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Gene mutation ID’ed in potentially lethal Lab syndrome
By Gina Spadafori
September 22, 2008
Since Labradors are among the most popular breeds in the world, this is an especially significant finding:
Researchers at the University of Saskatchewan’s Western College of Veterinary Medicine (WCVM) and the University of Minnesota’s College of Veterinary Medicine have identified a genetic mutation in Labrador retriever dogs that is highly associated with exercise-induced collapse (EIC) syndrome.
The findings published this week in Nature Genetics are expected to help dog breeders gradually reduce the number of Labradors with the trait in future generations.
After intense hunting or retrieving exercise, EIC-affected Labradors start to lose control of their hind limbs. In most cases, their legs get wobbly and their limbs give out. In rare cases, the dogs may die. Labradors are the most common dog breed in the world and an estimated three to five per cent of Labradors have this condition.
“After 13 years of working on this problem, we now have the definitive answer about the syndrome’s true cause for Labrador breeders and owners. This discovery will have a huge impact on the Labrador breed worldwide.” says Susan Taylor, a professor of small animal internal medicine at the WCVM.
[...]
The researchers have also developed a genetic test for the mutated gene and determined that up to 30 per cent of Labrador retrievers are carriers of the mutation. EIC is inherited as an autosomal recessive trait, with affected dogs inheriting one copy of the mutation from each parent. Owners can have their dogs tested through their veterinarian by submitting a blood sample to the University of Minnesota Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory.
Taylor and her WCVM colleague, small animal surgeon Cindy Shmon, initiated a comprehensive clinical investigation of EIC in 1995 after examining an affected dog that was referred to the WCVM Veterinary Teaching Hospital. Suspecting that the syndrome had a novel genetic basis, Taylor contacted Mickelson and Edward Patterson at the University of Minnesota in 2001.
“The genetic research was based on more than 300 blood samples and pedigrees that we collected from affected and unaffected Labradors throughout North America,” says Taylor, who breeds Labradors and competes with them in retriever field trials.
Here’s the rest. Picture of Dr. Taylor and her dogs Blue and Breeze from the U’s Web site.
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Hooray U of MN!
Here’s our school paper’s article on the findings…
http://www.mndaily.com/2008/09.....-labradors
Comment by Megan — September 22, 2008 @ 11:54 am
Great! Hooray U of MN, indeed!
Now maybe they can find the gene that causes people to breed dogs purely for appearance and that can’t breath properly, give birth normally, move without pain or live a normal life span without costing their owners thousands of dollars. If we could breed that gene out of our species, dogs would be so much better off.
And three cheers to the RSPCA for pulling out of Crufts! Thanks for the coverage, Terrierman!
Comment by Susan Fox — September 22, 2008 @ 6:59 pm