Abstract
Progressive retinal degenerations are the most common causes of complete blindness both in human and in dogs. Canine progressive retinal atrophy (PRA) or degeneration resembles human retinitis pigmentosa (RP) and is characterized by a progressive loss of rod photoreceptor cells followed by a loss of cone function. The primary clinical signs are detected as vision impairment in a dim light. Although several genes have been associated with PRAs, there are still PRAs of unknown genetic cause in many breeds, including Papillons and Phalènes. We have performed a genome wide association and linkage studies in cohort of 6 affected Papillons and Phalènes and 14 healthy control dogs to map a novel PRA locus on canine chromosome 2, with a 1.9 Mb shared homozygous region in the affected dogs. Parallel exome sequencing of a trio identified an indel mutation, including a 1-bp deletion, followed by a 6-bp insertion in the CNGB1 gene. This mutation causes a frameshift and premature stop codon leading to probable nonsense mediated decay (NMD) of the CNGB1 mRNA. The mutation segregated with the disease and was confirmed in a larger cohort of 145 Papillons and Phalènes (PFisher = 1.4×10−8) with a carrier frequency of 17.2 %. This breed specific mutation was not present in 334 healthy dogs from 10 other breeds or 121 PRA affected dogs from 44 other breeds. CNGB1 is important for the photoreceptor cell function its defects have been previously associated with retinal degeneration in both human and mouse. Our study indicates that a frameshift mutation in CNGB1 is a cause of PRA in Papillons and Phalènes and establishes the breed as a large functional animal model for further characterization of retinal CNGB1 biology and possible retinal gene therapy trials. This study enables also the development of a genetic test for breeding purposes.
Highlights
Progressive retinal degeneration or atrophy is one of the most common causes of blindness both in human and in dog affecting the retinal photoreceptor cells
We found a high carrier frequency in the breed 17.1 % (25/ 146), but only one affected dog was homozygous for retinitis pigmentosa GTPase regulator interacting protein 1 (RPGRIP1) mutation
We have performed a series of genetic analyses, including genome-wide association study (GWAS), linkage and exome sequencing to identify the mutation for progressive retinal atrophy (PRA) in Papillon and Phalene breeds
Summary
Progressive retinal degeneration or atrophy is one of the most common causes of blindness both in human and in dog affecting the retinal photoreceptor cells. Most canine PRAs are recessively inherited and 12 causative genes are known including ADAM metallopeptidase domain 9 (ADAM9) [3], bestrophin (BEST1) [4], chromosome 2 open reading frame 71 (C2orf71) [5], cyclic nucleotide gated channel beta 3 (CNGB3) [6], nephronophthisis (NPHP4) [7], phosphodiesterase 6A, cGMP-specific, rod, alpha (PDE6A) [8], rod cGMP-specific 3’,5’-cyclic phosphodiesterase subunit beta (PDE6B) [9], rhodopsin (RHO) [10], retinitis pigmentosa GTPase regulator-interacting protein (RPGRIP1) [11], retinal pigment epithelium-specific protein (RPE65) [12], solute carrier family 4, anion exchanger, member 3 (SLC4A3) [13], progressive rod-cone degeneration (PRCD) gene [14]. There are still other PRA affected breeds of unknown genetic cause
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