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A COL7A1 mutation causes dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa in Rotes Höhenvieh cattle.
[dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa]
We
identified
a
congenital
mechanobullous
skin
disorder
in
six
calves
on
a
single
farm
of
an
endangered
German
cattle
breed
in
2010
.
The
condition
presented
as
a
large
loss
of
skin
distal
to
the
fetlocks
and
at
the
mucosa
of
the
muzzle
.
All
affected
calves
were
euthanized
on
humane
grounds
due
to
the
severity
,
extent
and
progression
of
the
skin
and
oral
lesions
.
Examination
of
skin
samples
under
light
microscopy
revealed
detachment
of
the
epidermis
from
the
dermis
at
the
level
of
the
dermo
epidermal
junction
,
leading
to
the
diagnosis
of
a
subepidermal
bullous
dermatosis
such
as
epidermolysis
bullosa
.
The
pedigree
was
consistent
with
monogenic
autosomal
recessive
inheritance
.
We
localized
the
causative
mutation
to
an
18
Mb
interval
on
chromosome
22
by
homozygosity
mapping
.
The
COL
7
A
1
gene
encoding
collagen
type
VII
alpha
1
is
located
within
this
interval
and
COL
7
A
1
mutations
have
been
shown
to
cause
inherited
dystrophic
epidermolysis
bullosa
(
DEB
)
in
humans
.
A
SNP
in
the
bovine
COL
7
A
1
exon
49
(
c
.
4756
C
>
T
)
was
perfectly
associated
with
the
observed
disease
.
The
homozygous
mutant
T
/
T
genotype
was
exclusively
present
in
affected
calves
and
their
parents
were
heterozygous
C
/
T
confirming
the
assumed
recessive
mode
of
inheritance
.
All
known
cases
and
genotyped
carriers
were
related
to
a
single
cow
,
which
is
supposed
to
be
the
founder
animal
.
The
mutant
T
allele
was
absent
in
63
animals
from
24
cattle
breeds
.
The
identified
mutation
causes
a
premature
stop
codon
which
leads
to
a
truncated
protein
representing
a
complete
loss
of
COL
7
A
1
function
(
p
.
R
1586
*
)
.
We
thus
have
identified
a
candidate
causative
mutation
for
this
genetic
disease
using
only
three
cases
to
unravel
its
molecular
basis
.
Selection
against
this
mutation
can
now
be
used
to
eliminate
the
mutant
allele
from
the
Rotes
Höhenvieh
breed
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"skin samples"
symptom
child syndrome
dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa
epidermolysis bullosa simplex
kindler syndrome
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