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Genetic discoveries fuel veterinary medicine

DNA knowledge is leading to new tests, improved care for pets

Denali, a Maine Coon cat, gets a ride back to his cage at the CFA-IAMS Cat Championship in New York
Denali, a Maine Coon cat, gets a ride back to his cage at the CFA-IAMS Cat Championship in New York on Oct. 8. The cracking of the feline genome has allowed researchers to identify a gene in Maine Coon cats that causes a common form of heart disease.
Seth Wenig / Reuters file
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  Animal Tracks
Two Thanksgiving turkeys, a see-through sea creature, a camouflaged catfish, a hungry golden monkey, a kissing pooch – plus more animals great and small.

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Image: Two kittens wait for adoption at the Elkhart County Humane Society in Elkhart, IN.
Carissa Ray / msnbc.com
Abandoned pups, kittens feel recession
Nov. 24: The Humane Society of Elkhart County is grappling with an influx of pets dropped off after hours in an area that has been hit hard by the economic downturn. Msnbc.com’s Carissa Ray reports.

By Kim Campbell Thornton
updated 1:27 a.m. ET Oct. 18, 2005

Kim Campbell Thornton

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Ricky, a Devon Rex cat, played the piano, jumped through a hoop, and was once mistaken by a bank teller for a wind-up toy. Ricky had another, less-fortunate distinction: he suffered from hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, the most common form of heart disease in cats.

When Ricky died of a massive heart attack in 2002, his owner, Steve Dale of Chicago, set up The Ricky Fund for research into feline hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) in conjunction with the Winn Feline Foundation, which funds research into cat-related health problems. Since then, among the advances researchers have made include identification of the gene that causes HCM in Maine Coon cats, a great step in the path toward treating the disease.

By cracking open the textbooks of life through the sequencing of the canine and feline genomes, researchers are discovering new approaches to pet health and disease. They’ve begun to identify the genes responsible for certain inherited diseases and create genetic tests to identify affected animals. These breakthroughs mean new hope for people whose cats and dogs suffer from such diseases, as well as for breeders, who can use new techniques to screen for disease and prevent passing it on.

“Finding the gene [for HCM] will lead to the availability of a genetic test to identify affected Maine Coon cats in the near future, and it will spur research to see if the same gene is responsible for the disease in other types of cats," says Susan Little, a veterinarian in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada and president of the Winn Feline Foundation. “Finding the gene responsible for a disease always opens the potential that new treatments will be found as well.”

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Winn-funded researchers have also identified the gene responsible for polycystic kidney disease (PKD), which affects 30 to 40 percent of Persian cats and related breeds, such as Himalayans.

“With the identification of the PKD gene has come a simple genetic test to identify affected cats, and hopefully it will lead to a treatment for cats that develop chronic renal insufficiency due to their PKD,” Little says.

Early screening
With this test, breeders can screen kittens as young as 8 weeks of age for the PKD gene and replace any PKD-positive cats in their breeding program over time. Because the gene is found in such a large proportion of Persians and related breeds, it’s important for breeders to eliminate the gene slowly so as not to restrict genetic variability.

“Restricting genetic variability would lead to more health problems,” Little says. “Eventually, there should be very few Persians born with PKD, something that will bring peace of mind to pet owners. Pet owners who have Persians now can also get them screened for the gene and learn more about the disease.”

Some diseases are genetically complex, linked to more than one gene. In the past, that’s been a difficult issue for breeders and researchers, especially if diseases don’t occur until later in life. By the time the disease shows up, the animal may have offspring that also carry the genes for the disease.

“New genetic tests should really help us deal with issues like that,” says veterinarian Patricia Olson, president and CEO of Morris Animal Foundation in Englewood, Colo. “We should have some very good tools that can tell us earlier if an animal is predisposed to something. It doesn’t mean you don’t utilize that animal in breeding, but you utilize it in a way that the carrier is mated appropriately and doesn’t pass on the disease. You want to optimize the good traits, not pass on the bad, and have the tools to be able to make the difference.”


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