Spider lamb syndrome, also known as spider syndrome[1] and more formally as ovine hereditary chondrodysplasia,[2] is a homozygousrecessive disorder affecting the growth of cartilage and bone in sheep. The name derives from the limbs of afflicted animals being thin, elongated, and "spider-like".[3]
It is a semilethal trait,[4] which is thought to have been first observed in the 1970s,[5] and is most common in sheep of the Suffolk and Hampshire breeds.[6] These are both black-faced breeds of sheep; the syndrome has never been detected in white-faced breeds.[7]
The syndrome was an economically significant issue for sheep breeders in the 1980s, [8] but with strict testing and breeding programs it has become less common.[8]
Afflicted animals may be visibly deformed at birth and unable to stand, or seemingly normal for the first 4 to 6 weeks of their lives.[4]
Symptoms
Symptoms have been observed on fetal lambs as early as by the completion of the second gestational trimester.[11] Under normal production circumstances, the lambs usually do not survive past the neonatal period.[12] For this reason, the disease is considered semi-lethal.[4] The disease typically affects the musculo-skeletal system.[12] The clinical signs can include: skeletal abnormalities, twisted or humped spines, facial defects, bent legs, abnormally long legs, flat ribs, and underdeveloped muscles.[4] Due to these symptoms, lambs cannot stand to nurse.[12]
Spider lamb syndrome is untreatable, and in almost all cases, the lambs must be euthanized.[11]
Causes
Spider lamb syndrome is caused by a mutation to the gene for fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 (FGFR3), on ovine chromosome 6.[12] FGFR3 is in the tyrosine kinase receptor family and its function is to restrict the proliferation of cartilage at the growth plates of the long bones:[12] regulating ossification (the conversion of cartilage into bone), limiting skeletal elongation, and thereby ensuring that the limbs are the right length.[12]
^ abcdefBeever, J. E.; Smit, M. A.; Meyers, S. N.; Hadfield, T. S.; Bottema, C.; Albretsen, J.; Cockett, N. E. (2006). "A single-base change in the tyrosine kinase II domain of ovine FGFR3 causes hereditary chondrodysplasia in sheep". Animal Genetics. 37 (1): 66–71. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2052.2005.01398.x. ISSN1365-2052. PMID16441300.