Department of Population Health and Reproduction, University of California Davis, Davis, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2012;7(12):e53173. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0053173. Epub 2012 Dec 28.
Burmese is an old and popular cat breed, however, several health concerns, such as hypokalemia and a craniofacial defect, are prevalent, endangering the general health of the breed. Hypokalemia, a subnormal serum potassium ion concentration ([K(+)]), most often occurs as a secondary problem but can occur as a primary problem, such as hypokalaemic periodic paralysis in humans, and as feline hypokalaemic periodic polymyopathy primarily in Burmese. The most characteristic clinical sign of hypokalemia in Burmese is a skeletal muscle weakness that is frequently episodic in nature, either generalized, or sometimes localized to the cervical and thoracic limb girdle muscles. Burmese hypokalemia is suspected to be a single locus autosomal recessive trait. A genome wide case-control study using the illumina Infinium Feline 63K iSelect DNA array was performed using 35 cases and 25 controls from the Burmese breed that identified a locus on chromosome E1 associated with hypokalemia. Within approximately 1.2 Mb of the highest associated SNP, two candidate genes were identified, KCNH4 and WNK4. Direct sequencing of the genes revealed a nonsense mutation, producing a premature stop codon within WNK4 (c.2899C>T), leading to a truncated protein that lacks the C-terminal coiled-coil domain and the highly conserved Akt1/SGK phosphorylation site. All cases were homozygous for the mutation. Although the exact mechanism causing hypokalemia has not been determined, extrapolation from the homologous human and mouse genes suggests the mechanism may involve a potassium-losing nephropathy. A genetic test to screen for the genetic defect within the active breeding population has been developed, which should lead to eradication of the mutation and improved general health within the breed. Moreover, the identified mutation may help clarify the role of the protein in K⁺ regulation and the cat represents the first animal model for WNK4-associated hypokalemia.
缅甸猫是一种古老而受欢迎的猫种,但存在几种健康问题,如低钾血症和颅面缺陷,这危及该品种的整体健康。低钾血症,即血清钾离子浓度异常([K(+)]),通常是继发问题,但也可能是原发性问题,如人类的低钾周期性瘫痪,以及主要发生在缅甸猫中的低钾周期性多肌病。缅甸猫低钾血症的最典型临床特征是骨骼肌无力,这种无力通常是间歇性的,要么是全身性的,要么是局部性的,局限于颈和胸肢带肌肉。缅甸猫低钾血症疑似为单一基因座常染色体隐性遗传特征。使用 Illumina Infinium Feline 63K iSelect DNA 芯片进行了全基因组病例对照研究,使用来自缅甸猫的 35 个病例和 25 个对照,确定了与低钾血症相关的 E1 染色体上的一个基因座。在与最高相关 SNP 大约 1.2 Mb 范围内,确定了两个候选基因,KCNH4 和 WNK4。对这些基因进行直接测序发现了一个无义突变,WNK4 内产生一个提前终止密码子(c.2899C>T),导致截短蛋白缺失 C 末端卷曲螺旋结构域和高度保守的 Akt1/SGK 磷酸化位点。所有病例均为该突变的纯合子。尽管导致低钾血症的确切机制尚未确定,但从同源的人类和小鼠基因推断,该机制可能涉及失钾性肾病。已经开发出一种用于筛查活跃繁殖群体中遗传缺陷的基因测试,这应该可以消除突变并改善该品种的整体健康状况。此外,所鉴定的突变可能有助于阐明该蛋白在 K⁺调节中的作用,并且猫代表了与 WNK4 相关低钾血症的首个动物模型。