2019
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0212645
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Bald thigh syndrome in sighthounds—Revisiting the cause of a well-known disease

Abstract: Bald thigh syndrome is a common hair loss disorder in sighthounds. Numerous possible causes, including environmental conditions, trauma, stress, endocrinopathies and genetic components have been proposed, but only endocrinopathies have been ruled out scientifically. The overall goal of our study was to identify the cause of bald thigh syndrome and the pathological changes associated with it. We approached this aim by comparing skin biopsies and hair shafts of affected and control dogs microscopically as well a… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Among the most common variants were several variants with a suggested ancient origin and established distribution across a wide range of modern-day breeds, such as chondrodystrophy and intervertebral disc disease (CDDY), degenerative myelopathy (DM), progressive rod-cone degeneration (prcd-PRA), hyperuricosuria (HUU) and collie eye anomaly (CEA) (1216). On the other hand, we observed a high frequency of several variants that have so far been linked to specific disease phenotypes based on examinations of a single breed or subpopulation within a breed including IGFBP5 gene candidate variant for bald thigh syndrome in sighthounds (17), SLC7A9 and SLC3A1 gene variants associated with cystinuria in Bulldogs (18, 19), as well as PDK4 and TTN gene risk variants for dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in Dobermans (2022). The clinical impact of these broadly distributed putative genetic risk factors in dogs of a diverse genetic ancestry background were further assessed with the use of electronic medical records.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among the most common variants were several variants with a suggested ancient origin and established distribution across a wide range of modern-day breeds, such as chondrodystrophy and intervertebral disc disease (CDDY), degenerative myelopathy (DM), progressive rod-cone degeneration (prcd-PRA), hyperuricosuria (HUU) and collie eye anomaly (CEA) (1216). On the other hand, we observed a high frequency of several variants that have so far been linked to specific disease phenotypes based on examinations of a single breed or subpopulation within a breed including IGFBP5 gene candidate variant for bald thigh syndrome in sighthounds (17), SLC7A9 and SLC3A1 gene variants associated with cystinuria in Bulldogs (18, 19), as well as PDK4 and TTN gene risk variants for dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in Dobermans (2022). The clinical impact of these broadly distributed putative genetic risk factors in dogs of a diverse genetic ancestry background were further assessed with the use of electronic medical records.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…RNA for transcriptome sequencing was extracted from the 20 pooled microdissected HF of the same cycle stage and the IFE collected from each dog. RNA extraction, library preparation and RNA-seq were performed as described in a previous study [ 17 , 36 ]. In brief, total RNA was extracted using the RNeasy Micro Kit (Qiagen, Hombrechtikon, Switzerland) including proteinase K digestion according to the manufacturer’s protocol.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Low quality bases (−q 15) and illumina adaptors were trimmed with fastp (PMID: 30423086). All reads that passed quality control were mapped with an average of 90% uniquely mapped reads to the dog reference genome (Can.Fam3.1) by STAR aligner version 2.6.0 [ 52 ] as described in a previous study [ 17 , 36 ]. The read abundance was calculated using HTseq and a gtf file (version 105, downloaded and modified in March 2019) obtained from NCBI Can.Fam3.1 annotation release 105 [ 53 ].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…We also observed several variants that had only previously been associated with disease in a single breed or sub-population, at high frequency across many breeds. This includes the IGFBP5 gene candidate variant for bald thigh syndrome in sighthounds [22], SLC7A9 and SLC3A1 gene variants associated with cystinuria in Bulldogs [23,24], as well as PDK4 and TTN gene risk variants for dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in Dobermans [25][26][27]. The clinical impact of these broadly distributed putative genetic risk factors in dogs of a diverse genetic ancestry background were further assessed with the use of electronic medical records.…”
Section: The Most Common Disease-associated Variants In Dogsmentioning
confidence: 99%