Genome-Wide Association Analysis Identifies a Mutation in the Thiamine Transporter 2 (SLC19A3) Gene Associated with Alaskan Husky Encephalopathy
Karen M. Vernau,Jonathan A. Runstadler,Emily A. Brown,Jessie M. Cameron,Heather J. Huson,Robert J. Higgins,Cameron Ackerley,Beverly K. Sturges,Peter J Dickinson,Birgit Puschner,Cecilia R Giulivi,G. Diane Shelton,Brian H. Robinson,Salvatore DiMauro,Andrew W. Bollen,Danika L. Bannasch +15 more
TL;DR: Results suggest that this mutation in SLC19A3.1, encoding a thiamine transporter protein, plays a critical role in the pathogenesis of AHE.
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Abstract: Alaskan Husky Encephalopathy (AHE) has been previously proposed as a mitochondrial encephalopathy based on neuropathological similarities with human Leigh Syndrome (LS). We studied 11 Alaskan Husky dogs with AHE, but found no abnormalities in respiratory chain enzyme activities in muscle and liver, or mutations in mitochondrial or nuclear genes that cause LS in people. A genome wide association study was performed using eight of the affected dogs and 20 related but unaffected control AHs using the Illumina canine HD array. SLC19A3 was identified as a positional candidate gene. This gene controls the uptake of thiamine in the CNS via expression of the thiamine transporter protein THTR2. Dogs have two copies of this gene located within the candidate interval (SLC19A3.2 – 43.36–43.38 Mb and SLC19A3.1 – 43.411–43.419 Mb) on chromosome 25. Expression analysis in a normal dog revealed that one of the paralogs, SLC19A3.1, was expressed in the brain and spinal cord while the other was not. Subsequent exon sequencing of SLC19A3.1 revealed a 4bp insertion and SNP in the second exon that is predicted to result in a functional protein truncation of 279 amino acids (c.624 insTTGC, c.625 C>A). All dogs with AHE were homozygous for this mutation, 15/41 healthy AH control dogs were heterozygous carriers while 26/41 normal healthy AH dogs were wild type. Furthermore, this mutation was not detected in another 187 dogs of different breeds. These results suggest that this mutation in SLC19A3.1, encoding a thiamine transporter protein, plays a critical role in the pathogenesis of AHE.
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Adolescent Intermittent Alcohol Exposure: Persistence of Structural and Functional Hippocampal Abnormalities into Adulthood
Mary-Louise Risher,Rebekah L. Fleming,W. Christopher Risher,Kelsey M. Miller,Rebecca C. Klein,Tiffany A. Wills,Shawn K. Acheson,Scott D. Moore,Wilkie A. Wilson,Cagla Eroglu,H. S. Swartzwelder +10 more
TL;DR: Findings reveal that repeated alcohol exposure during adolescence results in enduring structural and functional abnormalities in the hippocampus, which may help to explain learning-related behavioral changes in adult animals preexposed to AIE.
Mutation in the thiamine transporter gene and Wernicke's like encephalopathy
Hiroaki Miyajima
- 25 Nov 2012
TL;DR: To the Editor: The authors report on two previously healthy Japanese brothers with a newly discovered recessively inherited syndrome similar to Wernicke's encephalopathy that developed in the second decade of the century.
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