4.5 Article

Inherited Neuroaxonal Dystrophy in Dogs Causing Lethal, Fetal-Onset Motor System Dysfunction and Cerebellar Hypoplasia

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY
Volume 518, Issue 18, Pages 3771-3784

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cne.22423

Keywords

brainstem; spinal cord; peripheral neuropathy; spheroid; fetal akinesia

Funding

  1. National Institute of Neurologic Disease and Stroke [NS41989]
  2. National Institute of Research Resources [RR02512]
  3. Purebred Dog Endowment Fund of the College of Veterinary Medicine, Michigan State University

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Neuroaxonal dystrophy in brainstem, spinal cord tracts, and spinal nerves accompanied by cerebellar hypoplasia was observed in a colony of laboratory dogs. Fetal akinesia was documented by ultrasonographic examination. At birth, affected puppies exhibited stereotypical positioning of limbs, scoliosis, arthrogryposis, pulmonary hypoplasia, and respiratory failure. Regional hypoplasia in the central nervous system was apparent grossly, most strikingly as underdeveloped cerebellum and spinal cord. Histopathologic abnormalities included swollen axons and spheroids in brainstem and spinal cord tracts; reduced cerebellar foliation, patchy loss of Purkinje cells, multifocal thinning of the external granular cell layer, and loss of neurons in the deep cerebellar nuclei; spheroids and loss of myelinated axons in spinal roots and peripheral nerves; increased myocyte apoptosis in skeletal muscle; and fibrofatty connective tissue proliferation around joints. Breeding studies demonstrated that the canine disorder is a fully penetrant, simple autosomal recessive trait. The disorder demonstrated a type and distribution of lesions homologous to that of human infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy (INAD), most commonly caused by mutations of phospholipase A2 group VI gene (PLA2G6), but alleles of informative markers flanking the canine PLA2G6 locus did not associate with the canine disorder. Thus, fetal-onset neuroaxonal dystrophy in dogs, a species with well-developed genome mapping resources, provides a unique opportunity for additional disease gene discovery and understanding of this pathology. J. Comp. Neurol. 518:3771-3784, 2010. (C) 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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