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A Common Missense Variant Causing Factor XI Deficiency and Increased Bleeding Tendency in Maine Coon Cats

Hereditary factor XI (FXI) deficiency is characterized as an autosomal mild to moderate coagulopathy in humans and domestic animals. Coagulation testing revealed FXI deficiency in a core family of Maine Coon cats (MCCs) in the United States. Factor XI-deficient MCCs were homozygous for a guanine to...

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Autores principales: Kuder, Henrike, Dickeson, S. Kent, Brooks, Marjory B., Kehl, Alexandra, Müller, Elisabeth, Gailani, David, Giger, Urs
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9140718/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35627175
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes13050792
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author Kuder, Henrike
Dickeson, S. Kent
Brooks, Marjory B.
Kehl, Alexandra
Müller, Elisabeth
Gailani, David
Giger, Urs
author_facet Kuder, Henrike
Dickeson, S. Kent
Brooks, Marjory B.
Kehl, Alexandra
Müller, Elisabeth
Gailani, David
Giger, Urs
author_sort Kuder, Henrike
collection PubMed
description Hereditary factor XI (FXI) deficiency is characterized as an autosomal mild to moderate coagulopathy in humans and domestic animals. Coagulation testing revealed FXI deficiency in a core family of Maine Coon cats (MCCs) in the United States. Factor XI-deficient MCCs were homozygous for a guanine to adenine transition resulting in a methionine substitution for the highly conserved valine-516 in the FXI catalytic domain. Immunoblots detected FXI of normal size and quantity in plasmas of MCCs homozygous for V516M. Some FXI-deficient MCCs experienced excessive post-operative/traumatic bleeding. Screening of 263 MCCs in Europe revealed a mutant allele frequency of 0.232 (23.2%). However, V516M was not found among 100 cats of other breeds. Recombinant feline FXI-M516 (fFXI-M516) expressed ~4% of the activity of wild-type fFXI-V516 in plasma clotting assays. Furthermore, fFXIa-M516 cleaved the chromogenic substrate S-2366 with ~4.3-fold lower catalytic efficacy (k(cat)/K(m)) than fFXIa-V516, supporting a conformational alteration of the protease active site. The rate of FIX activation by fFXIa-M516 was reduced >3-fold compared with fFXIa-V516. The common missense variant FXI-V516M causes a cross-reactive material positive FXI deficiency in MCCs that is associated with mild-moderate bleeding tendencies. Given the prevalence of the variant in MCCs, genotyping is recommended prior to invasive procedures or breeding.
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spelling pubmed-91407182022-05-28 A Common Missense Variant Causing Factor XI Deficiency and Increased Bleeding Tendency in Maine Coon Cats Kuder, Henrike Dickeson, S. Kent Brooks, Marjory B. Kehl, Alexandra Müller, Elisabeth Gailani, David Giger, Urs Genes (Basel) Article Hereditary factor XI (FXI) deficiency is characterized as an autosomal mild to moderate coagulopathy in humans and domestic animals. Coagulation testing revealed FXI deficiency in a core family of Maine Coon cats (MCCs) in the United States. Factor XI-deficient MCCs were homozygous for a guanine to adenine transition resulting in a methionine substitution for the highly conserved valine-516 in the FXI catalytic domain. Immunoblots detected FXI of normal size and quantity in plasmas of MCCs homozygous for V516M. Some FXI-deficient MCCs experienced excessive post-operative/traumatic bleeding. Screening of 263 MCCs in Europe revealed a mutant allele frequency of 0.232 (23.2%). However, V516M was not found among 100 cats of other breeds. Recombinant feline FXI-M516 (fFXI-M516) expressed ~4% of the activity of wild-type fFXI-V516 in plasma clotting assays. Furthermore, fFXIa-M516 cleaved the chromogenic substrate S-2366 with ~4.3-fold lower catalytic efficacy (k(cat)/K(m)) than fFXIa-V516, supporting a conformational alteration of the protease active site. The rate of FIX activation by fFXIa-M516 was reduced >3-fold compared with fFXIa-V516. The common missense variant FXI-V516M causes a cross-reactive material positive FXI deficiency in MCCs that is associated with mild-moderate bleeding tendencies. Given the prevalence of the variant in MCCs, genotyping is recommended prior to invasive procedures or breeding. MDPI 2022-04-28 /pmc/articles/PMC9140718/ /pubmed/35627175 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes13050792 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Kuder, Henrike
Dickeson, S. Kent
Brooks, Marjory B.
Kehl, Alexandra
Müller, Elisabeth
Gailani, David
Giger, Urs
A Common Missense Variant Causing Factor XI Deficiency and Increased Bleeding Tendency in Maine Coon Cats
title A Common Missense Variant Causing Factor XI Deficiency and Increased Bleeding Tendency in Maine Coon Cats
title_full A Common Missense Variant Causing Factor XI Deficiency and Increased Bleeding Tendency in Maine Coon Cats
title_fullStr A Common Missense Variant Causing Factor XI Deficiency and Increased Bleeding Tendency in Maine Coon Cats
title_full_unstemmed A Common Missense Variant Causing Factor XI Deficiency and Increased Bleeding Tendency in Maine Coon Cats
title_short A Common Missense Variant Causing Factor XI Deficiency and Increased Bleeding Tendency in Maine Coon Cats
title_sort common missense variant causing factor xi deficiency and increased bleeding tendency in maine coon cats
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9140718/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35627175
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes13050792
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