Agerholm Jørgen S, McEvoy Fintan J, Heegaard Steffen, Charlier Carole, Jagannathan Vidhya, Drögemüller Cord
Department of Clinical Veterinary Sciences, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Dyrlægevej 16, 1870, Frederiksberg C, DK, Denmark.
Department of Pathology, Rigshospitalet, University of Copenhagen, Frederik V's Vej 11, 2100, Copenhagen Ø, DK, Denmark.
BMC Genet. 2017 Aug 2;18(1):74. doi: 10.1186/s12863-017-0541-3.
Surveillance for bovine genetic diseases in Denmark identified a hitherto unreported congenital syndrome occurring among progeny of a Holstein sire used for artificial breeding. A genetic aetiology due to a dominant inheritance with incomplete penetrance or a mosaic germline mutation was suspected as all recorded cases were progeny of the same sire. Detailed investigations were performed to characterize the syndrome and to reveal its cause.
Seven malformed calves were submitted examination. All cases shared a common morphology with the most striking lesions being severe facial dysplasia and complete prolapse of the eyes. Consequently the syndrome was named facial dysplasia syndrome (FDS). Furthermore, extensive brain malformations, including microencephaly, hydrocephalus, lobation of the cerebral hemispheres and compression of the brain were present. Subsequent data analysis of progeny of the sire revealed that around 0.5% of his offspring suffered from FDS. High density single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotyping data of the seven cases and their parents were used to map the defect in the bovine genome. Significant genetic linkage was obtained for three regions, including chromosome 26 where whole genome sequencing of a case-parent trio revealed two de novo variants perfectly associated with the disease: an intronic SNP in the DMBT1 gene and a single non-synonymous variant in the FGFR2 gene. This FGFR2 missense variant (c.927G>T) affects a gene encoding a member of the fibroblast growth factor receptor family, where amino acid sequence is highly conserved between members and across species. It is predicted to change an evolutionary conserved tryptophan into a cysteine residue (p.Trp309Cys). Both variant alleles were proven to result from de novo mutation events in the germline of the sire.
FDS is a novel genetic disorder of Holstein cattle. Mutations in the human FGFR2 gene are associated with various dominant inherited craniofacial dysostosis syndromes. Given the phenotypic similarities in FDS affected calves, the genetic mapping and absence of further high impact variants in the critical genome regions, it is highly likely that the missense mutation in the FGFR2 gene caused the FDS phenotype in a dominant mode of inheritance.
丹麦对牛遗传疾病的监测发现,在一头用于人工授精的荷斯坦公牛的后代中出现了一种此前未报告的先天性综合征。由于所有记录的病例都是同一头公牛的后代,因此怀疑是由显性遗传且外显不全或镶嵌种系突变引起的遗传病因。进行了详细调查以表征该综合征并揭示其病因。
提交了7头畸形小牛进行检查。所有病例都有共同的形态特征,最明显的病变是严重的面部发育异常和眼球完全脱垂。因此,该综合征被命名为面部发育异常综合征(FDS)。此外,还存在广泛的脑部畸形,包括小头畸形、脑积水、大脑半球分叶和脑受压。随后对该公牛后代的数据分析显示,其后代中约0.5%患有FDS。利用7例病例及其父母的高密度单核苷酸多态性(SNP)基因分型数据,在牛基因组中定位缺陷。在三个区域获得了显著的遗传连锁,包括26号染色体,对一个病例-父母三联体进行全基因组测序发现两个与疾病完美相关的新生变异:DMBT1基因中的一个内含子SNP和FGFR2基因中的一个非同义变异。这个FGFR2错义变异(c.927G>T)影响一个编码成纤维细胞生长因子受体家族成员的基因,该家族成员之间以及不同物种之间的氨基酸序列高度保守。预计它会将一个进化保守的色氨酸改变为半胱氨酸残基(p.Trp309Cys)。两个变异等位基因均被证明是由公牛种系中的新生突变事件导致的。
FDS是荷斯坦奶牛的一种新型遗传疾病。人类FGFR2基因的突变与各种显性遗传的颅面骨发育不全综合征相关。鉴于FDS患病小牛的表型相似性、基因定位以及关键基因组区域中没有进一步的高影响变异,FGFR2基因中的错义突变很可能以显性遗传模式导致了FDS表型。