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Differential gene expression between central and peripheral retinal regions in dogs and comparison with humans

  • Michele M. Salzman
  • , Tetsuya Takimoto
  • , Melanie L. Foster
  • , Freya M. Mowat

研究成果: ジャーナルへの寄稿学術論文査読

抄録

The dog retina contains a central macula-like region, and there are reports of central retinal disorders in dogs with shared genetic etiologies with humans. Defining central/peripheral gene expression profiles may provide insight into the suitability of dogs as models for human disorders. We determined central/peripheral posterior eye gene expression profiles in dogs and interrogated inherited retinal and macular disease-associated genes for differential expression between central and peripheral regions. Bulk tissue RNA sequencing was performed on 8 mm samples of the dog central and superior peripheral regions, sampling retina and retinal pigmented epithelium/choroid separately. Reads were mapped to CanFam3.1, read counts were analyzed to determine significantly differentially expressed genes (DEGs). A similar analytic pipeline was used with a published bulk-tissue RNA sequencing human dataset. Pathways and processes involved in significantly DEGs were identified (Database for Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery). Dogs and humans shared the extent and direction of central retinal differential gene expression, with multiple shared biological pathways implicated in differential expression. Many genes implicated in heritable retinal disorders in dogs and humans were differentially expressed between central and periphery. Approximately half of genes associated with human age-related macular degeneration were differentially expressed in human and dog tissues. We have identified similarities and differences in central/peripheral gene expression profiles between dogs and humans which can be applied to further define the relevance of dogs as models for human retinal disorders.

本文言語英語
論文番号109980
ジャーナルExperimental Eye Research
245
DOI
出版ステータス出版済み - 08-2024
外部発表はい

UN SDG

この成果は、次の持続可能な開発目標に貢献しています

  1. SDG 3 - すべての人に健康と福祉を
    SDG 3 すべての人に健康と福祉を

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • 眼科学
  • 感覚系
  • 細胞および分子神経科学

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