Abstract

BackgroundSpinocerebellar ataxia also referred to as hereditary ataxia comprises different forms of progressive neurodegenerative diseases. A complex mode of inheritance was most likely in Parson Russell Terriers (PRT) and in Jack Russell Terriers (JRT). Recently, the missense mutation KCNJ10:c.627C > G was shown to be associated with the spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA) in JRT and related Russell group of terriers, whereas the missense mutation CAPN1:c.344G > A was associated with late onset ataxia (LOA) in PRT.ResultsWe performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) in PRT including 15 cases and 29 controls and found a statistically strong signal in the genomic region on dog chromosome 38 (CFA38) where KCNJ10 is located. We tested the CAPN1:c.344G > A and KCNJ10:c.627C > G (Transcript XM_545752.4) mutations in a sample of 77 PRT and 9 JRT from Germany as well as further 179 controls from 20 different dog breeds. All cases and controls genotyped carried the wild-type for the CAPN1:c.344G > A mutation. Among the PRT, 17/77 (22.1 %) dogs were homozygous for the mutant KCNJ10 allele and 22/77 (28.6 %) dogs were heterozygous. Three cases of PRT had the homozygous KCNJ10 wild-type. In JRT, 1/3 cases did show the mutant KCNJ10 allele homozygous. Thus, we sequenced the KCNJ10 exons with their adjacent regions from 10 PRT and 3 JRT including the animals with imperfect co-segregation of the c.627C > G mutation. We identified a total of 45 genetic variants within KCNJ10. The most likely variant explaining the cases appeared a 1-bp-insertion in a C-stretch within exon 3 (KCNJ10:g.22141027insC). In silico analysis showed that this indel may influence the regulation of gene expression.ConclusionsIn the present study, 16/21 cases of hereditary ataxia perfectly co-segregated with the KCNJ10:c.627C > G mutation. The CAPN1:c.344G > A mutation could not be validated and seems to be a rare variant in the samples screened. Screening KCNJ10 for further mutations did result in a genetic variant explaining 2 JRT cases but further 3 cases with a non-mutant homozygous c.627C > G genotype could not be resolved. Breeders have to be aware that DNA-testing for hereditary ataxia in PRT and JRT does not capture all cases of hereditary ataxia in these dog breeds. At least one further form of hereditary ataxia not yet resolved by a mutation may occur in PRT and JRT.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12917-016-0862-x) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Spinocerebellar ataxia referred to as hereditary ataxia comprises different forms of progressive neurodegenerative diseases

  • Genome-wide association study The genome-wide association study (GWAS) using 15 cases and 29 controls identified three genome-wide significantly associated Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) on dog chromosome 38 (CFA38) (Additional file 6) and a quantile-quantile plot (Q-Q plot) for expected versus observed –log10P-values was calculated to control for population stratification (Additional file 7)

  • For all other cases, an extended homozygosity region could not be determined (Additional file 9). This may indicate that hereditary ataxia had its origin in several founders or recombinations broke down the homozygous identical-by-descent region caused by a common founder to a very small region not detectable via the beadchip data

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Summary

Introduction

Spinocerebellar ataxia referred to as hereditary ataxia comprises different forms of progressive neurodegenerative diseases. Spinocerebellar ataxia (hereditary ataxia) is characterized by progressive incoordination of gait, loss of balance, hypermetric and spastic movements. This condition may be associated with changes of brainstem auditory evoked potentials, myokymia, neuromyotonia and muscle fasciculation or seizures [1,2,3,4,5,6,7]. In Parson (PRT) and Jack Russell Terriers (JRT) lesions were found in the spinal cord and in the brain [2]. In Fox Terriers, lesions were only present in the spinal cord [9], whereas a more recent study reported histopathological degenerative changes in the brainstem [10]. Loss of axons and myelin and astrogliosis were primarily seen in the spinocerebellar tracts of the cervical cord but were present in all parts of the brain [1, 2, 7]

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