DALMATIAN DOGS HIGH URIC ACID
DNA TEST ELIMINATES GENETIC DEFECT
ScienceDaily
(Nov. 13, 2008) —
A gene
mutation that causes high levels of uric acid in all
Dalmatian dogs and bladder stones in some
Dalmatians, has been identified by a team of
researchers in the School of Veterinary Medicine at
the University of California, Davis.
The discovery equips dog breeders with the tools to
eliminate that trait from the Dalmatian breed and
yields clues to the cause of similar problems in
humans. The findings will be published Nov. 7 in the
scientific journal Public Library of Science.
"This defect, which in dogs is peculiar to the
entire Dalmatian breed, has been reported for nearly
a century and was probably unintentionally
introduced as breeders worked to select more
distinctive spotting patterns," said veterinary
geneticist Danika Bannasch, lead author on the
study.
"It is now possible that this trait can be removed
from the breed by crossing Dalmatians with the
normal offspring of the original Dalmatian-pointer
breeding that occurred in the early 1970s," she
said.
By Dec. 1, the Veterinary Genetics Laboratory in UC
Davis' School of Veterinary Medicine will begin
offering DNA testing for the mutation in dogs to
allow breeders to eliminate the trait. Information
on the testing program will be available online at
http://www.vgl.ucdavis.edu/.
Background
- All mammals excrete waste
products in their urine, but only humans, great apes
and Dalmatian dogs always produce elevated levels of
uric acid in their urine and blood. Other dog breeds
do not usually produce uric acid.
In humans, this can result in kidney stones,
hypertension and gout, a painful inflammation of the
joints. In Dalmatians, high uric acid levels result
in the formation of bladder stones that often have
to be removed surgically.
Scientists have known since the early 1900s that all
Dalmatians have this trait; however, the gene
responsible has remained elusive.
The New Findings - The researchers collected DNA
samples as well as urine samples from hundreds of
dogs to identify the gene responsible for high
levels of uric acid. Genetic analysis of dogs that
are a cross between pointers and Dalmatians revealed
that gene to be SLC2A9, a gene that recently has
been reported to be important in regulating uric
acid levels in humans. DNA analysis showed that
mutations in the SLC2A9 gene were responsible for
the elevated uric acid in the Dalmatians.
The same mutations also were present in some
bulldogs and black Russian terriers, breeds that are
not known to be closely related to Dalmatians. This
suggests that the gene mutation must be quite old,
even predating formation of the Dalmatian breed.
Alternatively, the mutation could have been
introduced to those breeds by crosses between
breeds, the researchers noted.
Because the gene mutation does not always occur in
bulldogs and black Russian terriers, breeders can
simply use genetic selection to eliminate the
unhealthy trait from those breeds. In Dalmatians,
however, the mutation occurs in all dogs, forcing
breeders to look outside of the breed to correct the
problem.
"In recent years, dogs that are about 99 percent
Dalmatian and one percent pointer have been bred,
successfully eliminating the elevated uric acid
trait," said Bannasch. "The result is a healthy dog
that that looks like a Dalmatian, maintains the
Dalmatian breed characteristics and is genetically
almost identical."
She noted that those "backcrossed" dogs, which have
been registered as Dalmatians with the United Kennel
Club in the United States, offer a valuable resource
for correcting the genetic defect that results in
the elevated uric acid trait in the Dalmatian breed.
Although humans also carry the SLC2A9 gene,
scientists have not yet identified the exact
mechanism that causes humans and great apes to have
elevated uric acid levels. The recent identification
of the responsible gene mutation in dogs will help
scientists better understand the related problem in
humans.
Collaborating with Bannasch on this study were
graduate students Noa Safra and Nili Karmi, staff
researcher Amy Young and Professor Emeritus Gerald
Ling, all from UC Davis, as well as Robert H.
Schaible of Purdue University.
The study was supported, in part, by a fellowship
from the Morris Animal Foundation and the National
Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney
Diseases within the National Institutes of Health.
Adapted from materials provided by
University of California - Davis (2008,
November 13). Dalmatian Bladder Stones Caused By
Gene That Regulates Uric Acid In Humans.
ScienceDaily Nov. 16, 2008
http://www.sciencedaily.com
http://www.thedogplace.org/Genetics/Dalmatian-DNA-09012.asp
Use Digger's
links to learn more about low uric acid (LUA) and genetic urinary health for the Dalmatian breed
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