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      A transposable element insertion in APOB causes cholesterol deficiency in Holstein cattle

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          Summary

          Cholesterol deficiency, a new autosomal recessive inherited genetic defect in Holstein cattle, has been recently reported to have an influence on the rearing success of calves. The affected animals show unresponsive diarrhea accompanied by hypocholesterolemia and usually die within the first weeks or months of life. Here, we show that whole genome sequencing combined with the knowledge about the pedigree and inbreeding status of a livestock population facilitates the identification of the causative mutation. We resequenced the entire genomes of an affected calf and a healthy partially inbred male carrying one copy of the critical 2.24‐Mb chromosome 11 segment in its ancestral state and one copy of the same segment with the cholesterol deficiency mutation. We detected a single structural variant, homozygous in the affected case and heterozygous in the non‐affected carrier male. The genetic makeup of this key animal provides extremely strong support for the causality of this mutation. The mutation represents a 1.3kb insertion of a transposable LTR element ( ERV2‐1) in the coding sequence of the APOB gene, which leads to truncated transcripts and aberrant splicing. This finding was further supported by RNA sequencing of the liver transcriptome of an affected calf. The encoded apolipoprotein B is an essential apolipoprotein on chylomicrons and low‐density lipoproteins, and therefore, the mutation represents a loss of function mutation similar to autosomal recessive inherited familial hypobetalipoproteinemia‐1 ( FHBL1) in humans. Our findings provide a direct gene test to improve selection against this deleterious mutation in Holstein cattle.

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          Looking the Cow in the Eye: Deletion in the NID1 Gene Is Associated with Recessive Inherited Cataract in Romagnola Cattle

          Cataract is a known condition leading to opacification of the eye lens causing partial or total blindness. Mutations are known to cause autosomal dominant or recessive inherited forms of cataracts in humans, mice, rats, guinea pigs and dogs. The use of large-sized animal models instead of those using mice for the study of this condition has been discussed due to the small size of rodent lenses. Four juvenile-onset cases of bilateral incomplete immature nuclear cataract were recently observed in Romagnola cattle. Pedigree analysis suggested a monogenic autosomal recessive inheritance. In addition to the cataract, one of the cases displayed abnormal head movements. Genome-wide association and homozygosity mapping and subsequent whole genome sequencing of a single case identified two perfectly associated sequence variants in a critical interval of 7.2 Mb on cattle chromosome 28: a missense point mutation located in an uncharacterized locus and an 855 bp deletion across the exon 19/intron 19 border of the bovine nidogen 1 (NID1) gene (c.3579_3604+829del). RT-PCR showed that NID1 is expressed in bovine lenses while the transcript of the second locus was absent. The NID1 deletion leads to the skipping of exon 19 during transcription and is therefore predicted to cause a frameshift and premature stop codon (p.1164fs27X). The truncated protein lacks a C-terminal domain essential for binding with matrix assembly complexes. Nidogen 1 deficient mice show neurological abnormalities and highly irregular crystal lens alterations. This study adds NID1 to the list of candidate genes for inherited cataract in humans and is the first report of a naturally occurring mutation leading to non-syndromic catarct in cattle provides a potential large animal model for human cataract.
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            The Transcriptome of Equine Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells

            Complete transcriptomic data at high resolution are available only for a few model organisms with medical importance. The gene structures of non-model organisms are mostly computationally predicted based on comparative genomics with other species. As a result, more than half of the horse gene models are known only by projection. Experimental data supporting these gene models are scarce. Moreover, most of the annotated equine genes are single-transcript genes. Utilizing RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) the experimental validation of predicted transcriptomes has become accessible at reasonable costs. To improve the horse genome annotation we performed RNA-seq on 561 samples of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) derived from 85 Warmblood horses. The mapped sequencing reads were used to build a new transcriptome assembly. The new assembly revealed many alternative isoforms associated to known genes or to those predicted by the Ensembl and/or Gnomon pipelines. We also identified 7,531 transcripts not associated with any horse gene annotated in public databases. Of these, 3,280 transcripts did not have a homologous match to any sequence deposited in the NCBI EST database suggesting horse specificity. The unknown transcripts were categorized as coding and noncoding based on predicted coding potential scores. Among them 230 transcripts had high coding potential score, at least 2 exons, and an open reading frame of at least 300 nt. We experimentally validated 9 new equine coding transcripts using RT-PCR and Sanger sequencing. Our results provide valuable detailed information on many transcripts yet to be annotated in the horse genome.
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              Low plasma cholesterol levels caused by a short deletion in the apolipoprotein B gene.

              Familial hypobetalipoproteinemia is a syndrome in which the plasma levels of apolipoprotein B (apo-B) and cholesterol are abnormally low. A truncated species of apo-B was identified in the plasma lipoproteins of members of a kindred with familial hypobetalipoproteinemia. DNA sequencing studies on genomic clones and enzymatically amplified genomic DNA samples revealed a four-base pair deletion in the apo-B gene. This short deletion, which results in a frameshift and a premature stop codon, accounts for the truncated apo-B species and explains the low apo-B and low cholesterol levels in this family.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Anim Genet
                Anim. Genet
                10.1111/(ISSN)1365-2052
                AGE
                Animal Genetics
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                0268-9146
                1365-2052
                13 January 2016
                14 March 2016
                : 47
                : 2 ( doiID: 10.1111/age.2016.47.issue-2 )
                : 253-257
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Institute of Genetics Vetsuisse FacultyUniversity of Bern Bremgartenstrasse 109a CH‐3001 BernSwitzerland
                [ 2 ] Clinic for Ruminants Vetsuisse FacultyUniversity of Bern Bremgartenstrasse 109a CH‐3001 BernSwitzerland
                [ 3 ] Institute of Animal Pathology Vetsuisse FacultyUniversity of Bern Länggassstrasse 122 CH‐3001 BernSwitzerland
                [ 4 ]Swissgenetics Meielenfeldweg 12 CH‐3052 ZollikofenSwitzerland
                [ 5 ]Present address: Tierarztpraxis am Gantrisch Galgenzelg 11 CH‐3150 Schwarzenburg
                Author notes
                [*] [* ] Address for correspondence

                C. Drögemüller, Institute of Genetics, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Bern, Bremgartenstrasse 109a CH‐3001, Bern, Switzerland.

                E‐mail: cord.droegemueller@ 123456vetsuisse.unibe.ch

                Article
                AGE12410
                10.1111/age.12410
                4849205
                26763170
                f80f6f8b-a44a-41a4-a0c7-bdd7e0f2decb
                © 2016 The Authors. Animal Genetics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Stichting International Foundation for Animal Genetics

                This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution‐NonCommercial‐NoDerivs License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.

                History
                : 06 December 2015
                Page count
                Pages: 5
                Categories
                Short Communication
                Short Communications
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                age12410
                April 2016
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_NLMPMC version:4.8.8 mode:remove_FC converted:28.04.2016

                Genetics
                diarrhea,disruptive mutation,gene test,hypobetalipoproteinemia,hypocholesterolemia,lipid malabsorption,rearing success,rnaseq,whole genome sequencing

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