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Head Defect

General description

The mutation causing the Burmese Head Defect affects function of a gene significant for facial development. One copy of the mutation does not cause the craniofacial defect but may produce a shortened facial structure (brachycephaly). Cats with two copies of the mutation have the severe craniofacial defect that is incompatible with life

Breeds

Burmese

Order details
Test number8465
Sample material0.5 ml EDTA blood, 2x cheek swab, 1x special swab (eNAT)
Test duration7-14 working days
Test specifications
Symptom complexskeletal
Inheritancesee Infotext
Causalitycausally
GeneALX1
MutationDEL
LiteratureOMIA:001551-9685
Detailed description

The Burmese Head Defect is a congenital malformation of the head and face (craniofacial) that is widespread in modern Burmese cat lines. The causal genetic variant was discovered by the Lyons Feline Genetics Research Laboratory at UC Davis and affects a gene that plays an important role in facial development.

One copy of the variant (heterozygous) does not cause malformation but is often responsible for a shortened facial skull (brachycephaly). Cats that inherit the variant from both parents (homozygous) have severe malformations and are not viable.