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Dog Studies may Help Understand Human Genetic Disorders

by Trilok Kapur on Feb 4 2010 5:43 PM

A study has indicated that dogs can provide an excellent model for understanding human complex diseases.

In the study with 81 affected dogs and 57 controls from the Nova Scotia duck tolling retriever breed, the researchers identified five loci associated with a canine systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) -related disease complex. Fine mapping with twice as many dogs validated these loci.

"Our results indicate that the homogeneity of strong genetic risk factors within dog breeds allows multigenic disorders to be mapped with fewer than 100 cases and 100 controls, making dogs an excellent model in which to identify pathways involved in human complex diseases", said Professor Hannes Lohi, University of Helsinki and Folkhalsan Research Center, Finland.

Nova Scotia duck tolling retrievers (NSDTRs) are strongly predisposed to many immune-mediated diseases, including a systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) -related disease complex comprising an immune-mediated rheumatic disease (IMRD) and steroid-responsive meningitis-arteritis (SRMA).

The NSDTR breed was developed in the Yarmouth region of Nova Scotia in the early 1800s as a hunting and retrieving dog.

The breed descended from a very small population of dogs that survived two devastating outbreaks of canine distemper virus in 1908 and 1912.

One hypothesis for the abnormally high rates of autoimmune diseases in modern NSDTRs world-wide is that dogs with particularly strong or reactive immune systems were much more likely to survive these outbreaks.

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Pedigree analysis of the SLE disease complex in NSDTRs has indicated that it involves multi-genetic inheritance, like most autoimmune diseases in humans.

The IMRD disease complex involves chronic musculoskeletal signs with a clinical picture indicative of immune-mediated non-erosive polyarthritis. Many of the clinical features of the canine IMRD complex are similar to those of human SLE.

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"In this study, we have identified five loci that predispose to an SLE-related disease in NSDTRs. The study highlights the strength of disease mapping in dogs, where a canine breed may carry a few disease loci, each with a strong effect, that together are sufficient to predispose to a complex disease", Lohi said.

Some types of genetic risk factor will be more easily traced in dogs than in humans, and the dog studies might be a valuable complement to human study for identifying new genes and pathways that are important in disease pathogenesis.

"Although we plan to identify and characterize the functions of the canine mutations, this study opens the door for further studies of specific T-cell activation pathways in human populations. In the more long term, the development of clinical treatment regimens based on a dog's particular risk genotype might be possible," Lohi said.

The study has been published in Nature Genetics.

Source-ANI
TRI


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