Search Phenotypes

Lethal multi-organ developmental dysplasia — Paunch calf syndrome

Using targeted DNA capture and massively parallel resequencing of the 1.2 Mb region that contained 24 genes, Testoni et al. (2012) identified a causal mutation as a "KDM2B missense mutation (c.2503G>A) leading to an amino acid exchange (p.D835N) in an evolutionary strongly conserved domain". As the same authors report, "The KDM2B gene (also known as JHDM1B and FBXL10) encodes a histone H3 lysine 36 dimethyl (H3K36me2)-specific demethylase ....

OMIA ID: 1722Inheritance: 5Characterised: YesYear: 2012

Muscular hypertrophy (double muscling) — Double muscling; “culón”; horse rump

The double-muscle trait in cattle is characterised by an increase in muscle mass of approx 20%, resulting in substantially higher meat yield, a higher proportion of expensive cuts of meat, and lean and very tender meat, for which a substantial premium is paid. The trait is autosomal recessive, and the locus has been given the symbol mh. It occurs at such a high frequency in Piedmontese and Belgian Blue cattle that it is characteristic of these...

OMIA ID: 683Inheritance: 1Characterised: YesYear: 1997

Pseudomyotonia, congenital — Congenital pseudomyotonia

Recognising the close resemblance of this disorder in Chianina cattle to Brody disease in humans, Drögemüller et al. (2008) illustrated the power of the candidate-gene approach by showing that this disorder in Chianina cattle is due to a missense mutation in the bovine version of the "Brody gene" - ATP2A1. Interestingly, another mutation in this same gene causes a far more severe set of clinical signs: congenital muscular dystonia 1 (OMIA 0014...

OMIA ID: 1464Inheritance: 5Characterised: YesYear: 2008