A TNR Frameshift Variant in Weimaraner Dogs with an Exercise‐Induced Paroxysmal Movement Disorder

Author:

Christen Matthias1ORCID,Gutierrez‐Quintana Rodrigo2ORCID,James Matthew3ORCID,Faller Kiterie M.E.4ORCID,Lowrie Mark3ORCID,Rusbridge Clare5ORCID,Bossens Kenny6ORCID,Mellersh Cathryn7ORCID,Pettitt Louise7ORCID,Heinonen Tiina8ORCID,Lohi Hannes8ORCID,Jagannathan Vidhya1ORCID,Leeb Tosso1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Genetics, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Bern Bern Switzerland

2. Small Animal Hospital, School of Biodiversity, One Health and Veterinary Medicine University of Glasgow Glasgow United Kingdom

3. Dovecote Veterinary Hospital Derby United Kingdom

4. Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies The University of Edinburgh Roslin United Kingdom

5. School of Veterinary Medicine University of Surrey Surrey United Kingdom

6. Nesto Veterinary Referral Center Orion Herentals Belgium

7. Department of Veterinary Medicine University of Cambridge Cambridge United Kingdom

8. Department of Medical and Clinical Genetics, Department of Veterinary Biosciences University of Helsinki, and Folkhälsan Research Center Helsinki Finland

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundSome paroxysmal movement disorders remain without an identified genetic cause.ObjectivesThe aim was to identify the causal genetic variant for a paroxysmal dystonia–ataxia syndrome in Weimaraner dogs.MethodsClinical and diagnostic investigations were performed. Whole genome sequencing of one affected dog was used to identify private homozygous variants against 921 control genomes.ResultsFour Weimaraners were presented for episodes of abnormal gait. Results of examinations and diagnostic investigations were unremarkable. Whole genome sequencing revealed a private frameshift variant in the TNR (tenascin‐R) gene in an affected dog, XM_038542431.1:c.831dupC, which is predicted to truncate more than 75% of the open read frame. Genotypes in a cohort of 4 affected and 70 unaffected Weimaraners showed perfect association with the disease phenotype.ConclusionsWe report the association of a TNR variant with a paroxysmal dystonia–ataxia syndrome in Weimaraners. It might be relevant to include sequencing of this gene in diagnosing humans with unexplained paroxysmal movement disorders. © 2023 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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