Gene or Region: RYR1
Reference Variant: C
Mutant Variant: G
Affected Breeds: Quarter Horse
Research Confidence: High confidence, findings reproduced multiple studies
Explanation of Results: MH/MH = homozygous for Malignant Hyperthermia, trait expressed MH/n = heterozygous for Malignant Hyperthermia, trait expressed n/n = no variant detected
Malignant Hyperthermia (MH) is a muscle disorder in which anesthesia, stress, or extreme exercise trigger a hyperthermic state. Symptoms include high temperature, increased heart rate, high blood pressure, sweating, acidosis, and muscle rigidity. If symptoms are not immediately resolved, death is likely to occur. As this condition is autosomal dominant, even horses with a single allele (MH/n) exhibit symptoms. One study has shown that horses with both MH and polysaccharide storage myopathy (PSSM) have more severe clinical symptoms.
RYR1 is involved in the control of calcium channels within the muscle. Mutations in both humans and swine have been shown to cause conditions similar to MH seen in the horse. This mutation is a single base substitution that alters an amino acid, likely affected the function of the encoded protein.
Aleman M et al., “Association of a mutation in the ryanodine receptor 1 gene with equine malignant hyperthermia.” (2004) Muscle Nerve. 30: 356-65. PMID: 15318347
McCue ME et al., “Polysaccharide storage myopathy phenotype in quarter horse-related breeds is modified by the presence of an RYR1 mutation.” (2009) Neuromuscul Disord. 19: 37-43. PMID: 19056269
Aleman M et al., “Malignant hyperthermia associated with ryanodine receptor 1 (C7360G) mutation in Quarter Horses.” (2009) J Vet Intern Med. 23: 329-34. PMID: 19220734
Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Disease (SCID) is a condition in which affected foals are unable to mount an effective immune response after infection and are unable to recover from infections that unaffected foals would easily resist. The disease is universally fatal in horses, usually within 4-6 months of life.
West Nile Virus (WNV) is a mosquito-borne virus that can infect multiple types of mammals, including horses. Infection can lead to a series of severe symptoms, most commonly encephalitis – acute inflammation of the brain. Severe neurological symptoms develop in ~8% of exposed horses, and once symptoms manifest, the fatality rate ranges from 20-40% and is higher in older horses.