Consequences of UMP synthase deficiency in cattle.

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RESUMO

Several dairy cows have been identified as partially deficient in UMP synthase. Although erythrocytes of normal cows contained 2.54 units of enzyme per ml, four cows were discovered with only 1.08 units per ml. Cows deficient in UMP synthase secreted milk with abnormally high levels of orotate, 300-1,000 micrograms of orotate per ml compared to 80 micrograms/ml for normal cows. The deficiency also was accompanied by a lactation-induced orotic aciduria. Although bovine urinary orotate was generally less than 10 micrograms/ml, the urine of the deficient cows, when lactating, contained 20-200 micrograms/ml. Their plasma orotate also was elevated. Genetic transmission of the condition was suggested by a common bull in the pedigrees of all deficient animals. Indeed, these cows, with half the normal level of UMP synthase, are probably heterozygotes with a 50% chance of passing the deficient allele to their progeny. For these putative heterozygotes, the condition is apparently benign because longevity and production were unaffected. However, the existence of a gene for UMP synthase deficiency in the dairy cow population poses a hazard with respect to the conception of homozygotic, deficient animals. These, in analogy with a comparable human condition, would be expected to exhibit high perinatal morbidity and mortality.

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