Breed relationships facilitate fine-mapping studies: A 7.8-kb deletion cosegregates with Collie eye anomaly across multiple dog breeds

  1. Heidi G. Parker1,
  2. Anna V. Kukekova2,
  3. Dayna T. Akey3,
  4. Orly Goldstein2,
  5. Ewen F. Kirkness4,
  6. Kathleen C. Baysac1,
  7. Dana S. Mosher1,
  8. Gustavo D. Aguirre5,
  9. Gregory M. Acland2, and
  10. Elaine A. Ostrander1,6
  1. 1 Cancer Genetics Branch, National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA;
  2. 2 Baker Institute for Animal Health, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA;
  3. 3 Department of Genome Sciences, School of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA;
  4. 4 The Institute for Genomic Research, Rockville, Maryland 20850, USA;
  5. 5 Department of Clinical Studies, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA

Abstract

The features of modern dog breeds that increase the ease of mapping common diseases, such as reduced heterogeneity and extensive linkage disequilibrium, may also increase the difficulty associated with fine mapping and identifying causative mutations. One way to address this problem is by combining data from multiple breeds segregating the same trait after initial linkage has been determined. The multibreed approach increases the number of potentially informative recombination events and reduces the size of the critical haplotype by taking advantage of shortened linkage disequilibrium distances found across breeds. In order to identify breeds that likely share a trait inherited from the same ancestral source, we have used cluster analysis to divide 132 breeds of dog into five primary breed groups. We then use the multibreed approach to fine-map Collie eye anomaly (cea), a complex disorder of ocular development that was initially mapped to a 3.9-cM region on canine chromosome 37. Combined genotypes from affected individuals from four breeds of a single breed group significantly narrowed the candidate gene region to a 103-kb interval spanning only four genes. Sequence analysis revealed that all affected dogs share a homozygous deletion of 7.8 kb in the NHEJ1 gene. This intronic deletion spans a highly conserved binding domain to which several developmentally important proteins bind. This work both establishes that the primary cea mutation arose as a single disease allele in a common ancestor of herding breeds as well as highlights the value of comparative population analysis for refining regions of linkage.

Footnotes

  • 6 Corresponding author.

    6 E-mail eostrand{at}mail.nih.gov; fax (301) 480-0472.

  • [Supplemental material is available online at www.genome.org.]

  • Article published online before print. Article and publication date are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.6772807

    • Received June 4, 2007.
    • Accepted August 22, 2007.
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