2022
DOI: 10.1101/2022.06.12.495799
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Genetic prevalence and clinical relevance of canine Mendelian disease variants in over one million dogs

Abstract: Hundreds of genetic variants linked to Mendelian disease have been characterized in dogs to date, and commercial screening is being offered for most of them worldwide. There typically remains a paucity of information regarding the broader population frequency of newly discovered variants, as well as uncertainty regarding their functional and clinical impact on additional genomic ancestry backgrounds beyond the discovery breed. Panel screening of disease variants, commercially offered as direct-to-consumer gene… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(2 citation statements)
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“…Parallel assessment of breed predisposition based on that institution's more limited data showed very similar findings (generally with lower power) where analysis was possible. Similarly, use of a single institution's population data combined with general dog population allele frequency data limited to a 2‐year period 47 , 48 has limitations. However, this is somewhat mitigated by the high sample size (>1 million dogs) and sampling across pure and mix‐breed populations from 150 countries.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Parallel assessment of breed predisposition based on that institution's more limited data showed very similar findings (generally with lower power) where analysis was possible. Similarly, use of a single institution's population data combined with general dog population allele frequency data limited to a 2‐year period 47 , 48 has limitations. However, this is somewhat mitigated by the high sample size (>1 million dogs) and sampling across pure and mix‐breed populations from 150 countries.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Independence of FCE and FGF4L2 and FGF4L1 genotype status was determined using all study cases where genotyping was successful. FCE retrogene allele frequency was compared to the predicted frequency of the FGF4L1 and FGF4L2 alleles in the UC Davis veterinary hospital general population over the duration of the collected samples based on general population reported allele frequencies (15.215% and 11.951% respectively) in 1 054 293 mixed and pure‐bred dogs from more than 150 countries 47,48 …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%