Familiar Hypopigmentation Syndrome in Sheep Associated with Homozygous Deletion of the Entire Endothelin Type-B Receptor Gene
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2012
Abstract:
In humans, rodents and horses, pigmentary anomalies in combination with other disorders, notably intestinal aganglionosis,
are associated with variants of the endothelin type-B receptor gene (EDNRB). In an inbred Cameroon sheep flock, five white
lambs with light blue eyes were sired from the same ram and died within a few hours up to a few days after birth, some of
them with signs of intestinal obstruction. The aim of this study was to investigate if the observed hypopigmentation and
a possible lethal condition were associated with a molecular change at the ovine EDNRB locus, and to check if such a genetic
alteration also occurs in other Cameroon sheep flocks. Sequence analysis revealed a deletion of about 110 kb on sheep
chromosome 10, comprising the entire EDNRB gene, on both chromosomes in the two available hypopigmented lambs and
on a single chromosome in the two dams and three other unaffected relatives. This micro-chromosomal deletion was also
confirmed by quantitative real-time PCR and by fluorescence in situ hybridization. Genotyping of a total of 127 Cameroon
sheep in 7 other flocks by duplex PCR did not identify additional carriers of the deletion. Although both hypopigmented
lambs available for post-mortem examination had a considerably dilated cecum and remaining meconium,
histopathological examination of intestinal samples showed morphologically normal ganglion cells in appropriate number
and distribution. This is to our knowledge the first description of an ENDRB gene deletion and associated clinical signs in
a mammalian species different from humans and rodents. In humans and rats it is postulated that the variable presence and
severity of intestinal aganglionosis and other features in individuals with EDNRB deletion is due to a variable genetic
background and multiple gene interactions. Therefore the here analyzed sheep are a valuable animal model to test these
hypotheses in another species.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
Endothelin Type-B Receptor Gene; Familiar Hypopigmentation Syndrome
Elenco autori:
Luhken G; Fleck K; Pauciullo A; Huisinga M; Erhardt G
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