Author:
Damé Maria Cecília Florisbal,Xavier Gildenor Medeiros,Oliveira-Filho José Paes,Borges Alexandre Secorun,Oliveira Henrique Nunes,Riet-Correa Franklin,Schild Ana Lucia
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Oculocutaneous albinism (OCA) is an autosomal recessive hereditary pigmentation disorder affecting humans and several other animal species. Oculocutaneous albinism was studied in a herd of Murrah buffalo to determine the clinical presentation and genetic basis of albinism in this species.
Results
Clinical examinations and pedigree analysis were performed in an affected herd, and wild-type and OCA tyrosinase mRNA sequences were obtained. The main clinical findings were photophobia and a lack of pigmentation of the hair, skin, horns, hooves, mucosa, and iris. The results of segregation analysis suggest that this disease is acquired through recessive inheritance. In the OCA buffalo, a single-base substitution was detected at nucleotide 1,431 (G to A), which leads to the conversion of tryptophan into a stop codon at residue 477.
Conclusion
This premature stop codon produces an inactive protein, which is responsible for the OCA buffalo phenotype. These findings will be useful for future studies of albinism in buffalo and as a possible model to study diseases caused by a premature stop codon.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Genetics
Cited by
32 articles.
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