Glycogen-branching enzyme deficiency
Glycogen Branching Enzyme Deficiency (GBED) is a genetic disease affecting horses, especially American Quarter Horses and related breeds.
Diagnosis, Symptoms, and Prognosis
Lacking an enzyme necessary for storing glycogen, the horse's brain, heart muscle, and skeletal muscles cannot function, leading to rapid death. This condition may be diagnosed with a muscle biopsy. Most foals with GBED are aborted or stillborn, and those that survive live only for a few months. Symptoms include general weakness, contracted tendons, seizures, cardiac arrest, and sudden death. There is no known treatment.
Causes
The disease occurs in foals who are homozygous for the lethal GBED allele, meaning both parents must be heterozygous for the allele. A blood test for this allele was developed by the University of Minnesota College of Veterinary Medicine and as of 2005 is licensed to the UC Davis Veterinary Genetics Laboratory. Using this, breeders can avoid crosses that could produce GBED foals, and eventually selectively breed it out. Initial samples suggest that about 10% of Quarter Horses are carriers.
This genetic disease has been linked to the foundation Quarter Horse sire King P-234.
See also
Glycogen storage disease type IV
External links
- University of Minnesota: Neuromuscular Diagonistic Laboratory: Glycogen Branching Enzyme Deficiency (GBED)
- UC Davis: Veterinary Genetics Laboratory: Glycogen Branching Enzyme Deficiency (GBED)
- VetGen: Veterinary Genetics Services: Glycogen Branching Enzyme Deficiency (GBED)
Sources
"Testing for Genetic Diseases." Equus 353. pp 40-41.