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Item A new mechanism for a familiar mutation - bovine DGAT1 K232A modulates gene expression through multi-junction exon splice enhancement(BioMed Central Ltd, 2020-08-26) Fink T; Lopdell TJ; Tiplady K; Handley R; Johnson TJJ; Spelman RJ; Davis SR; Snell RG; Littlejohn MDBACKGROUND: The DGAT1 gene encodes an enzyme responsible for catalysing the terminal reaction in mammary triglyceride synthesis, and underpins a well-known pleiotropic quantitative trait locus (QTL) with a large influence on milk composition phenotypes. Since first described over 15 years ago, a protein-coding variant K232A has been assumed as the causative variant underlying these effects, following in-vitro studies that demonstrated differing levels of triglyceride synthesis between the two protein isoforms. RESULTS: We used a large RNAseq dataset to re-examine the underlying mechanisms of this large milk production QTL, and hereby report novel expression-based functions of the chr14 g.1802265AA > GC variant that encodes the DGAT1 K232A substitution. Using expression QTL (eQTL) mapping, we demonstrate a highly-significant mammary eQTL for DGAT1, where the K232A mutation appears as one of the top associated variants for this effect. By conducting in vitro expression and splicing experiments in bovine mammary cell culture, we further show modulation of splicing efficiency by this mutation, likely through disruption of an exon splice enhancer as a consequence of the allele encoding the 232A variant. CONCLUSIONS: The relative contributions of the enzymatic and transcription-based mechanisms now attributed to K232A remain unclear; however, these results suggest that transcriptional impacts contribute to the diversity of lactation effects observed at the DGAT1 locus.Item A frameshift-deletion mutation in Reelin causes cerebellar hypoplasia in White Swiss Shepherd dogs(John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Stichting International Foundation for Animal Genetics, 2023-10) Littlejohn MD; Sneddon N; Dittmer K; Keehan M; Stephen M; Drögemüller M; Garrick DCerebellar hypoplasia is a heterogeneous neurological condition in which the cerebellum is smaller than usual or not completely developed. The condition can have genetic origins, with Mendelian-effect mutations described in several mammalian species. Here, we describe a genetic investigation of cerebellar hypoplasia in White Swiss Shepherd dogs, where two affected puppies were identified from a litter with a recent common ancestor on both sides of their pedigree. Whole genome sequencing was conducted for 10 dogs in this family, and filtering of these data based on a recessive transmission hypothesis highlighted five protein-altering candidate variants - including a frameshift-deletion of the Reelin (RELN) gene (p.Val947*). Given the status of RELN as a gene responsible for cerebellar hypoplasia in humans, sheep and mice, these data strongly suggest the loss-of-function variant as underlying these effects. This variant has not been found in other dog breeds nor in a cohort of European White Swiss Shepherds, suggesting a recent mutation event. This finding will support the genotyping of a more diverse sample of dogs, and should aid future management of the harmful allele through optimised mating schemes.
