| Literature DB >> 26585380 |
Ashley D Franklin1, Anne Schmidt-Küntzel2, Karen A Terio2, Laurie L Marker2, Adrienne E Crosier2.
Abstract
Systemic amyloid A (AA) amyloidosis is a major cause of morbidity and mortality among captive cheetahs. The self-aggregating AA protein responsible for this disease is a byproduct of serum amyloid A (SAA) protein degradation. Transcriptional induction of the SAA1 gene is dependent on both C/EBPβ and NF-κB cis-acting elements within the promoter region. In cheetahs, 2 alleles exist for a single guanine nucleotide deletion in the putative NF-κB binding site. In this study, a novel genotyping assay was developed to screen for the alleles. The results show that the SAA1A (-97delG) allele is associated with decreased SAA protein concentrations in the serum of captive cheetahs (n = 58), suggesting genetic differences at this locus may be affecting AA amyloidosis prevalence. However, there was no significant difference in the frequency of the SAA1A (-97delG) allele between individuals confirmed AA amyloidosis positive versus AA amyloidosis negative at the time of necropsy (n = 48). Thus, even though there is evidence that having more copies of the SAA1A (-97delG) allele results in a potentially protective decrease in serum concentrations of SAA protein in captive cheetahs, genotype is not associated with this disease within the North American population. These results suggest that other factors are playing a more significant role in the pathogenesis of AA amyloidosis among captive cheetahs. © The American Genetic Association 2015. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.Entities:
Keywords: Acute phase response; amyloidosis; cheetah; genetic typing of insertion/deletion; serum amyloid A.
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26585380 PMCID: PMC5994965 DOI: 10.1093/jhered/esv089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hered ISSN: 0022-1503 Impact factor: 2.645
Primer sequences used for amplification of the SAA1A promoter
| Primer | Locationa | Sequence | Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| F3Ab | −745 to −724 bp | 5′-CAGATGGCCTCTGGTAGGTTTC-3′ |
|
| SAA1Rc | −30 to −49 bp | 5′-ACTGTGCCCTCCCCGTTGGG-3′ |
|
| SAA1Fc | −215 to −196 bp | 5′-GACCGGCCAAGCTGGCTTCC-3′ |
|
| SAA1F-FAMc | −215 to −196 bp | 5′-/6-FAM/GACCGGCCAAGCTGGCTTCC-3′ | Fluorescently labeled |
aPosition upstream of the SAA1A transcription start site.
bChen et al. (2012).
cThis study, modified from Zhang et al. (2008).
Figure 1.Effects of health status and genotype on serum concentrations of serum amyloid A (SAA) protein in captive cheetahs at NZP-SCBI and CCF. Means of the SAA concentrations ± SE by health status (A) and genotype (B) are presented.
Estimated allele frequencies of the SAA1A SNP for wild or wild-born cheetahs in Namibia and captive cheetahs in North America
| Population | Allele | Estimateda frequency ± standard error | Hardy–Weinberg |
|---|---|---|---|
| Namibia |
| 0.5032c ± 0.0600 | 0.291 |
| (Wild or wild-born, |
| 0.4968±0.0600 | |
| North America |
| 0.7158d ± 0.0796 | 0.422 |
| (Captive, |
| 0.2842±0.0796 | |
| North America |
| 0.6450±0.0700 | 0.438 |
| (Deceased, |
| 0.3550±0.0700 | |
| AA amyloidosis |
| 0.8750±0.1170 | |
| Positive ( |
| 0.1250±0.1170 | |
| AA amyloidosis |
| 0.5980±0.0781 | |
| Negative ( |
| 0.4020±0.0781 |
aEstimated using the software MENDEL (Lange et al. 2013) utilizing complete pedigree information available for all individuals.
bGenotypes tested for Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium for each population in MENDEL (Lange et al. 2005).
c,dIndicates a significant difference in allele frequency based on the Chi-square test of homogeneity, P = 0.0414.