon 23 (B) within the highly conserved HECT-domain. Multi-species alignment of the UBE3B protein sequence (C). Alternating colour indicates different exons (22–24). Bold type indicates the initiation of the HECT domain.
Figure 4Mutation rs475678587 causes partial skipping of exon 23 in . Agarose gel electrophoresis of the RT-PCR products reveals that in addition to normal band affected animals also express smaller fragment with primers that flanked the exon 23 (A). Amplicons obtained with primers that flanked the exon 27–29 show no difference between affected and unaffected animals (B). 1 is molecular weight marker. Cerebellum samples 2–4 are from PIRM affected animals and 5 and 6 are from unaffected animals.