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Inheritance of monogenic hereditary skin disease and related canine breeds


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Título : Inheritance of monogenic hereditary skin disease and related canine breeds
Autor : Marín García, Pablo Jesús
Llobat Bordes, Lola
Materias: Dogs - Skin - Diseases.Perros - Enfermedades genéticas.Dogs - Genetic disorders.Leishmaniasis en los perros.Perros - Piel - Enfermedades.
Editorial : MDPI
Citación : Marín-García, P. J. & Llobat, L. (2022). Inheritance of monogenic hereditary skin disease and related canine breeds. Veterinary Sciences, vol. 9, i. 8 (15 aug.), art. 433. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/vetsci9080433
Resumen : The plasticity of the genome is an evolutionary factor in all animal species, including canines, but it can also be the origin of diseases caused by hereditary genetic mutation. Genetic changes, or mutations, that give rise to a pathology in most cases result from recessive alleles that are normally found with minority allelic frequency. The use of genetic improvement increases the consanguinity within canine breeds and, on many occasions, also increases the frequency of these recessive alleles, increasing the prevalence of these pathologies. This prevalence has been known for a long time, but mutations differ according to the canine breed. These genetic diseases, including skin diseases, or genodermatosis, which is narrowly defined as monogenic hereditary dermatosis. In this review, we focus on genodermatosis sensu estricto, i.e., monogenic, and hereditary dermatosis, in addition to the clinical features, diagnosis, pathogeny, and treatment. Specifically, this review analyzes epidermolytic and non-epidermolytic ichthyosis, junctional epidermolysis bullosa, nasal parakeratosis, mucinosis, dermoid sinus, among others, in canine breeds, such as Golden Retriever, German Pointer, Australian Shepherd, American Bulldog, Great Dane, Jack Russell Terrier, Labrador Retriever, Shar-Pei, and Rhodesian Ridgeback.
Descripción : Este artículo se encuentra disponible en la siguiente URL: https://www.mdpi.com/2306-7381/9/8/433
Este artículo pertenece a la sección "Veterinary Biomedical Sciences".
URI : http://hdl.handle.net/10637/14172
Derechos: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.es
ISSN : 2306-7381 (Electrónico)
Idioma: es
Fecha de publicación : 15-ago-2022
Centro : Universidad Cardenal Herrera-CEU
Aparece en las colecciones: Dpto. Producción y Sanidad Animal, Salud Pública Veterinaria y Ciencia y Tecnología de los Alimentos





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