Prevalence of PKD1gene mutation in cats in Turkey and pathogenesis of feline polycystic kidney disease

Autor: Sevim Isparta, Yusuf Şen, Bengi Çinar Kul, Özge Şebnem Çildir, Zeynep Bars, Nuket Bilgen, Merve Bişkin Türkmen, Mustafa Yenal Akkurt
Přispěvatelé: KKÜ
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
Popis: Isparta, Sevim/0000-0002-1575-7861; Bars, Zeynep/0000-0002-8116-1855; CINAR KUL, Bengi/0000-0002-8955-0097; Cildir, Ozge Sebnem/0000-0001-7070-4212 WOS:000550747800007 PubMed: 32687010 Polycystic kidney disease (PKD) is one of the most common hereditary diseases in cats, with high prevalence in Persian and Persian-related cats. PKD is caused mainly by an inherited autosomal dominant (AD) mutation, and animals may be asymptomatic for years. We screened 16 cats from various breeds exhibiting a renal abnormality by ultrasound examination and genotyped them for the c.10063C>A transversion on exon 29 of the polycystin-1 (PKD1) gene, by PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP). Among these cats, a Siamese nuclear family of 4 cats with ancestral hereditary renal failure were screened by whole-genome sequencing (WGS) to determine novel variations in genes associated with both AD and autosomal recessive PKD in humans. During the study period, one cat died as a result of renal failure and was forwarded for autopsy. Additionally, we screened 294 cats asymptomatic for renal disease (Angora, Van, Persian, Siamese, Scottish Fold, Exotic Shorthair, British Shorthair, and mixed breeds) to determine the prevalence of the mutation in cats in Turkey. Ten of the symptomatic and 2 of the asymptomatic cats carried the heterozygous C -> A transversion, indicating a prevalence of 62.5% and 0.68%, respectively. In the WGS analysis of 4 cats in the Siamese nuclear family, novel variations were determined in the fibrocystin gene (PKHD1), which was not compatible with dominant inheritance of PKD.
Databáze: OpenAIRE