Frequency of five disease-causing genetic mutations in a large mixed-breed dog population (2011-2012).

A large and growing number of inherited genetic disease mutations are now known in the dog. Frequencies of these mutations are typically examined within the breed of discovery, possibly in related breeds, but nearly always in purebred dogs. No report to date has examined the frequencies of specific...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sharon Zierath, Angela M Hughes, Neale Fretwell, Mark Dibley, Kari J Ekenstedt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5699815?pdf=render
id doaj-e1c69b2d3ecb4ba5b706d11b6786bb25
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e1c69b2d3ecb4ba5b706d11b6786bb252020-11-25T01:22:08ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-011211e018854310.1371/journal.pone.0188543Frequency of five disease-causing genetic mutations in a large mixed-breed dog population (2011-2012).Sharon ZierathAngela M HughesNeale FretwellMark DibleyKari J EkenstedtA large and growing number of inherited genetic disease mutations are now known in the dog. Frequencies of these mutations are typically examined within the breed of discovery, possibly in related breeds, but nearly always in purebred dogs. No report to date has examined the frequencies of specific genetic disease mutations in a large population of mixed-breed dogs. Further, veterinarians and dog owners typically dismiss inherited/genetic diseases as possibilities for health problems in mixed-breed dogs, assuming hybrid vigor will guarantee that single-gene disease mutations are not a cause for concern. Therefore, the objective of this study was to screen a large mixed-breed canine population for the presence of mutant alleles associated with five autosomal recessive disorders: hyperuricosuria and hyperuricemia (HUU), cystinuria (CYST), factor VII deficiency (FVIID), myotonia congenita (MYC) and phosphofructokinase deficiency (PKFD). Genetic testing was performed in conjunction with breed determination via the commercially-available Wisdom PanelTM test.From a population of nearly 35,000 dogs, homozygous mutant dogs were identified for HUU (n = 57) and FVIID (n = 65). Homozygotes for HUU and FVIID were identified even among dogs with highly mixed breed ancestry. Carriers were identified for all disorders except MYC. HUU and FVIID were of high enough frequency to merit consideration in any mixed-breed dog, while CYST, MYC, and PKFD are vanishingly rare.The assumption that mixed-breed dogs do not suffer from single-gene genetic disorders is shown here to be false. Within the diseases examined, HUU and FVIID should remain on any practitioner's rule-out list, when clinically appropriate, for all mixed-breed dogs, and judicious genetic testing should be performed for diagnosis or screening. Future testing of large mixed-breed dog populations that include additional known canine genetic mutations will refine our knowledge of which genetic diseases can strike mixed-breed dogs.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5699815?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sharon Zierath
Angela M Hughes
Neale Fretwell
Mark Dibley
Kari J Ekenstedt
spellingShingle Sharon Zierath
Angela M Hughes
Neale Fretwell
Mark Dibley
Kari J Ekenstedt
Frequency of five disease-causing genetic mutations in a large mixed-breed dog population (2011-2012).
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sharon Zierath
Angela M Hughes
Neale Fretwell
Mark Dibley
Kari J Ekenstedt
author_sort Sharon Zierath
title Frequency of five disease-causing genetic mutations in a large mixed-breed dog population (2011-2012).
title_short Frequency of five disease-causing genetic mutations in a large mixed-breed dog population (2011-2012).
title_full Frequency of five disease-causing genetic mutations in a large mixed-breed dog population (2011-2012).
title_fullStr Frequency of five disease-causing genetic mutations in a large mixed-breed dog population (2011-2012).
title_full_unstemmed Frequency of five disease-causing genetic mutations in a large mixed-breed dog population (2011-2012).
title_sort frequency of five disease-causing genetic mutations in a large mixed-breed dog population (2011-2012).
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description A large and growing number of inherited genetic disease mutations are now known in the dog. Frequencies of these mutations are typically examined within the breed of discovery, possibly in related breeds, but nearly always in purebred dogs. No report to date has examined the frequencies of specific genetic disease mutations in a large population of mixed-breed dogs. Further, veterinarians and dog owners typically dismiss inherited/genetic diseases as possibilities for health problems in mixed-breed dogs, assuming hybrid vigor will guarantee that single-gene disease mutations are not a cause for concern. Therefore, the objective of this study was to screen a large mixed-breed canine population for the presence of mutant alleles associated with five autosomal recessive disorders: hyperuricosuria and hyperuricemia (HUU), cystinuria (CYST), factor VII deficiency (FVIID), myotonia congenita (MYC) and phosphofructokinase deficiency (PKFD). Genetic testing was performed in conjunction with breed determination via the commercially-available Wisdom PanelTM test.From a population of nearly 35,000 dogs, homozygous mutant dogs were identified for HUU (n = 57) and FVIID (n = 65). Homozygotes for HUU and FVIID were identified even among dogs with highly mixed breed ancestry. Carriers were identified for all disorders except MYC. HUU and FVIID were of high enough frequency to merit consideration in any mixed-breed dog, while CYST, MYC, and PKFD are vanishingly rare.The assumption that mixed-breed dogs do not suffer from single-gene genetic disorders is shown here to be false. Within the diseases examined, HUU and FVIID should remain on any practitioner's rule-out list, when clinically appropriate, for all mixed-breed dogs, and judicious genetic testing should be performed for diagnosis or screening. Future testing of large mixed-breed dog populations that include additional known canine genetic mutations will refine our knowledge of which genetic diseases can strike mixed-breed dogs.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5699815?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT sharonzierath frequencyoffivediseasecausinggeneticmutationsinalargemixedbreeddogpopulation20112012
AT angelamhughes frequencyoffivediseasecausinggeneticmutationsinalargemixedbreeddogpopulation20112012
AT nealefretwell frequencyoffivediseasecausinggeneticmutationsinalargemixedbreeddogpopulation20112012
AT markdibley frequencyoffivediseasecausinggeneticmutationsinalargemixedbreeddogpopulation20112012
AT karijekenstedt frequencyoffivediseasecausinggeneticmutationsinalargemixedbreeddogpopulation20112012
_version_ 1725127501522403328