PROGRESSIVE RETINAL ATROPHY IN
THE SLOUGHI
By Dominique Crapon de Caprona,
Ph.D.
What is progressive Retinal Atrophy?
Progressive Retinal Atrophy, or PRA, is a hereditary blinding disorder found in most purebred dogs. PRA is a degenerative disease of the retina. The retina, a tissue located inside the back of the eye, contains specialized cells or photoreceptors which absorb the light focused on them by the eye's lens. These photoreceptors convert that light into electrical nerve signals. The nerve signals from the retina are passed through the optic nerve to the brain where they are perceived as vision. The retinal photoreceptors are of two kinds: rods for night vision, and cones for day and color vision. PRA usually affects the rods first, leading to poor vision in darkness and twilight, and then cones in later stages of the disease when day vision becomes impaired too. As their vision deteriorates, affected dogs adjust to their handicap by relying on other sensory modalities (touch, hearing, smell) as long as their environment remains constant. As the disease progresses, the pupils of their eyes become noticeably very "shiny" and the lens of their eyes may become opaque sometimes resulting in a cataract. In humans a similar disorder is called retinitis pigmentosa. When was Progressive Retinal Atrophy identified
in the Sloughi?
How is Progressive Retinal Atrophy in the Sloughi
characterized?
How is Progressive Retinal Atrophy in the Sloughi
inherited?
What to do when breeding Sloughis?
It is important to keep in mind that, at the beginning of year 2001, although less than 10 Sloughis have been found to be affected with PRA, 30% of the Sloughis genotyped so far have been shown to be carriers for PRA. It is therefore extremely important at this point in time not to go the path of other extremes, and to deplete the gene pool of the Sloughi by excluding 1/3 of the current population from breeding. In doing so, one could run an even greater risk of developing other problems in the breed, far more difficult to genotype and control. At the same time, because of the high incidence of PRA carriers in the breed, serious breeders will screen all their breeding stock for PRA. It is, however, suggested that only outstanding Sloughis found to be PRA carriers be bred with, and that from generation to generation fewer and fewer PRA carriers be used for breeding, until ideally and ultimately PRA is eradicated in the breed while at the same time maintaining the overall genetic health of the breed. © with the Library of Congress, Dominique de Caprona 2001 References and addresses: Dekomien G, Maren Munte, Rene Gödde, Jörg Thomas Epplen (2000): Generalized Progressive Retinal Atrophy of Sloughi dogs is due to an 8-bp insertion in exon 21 of the PDE6B gene. Cytogenet. Cell Genet. 93: 261-267 Department of Molecular Human Genetics, Ruhr University, 44780 Bochum, Germany Web: http://mhg.uni-bochum.de Acland Gregory, Gustavo Aguirre (1995): PRA today - PRA background and diagnosis. From the Web: http://www.sheepdog.com OptiGen, LLC Cornell Business and Technology Park
767 Warren Road, Suite 300, Ithaca, NY 14850
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