| Literature DB >> 31479451 |
Linda Anderegg1, Michelle Im Hof Gut2, Udo Hetzel3, Elizabeth W Howerth4, Fabienne Leuthard1, Kaisa Kyöstilä5,6,7, Hannes Lohi5,6,7, Louise Pettitt8, Cathryn Mellersh8, Katie M Minor9, James R Mickelson9, Kevin Batcher10, Danika Bannasch10, Vidhya Jagannathan1, Tosso Leeb1.
Abstract
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a hereditary defect of motile cilia in humans and several domestic animal species. Typical clinical findings are chronic recurrent infections of the respiratory tract and fertility problems. We analyzed an Alaskan Malamute family, in which two out of six puppies were affected by PCD. The parents were unaffected suggesting autosomal recessive inheritance. Linkage and homozygosity mapping defined critical intervals comprising ~118 Mb. Whole genome sequencing of one case and comparison to 601 control genomes identified a disease associated frameshift variant, c.43delA, in the NME5 gene encoding a sparsely characterized protein associated with ciliary function. Nme5-/- knockout mice exhibit doming of the skull, hydrocephalus and sperm flagellar defects. The genotypes at NME5:c.43delA showed the expected co-segregation with the phenotype in the Alaskan Malamute family. An additional unrelated Alaskan Malamute with PCD and hydrocephalus that became available later in the study was also homozygous mutant at the NME5:c.43delA variant. The mutant allele was not present in more than 1000 control dogs from different breeds. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated absence of the NME5 protein from nasal epithelia of an affected dog. We therefore propose NME5:c.43delA as the most likely candidate causative variant for PCD in Alaskan Malamutes. These findings enable genetic testing to avoid the unintentional breeding of affected dogs in the future. Furthermore, the results of this study identify NME5 as a novel candidate gene for unsolved human PCD and/or hydrocephalus cases.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31479451 PMCID: PMC6743793 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1008378
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Fig 1PCD phenotype in Alaskan Malamutes.
(A) Left lateral view of the thorax of one of the affected dogs at the age of 15 months with bronchopneumonia in the right middle lung lobe (encircled). (B) Endoscopic image of the trachea. Mucosal hyperemia with cobblestone appearance covered with a large amount of mucopurulent secretion. (C) Endoscopic image of the right caudal lung. Hyperemic bronchi with large amount of mucopurulent secretions is evident. (D, E) Endoscopic images of the nasal cavity. Severe turbinate lysis, hyperemic mucosa and mucopurulent mucus is evident. The bleeding on the left is from the endoscope and represents an iatrogenic lesion.
Fig 2Transmission electron micrographs of bronchial mucosa from a PCD affected Alaskan Malamute.
(A) Overview of a ciliated airway demonstrating an overall reduced ciliation (upper part) with prominent basal bodies (white arrows). (B) A cross section of cilia is shown at higher magnification. In normal cilia, there is a 9 + 2 arrangement of microtubules with two single microtubules in the center and nine pairs of peripheral microtubules. In the affected dog, extra peripheral microtubule singlets appeared occasionally (red arrows). Furthermore, some of the outer dynein arms and most of the inner dynein arms were shortened or entirely absent.
Fig 3Pedigree of the Alaskan Malamute family with two PCD cases.
Filled symbols represent dogs affected by PCD. The solitary symbol in the square represent the additional PCD affected dog (AM021) previously reported in the USA of which no pedigree data was available. For genotyping, DNA of this dog was extracted from FFPE tissues [10]. Other lab numbers indicate dogs, of which blood samples were available. Genotypes of the NME5:c.43delA variant for these dogs are shown. Two Inbreeding loops are visible in this pedigree.
Fig 4Combined linkage analysis with homozygosity mapping.
(A) Parametric linkage analysis was performed with eight family members of one Alaskan Malamute family. Homozygosity mapping was made with two affected dogs from this family. (B) Linked regions >1 Mb are marked in yellow and all shared homozygous regions are marked in red. Twenty regions on different chromosomes showed overlapping linked and homozygous regions (arrows) which are designated as critical intervals.
Variants detected by whole genome resequencing of a PCD affected dog.
| Filtering step | Number of variants |
|---|---|
| Homozygous variants in the whole genome | 3,287,471 |
| Private homozygous variants in the whole genome | 8,877 |
| Private homozygous protein changing variants in the whole genome | 45 |
| Private homozygous protein changing variants in critical interval | 7 |
a Private variants were exclusively present in the affected dog and absent from 601 control genomes.
b Variants with SnpEff impact predictions “high” and “moderate”.
Private homozygous protein changing variants in the PCD affected dog.
| Chr. | Position | Gene | Transcript | Variant cDNA | Variant protein |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11 | 25,792,084 | XM_003639378.4 | c.43delA | p.Thr15LeufsTer56 | |
| 20 | 48,455,036 | XM_014121803.2 | c.634T>A | p.Ser212Thr | |
| 20 | 49,352,482 | XM_022406985.1 | c.67C>T | p.Arg23Trp | |
| 20 | 49,537,837 | XM_542050.6 | c.883C>G | p.Arg295Gly | |
| 20 | 56,148,068 | XM_022407255.1 | c.698A>G | p.Lys233Arg | |
| 20 | 56,474,502 | XM_005633100.3 | c.398G>A | p.Arg133His | |
| 20 | 56,784,636 | XM_022407394.1 | c.629C>T | p.Ala210Val |
Fig 5Sanger sequencing of the NME5:c.43delA variant.
Electropherograms from dogs with the three different genotypes confirm the presence of the variant.
Association of the NME5:c.43delA genotype with the PCD phenotype.
| wt/wt | wt/del | del/del | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alaskan Malamute cases (n = 3) | - | - | 3 |
| Alaskan Malamute obligate carriers (n = 2) | - | 2 | - |
| Alaskan Malamute controls (n = 402) | 397 | 5 | - |
| Dogs from other breeds (n = 539) | 539 | - | - |
aParents of the two Swiss PCD cases.
bTwo of the heterozygous dogs (presumed carriers) were littermates of the two Swiss PCD cases.
cThese 539 dogs were independent from the 593 dogs and 8 wolves with WGS data. Thus, the variant was absent from > 1000 dogs and wolves outside of the Alaskan Malamute breed.
Fig 6NME5 protein expression.
(A) NME5 immunohistochemistry shows a strong signal at the ciliated epithelium from nasal mucosa of a control dog. (B) In a PCD affected Alaskan Malamute, the same polyclonal anti-NME5 antibody does not give any detectable reaction. (C-H) NME5 immunogold transmission electron microscopy of nasal mucosa, ciliary cross sections. (C-E) Nasal mucosa of a control dog with positive binding of gold particles to (C,D) outer microtubules at the inner dynein arm location and to (E) the central microtubules. (F-H) Nasal mucosa of a PCD affected Alaskan Malamute with single positive gold particles binding to different locations within the cilia, possibly due to non-specific binding of the antibody.