| Literature DB >> 27203721 |
A Kolicheski1, G S Johnson1, D P O'Brien2, T Mhlanga-Mutangadura1, D Gilliam1, J Guo1, T D Anderson-Sieg1, R D Schnabel3, J F Taylor4, A Lebowitz5, B Swanson5, D Hicks6, Z E Niman7, F A Wininger8, M C Carpentier8, M L Katz9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL), a fatal neurodegenerative disease, has been diagnosed in young adult Australian Cattle Dogs.Entities:
Keywords: Autofluorescence; Lysosomal storage disease; Molecular genetics; Whole-genome sequence
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27203721 PMCID: PMC5084771 DOI: 10.1111/jvim.13971
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vet Intern Med ISSN: 0891-6640 Impact factor: 3.333
Breed distributions of canine NCL‐associated mutations
| Disease | Gene | Mutation | Amino Acid Sequence | Affected Dog Breed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CLN1 |
|
| p.F246Lfs*29 | Dachshund |
| CLN2 |
|
| p.A108Pfs*6 | Dachshund |
| CLN5 |
|
| p.Q207X | Border Collie, |
| CLN5 |
|
| CLN5:p.E312Vfs*6 | Golden Retriever |
| CLN6 |
|
| p.W277R | Australian Shepherd |
| CLN7 |
|
| p.F282Lfs*13 | Chinese Crested Dog, Chihuahua |
| CLN8 |
|
| p.L164P | English Setter |
| CLN8 |
|
| p.W195X | Australian Shepherd |
| CLN10 |
|
| p.M199I | American Bulldog |
| CLN12 |
|
| p.P541 fs*56 | Tibetan Terrier |
Figure 1Photographs of four of the subject Australian Cattle Dogs. (A) Dog A from near St. Louis euthanized in 2014, (B) Dog B from Chicago euthanized in 2014. (C) Dog C from Seattle euthanized in 2007. (D) Dog E from Alabama euthanized in 2015.
Figure 2T2‐weighted MRI from Dog A in the sagittal (A) and transverse (B) planes. From Dog A, T1‐weighted postcontrast MRI in the dorsal plane (C). CSF is white and brain parenchyma gray in the T2‐weighted images. CSF is dark gray in the T1‐weighted image. Diffuse brain atrophy is indicated by atrophy of the interthalamic adhesion (black arrow in A), dilatation of the 3rd (green dashed arrow in A), 4th (4‐point star in A), and lateral ventricles (5‐point stars in B and C), widening of the sulci of the cerebral cortex (solid yellow arrow in B), and increased CSF surrounding the folia of the cerebellum (yellow dashed arrow in A).
Figure 3Fluorescence micrographs of cryostat sections the cerebellum (A and B), cerebral cortex (C), retina (D) from Dog A and heart ventricular wall (E) from Dog C. In the cerebellum, storage body accumulation was most abundant in the Purkinje cell layer (pc) with some but not all of the material within cells that could be identified as Purkinje cells (arrows in A and B). There were lesser accumulations of this material in the molecular (m) and granular (g) layers. In the cerebral cortex (B), the storage material was widely distributed throughout most of the tissue. In the retina (C), the most prominent accumulations of autofluorescent material were in the ganglion cells (gc) and along the outer limiting membrane (olm). The retinal pigment epithelium (rpe) also contained substantial amounts of material with similar fluorescence properties, but since the accumulation of such material occurs during normal aging, the presence of this material in the rpe is not diagnostic for NCL. Clusters of autofluorescent inclusions were present in the heart muscle fibers sections in longitudinal orientation (E).
Figure 4Electron micrographs of the disease‐related storage bodies from a cerebellar Purkinje cell (A), a cerebral cortical neuron (B), retinal ganglion cells (C and D), and retinal photoreceptor cells (E and F) of NCL‐affected Australian Cattle Dog D. The storage bodies (s) in the photoreceptor cells are primarily located just internal to the outer limiting membrane. The contents of storage bodies consisted of both aggregates of small vesicles (E) or of membrane‐like structures in a variety of configurations (F).
Figure 5Light micrographs of sections of the cerebellar medulla (A and B) and granule cell layer (B and D). All sections were immunostained for GFAP. GFAP staining is a reddish brown color. All photomicrographs are from the cerebellum. Micrographs (A) and (C) are from the affected Australian Cattle Dog A; micrographs (B) and (D) are from a normal healthy Beagle of similar age. Bar in (D) indicates magnification of all 4 micrographs. GFAP‐positive cells with the typical profiles of reactive astrocytes were abundant in both the granule cell layer and medulla of affected dog, but were not present in either of these areas of the cerebellar cortex from the normal dog.
Variants in NCL‐associated genes in WGS from affected Australian Cattle Dog A
| Chromosomal Coordinate | Gene | Nucleotide Change | Predicted Amino Acid Change | Zygosity | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6:18,257,856 |
|
| p.Glu70Gly | Heterozygous | Variant in 10 other WGSs |
| 18:46,010,727 |
|
| p.Cys390Arg | Heterozygous | Variant in 10 other WGSs |
| 18:46,011,691 |
|
| p.Lys254Thr | Heterozygous | Variant in 13 other WGSs |
| 21:29,922,715 |
|
| p.Ala427Val | Heterozygous | Variant in 5 other WGSs |
| 22:30,574,637 |
|
| p.Gln207* | Homozygous | Unique to affected WGS |
Comparison of ages at onset and death or euthanasia for Australian Cattle Dogs, Border Collies, and Golden Retrievers with NCL
| Breed | Number of Dogs | Causal Mutation | Location | Age at Onset, Months | Age at Death or Euthanasia, Months | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australian Cattle Dog | 4 |
| United States | 12–19 | 15–26 | Current report |
| Australian Cattle Dog | 4 | Unknown | United States | 12–14 | 18–26 |
|
| Border Collie | 23 | Unknown | Australia | 16–23 | 18–29 |
|
| Border Collie | 1 | Unknown | United States | 27 | 29 |
|
| Border Collie | 27 |
| Japan | 15–20 | 23–32 |
|
| Golden Retriever | 4 |
| United States | 13–17 | 30–34 |
|