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Frequency of RPGRIP1 and MAP9 genetic modifiers of canine progressive retinal atrophy, in 132 breeds of dog. | LitMetric

Frequency of RPGRIP1 and MAP9 genetic modifiers of canine progressive retinal atrophy, in 132 breeds of dog.

Anim Genet

Department of Veterinary Medicine, Canine Genetics Centre, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • * A study genotyped these variants in 132 different dog breeds, finding that they are present in multiple breeds, but the frequency of each variant is usually specific to certain subsets of breeds.
  • * The data suggests these variants have ancient origins, and breeders might selectively avoid breeding dogs that are homozygous for both variants due to the more severe health issues they cause.

Article Abstract

Variants in RPGRIP1 and MAP9, termed RPGRIP1ins44 and MAP9del respectively, are both associated with a form of canine progressive retinal atrophy referred to as RPGRIP1-CRD and have both been demonstrated to modify the development and progression of this disease. In the current study both variants were genotyped in at least 50 dogs of 132 diverse breeds and the data reveal that both segregate in multiple breeds. Individually, each variant is common within largely non-overlapping subsets of breed, and there is a negative correlation between their frequencies within breeds that segregate both variants. The frequency of both variants exceeds 0.05 in a single breed only, the Miniature Longhaired Dachshund. These data indicate that both variants are likely to be ancient and predate the development and genetic isolation of modern dog breeds. That both variants are present individually at high frequency in multiple breeds is consistent with the hypothesis that homozygosity of either variant alone is not associated with a clinically relevant phenotype, whereas the negative correlation between the two variants is consistent with the application of selective pressure, from dog breeders, against homozygosity at both loci, probably due to the more severe phenotype associated with homozygosity at both loci.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/age.13443DOI Listing

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  • * A study genotyped these variants in 132 different dog breeds, finding that they are present in multiple breeds, but the frequency of each variant is usually specific to certain subsets of breeds.
  • * The data suggests these variants have ancient origins, and breeders might selectively avoid breeding dogs that are homozygous for both variants due to the more severe health issues they cause.
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Defects in the cilia gene RPGRIP1 cause Leber congenital amaurosis and cone-rod dystrophy in humans. A form of canine cone-rod dystrophy (cord1) was originally associated with a homozygous insertion in RPGRIP1 (RPGRIP1 ) as the primary disease locus while a homozygous deletion in MAP9 (MAP9 ) was later identified as a modifier associated with the early onset form. However, we find further variability in cone electroretinograms (ERGs) ranging from normal to absent in an extended RPGRIP1 canine colony, irrespective of the MAP9 genotype.

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Retinal degeneration (RD) in the Miniature Long Haired Dachshund (MLHD) is a cone-rod dystrophy resulting in eventual blindness in affected individuals. In a previous study, a 44-nucleotide insertion (ins44) in exon 2 of RPGRIP1 was associated with RD. However, results on an extended population of MLHD revealed a variable RD onset age for ins44 homozygous dogs.

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