| Literature DB >> 28841859 |
Doreen Becker1, Katie M Minor2, Anna Letko1, Kari J Ekenstedt2,3, Vidhya Jagannathan1, Tosso Leeb1, G Diane Shelton4, James R Mickelson2, Cord Drögemüller5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many inherited polyneuropathies (PN) observed in dogs have clinical similarities to the genetically heterogeneous group of Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) peripheral neuropathies in humans. The canine disorders collectively show a variable expression of progressive clinical signs and ages of onset, and different breed prevalences. Previously in the Leonberger breed, a variant highly associated with a juvenile-onset PN was identified in the canine orthologue of a CMT-associated gene. As this deletion in ARHGEF10 (termed LPN1) does not explain all cases, PN in this breed may encompass variants in several genes with similar clinical and histopathological features.Entities:
Keywords: Charcot-Marie-tooth; Connexin genes; Connexons; Dog; Gap junctions; Gene test; Genome wide association; Neurological disorder; Peripheral nerve; Polyneuropathy; Rare disease; Whole-genome resequencing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28841859 PMCID: PMC5574090 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-017-4081-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1Genome-wide association study for polyneuropathy in Leonberger dogs. a Note the association signal on chromosome 15. b The quantile–quantile (QQ) plot shows the observed vs. expected log P-values. The straight line in the QQ plot indicates the distribution of SNP markers under the null hypothesis, and the skew at the right edge indicates those markers that are more strongly associated with the trait than would be expected by chance. Markers from chromosome 15 are shown in red
Fig. 2A GJA9 frameshift variant in polyneuropathy affected Leonberger dogs. a IGV screenshots showing the homozygous presence of the 2 bp deletion in the GJA9 gene on CFA15 in reads from the sequenced case (marked by a red arrow) compared to a control dog genome. b The schematic representation indicates that the 2 bp deletion leads to a frameshift that is predicted to produce a significantly truncated intracellular C-terminus of canine GJA9. Note that the transmembranal N-terminal connexin domain that is important for gap junction formation is predicted to be unaffected
GJA9 c.1103_1104delAG genotype frequencies in three Leonberger cohorts
| Polyneuropathy status | Total | wt/wt (homozygous normal; N/N) | wt/del (heterozygous; D/N) | del/del (homozygous mutant; D/D) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GWAS cohort | 314 | 0.82 (258) | 0.16 (51) | 0.02 (5) |
| Affecteda | 176 | 0.72 (127) | 0.25 (44) | 0.03 (5) |
| Non-affecteda,b | 138 | 0.95 (131) | 0.05 (7) | 0 |
| Follow-up cohort | 608 | 0.87 (527) | 0.13 (79) | 0.003 (2) |
| Affecteda | 296 | 0.79 (235) | 0.20 (59) | 0.006 (2) |
| Non-affecteda,b | 312 | 0.94 (292) | 0.06 (20) | 0 |
| Total | 7455 | 0.94 (6995) | 0.06 (443) | 0.002 (17) |
| Affecteda | 474 | 0.76 (362) | 0.22 (105) | 0.02 (7) |
| Non-affecteda,b | 450 | 0.94 (423) | 0.06 (27) | 0 |
| Unknownc | 6533 | 0.95 (6210) | 0.05 (313) | 0.002 (10) |
aOnly dogs that were homozygous wild type or heterozygous ARHGEF10 carriers
bOnly dogs ≥8 years old that showed no signs of PN
cDogs without known phenotype status that were submitted for diagnostic purposes
Fig. 3Age of onset of clinical signs in dogs homozygous or heterozygous for the GJA9 mutation. Age-of-onset of clinical signs for the 100 PN cases in which one or two mutant GJA9 alleles were present
Fig. 4Representative histopathology of the peroneal nerve from male Leonberger dog with polyneuropathy and heterozygous GJA9 genotype. Resin embedded peroneal nerve sections collected post-mortem from a 5 year old male intact Leonberger dog with clinical signs of polyneuropathy. a Toluidine blue-acid fuchsin stain showing loss of predominantly large myelinated fibers and qualitatively increased populations of small calibre nerve fibers. b Paraphenelenediamine stain for myelin showing thin but intact myelin sheaths in many small nerve fibers. For comparison, images (c, toluidine blue-acid fuchsin stain) and (d, paraphenelenediamine stain) are from the peroneal nerve of a 6 year old female neutered Leonberger dog that was negative for both the ARHGEF10 and GJA9 variants and without clinical signs of polyneuropathy