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(View cats below)
The Lyons Den Cattery currently is housing Persian cats for Progressive
Retinal Atrophy (PRA-blindness) and Polycystic Kidney Disease (PKD. Neither
of these diseases interfer with the presentation of the other and the
cats' health is not greatly compromised. Blind cats do remarkably well
and often are hard to determine if they actually are blind. PKD may not
cause kidney failure until the cat reaches old age. We try to minimize
the cats used in research, thus the same cats can be used for both diseases
and also for studying coat color inheritance.
Oriental Shorthairs are housed for an early onset cancer that appears
as a mediastinal tumor of the thymic gland. Cancer appears before 2 years
and is inherited as an autosomal recessive condition. Three carrier cats,
a male and two females, are currently in the program. Other Orientals,
which are genetically very diverse from Persians, are used to outbreed
the Persians so that the Persian genetic studies will be more efficient
and powerful and the colony has to deal with fewer long-haired cats.
Russian Blues have been in the colony for 2 years. Three adults have
produced over 16 kittens that have been fixed and are being monitored
in adopted homes for heart disease. The heart disease has a very minor
presentation and the inheritance pattern has not been identified. All
adults have completely normal exams but we have had kittens die with enlarged
hearts and some cats have murmurs and very slighty abnormal EKGs, which
could be very easily missed. Donations will help us follow these cats
in their adopted homes.
Housing costs approximately $2.50 per day for each cat. Including general
health care expenses, each cat costs approximately $1,000.00. General
expenses include bloodwork twice per year, vaccinations, dental work and
microchipping.
Sole sponsorship of a cat requires a $1,000.00 donation but shared sponsorship
will be accepted at $50.00 or more donations. Checks can be made out to
"Reagents of UC Davis" with a notation for the "Lyons Research
Cats". Get your breed club together and immediately help genetics
research in your favorite cat breed!
Send donations to:
Leslie Lyons,
PhD
1114 Tupper Hall
Population Health & Reproduction
School of Veterinary Medicine
University of California, Davis
One Shields Avenue
Davis, CA 95616
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Duke is a seal point Himylayan. He is a carrier of the
early onset blindness and is also positive for PKD. Duke can be used
to breed to unrelated blind cats, producing blind and carrier control
kittens that may also have PKD. We will also try to study the coat
colors too. Duke is only of the colonies favorites as he roles on
his back to get affection. |
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Trakker is an Silver Oriental Shorthair with only a
chance to carrier the gene for lymphosarcoma. Thus, he can not be
used for the lymphosarocoma project but can be used to outbreed the
Persians for the blindness study. He would be bred to blind females
to produce, shorthair carriers with interesting coat colors. Very
dominant, Trakker needs to be housed in a spearate room from other
males. |
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Bluebird is a blue Oriental Shorthair with only a chance
of being a lymphosarcoma carrier. Like Trakker, she will be used to
outbred the Persians for the blindness and PKD studies. She can be
bred to blind males to produce shorthair cats that carry blindness
and may have PKD. A big sweetheart, Bluebird is a love machine! |
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Caught in the act, we have bred 16 Russian Blue kittens
from 2 queens and one sire. These cats have been adopted but we continue
to do health examinations and echocardiograms every 6 months to screen
these cats for heart disease. Overseen by feline cardiologist, Mark
Kittleson, local cats will come back to UCDavis but others are farther
away, even in Pittsburgh! |
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Patty is a blind seal point himylayan.
Patty is a young female and hopefully one of the big breeders for
the blindness study. Her first breeding produced Joy, a blindness
carrier, and now we have Little Stevie Wonder. She will hopefully
be a long-term breeder for the project. |
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Little Stevie Wonder (female), a smoke
Persian with a blind sire. Stevie should go blind by 16 weeks but
currently has normal eye exams. Behavior indicates that she may not
have full vision already. Stevie is most important for determining
the progression of the disease. She will hopefully be a long-term
breeder for the project. |
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Kashmir's male kitten did not like the
new male we put in the room. Showing who is boss, he has a 25% chance
of getting lymphosarcoma by 2 years of age, a 50% chance of being
a carrier and a 25% of not being a carrier. Thus, unless he gets cancer,
he will no longer be used in the program. He will be adopted into
a very special home where he remains intact and gets full chest x-rays
every 6 months. We continue to cover his health care costs, thus donations
can help cover these expenses. |
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Kashmir has buns in the oven! She is a
silver Oriental that is a known carrier of lymphosaroma. She has been
bred to a known male carrier thus her kittens may be carriers, get
lymphosaroma or be totally normal. We would prefer to breed her to
a male with lymphosaroma but getting these cats is a difficult process.
Kashmir is the hugging queen of the colony and a very good mother. |
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Joy, in her Lion cut attire, is a offspring
of our blind female Patty. Joy will be bred to blind males to produce
blind and carrier control cats. She is petite and has to out compete
Bluebird as the colony Lovemachine! Hopefully she will fall head over
paws for our handsome blind male Persian. |
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Kashmir's male and female kittens are full
of energy. Easch one has a 25% chance of getting lymphosarcoma by
2 years of age, a 50% chance of being a carrier and a 25% of not being
a carrier at all. Thus, unless they get cancer, they will no longer
be used in the program. They will be adopted into very special homes
where they remain intact and get full chest x-rays every 6 months.
We continue to cover their health care costs, thus donations can help
cover these expenses. |
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Black blind male Persian is a handsome
studly lover. Very friendly with even the human females, this male
is from a different Persian line than Patty and is the sire of Stevie
Wonder. Currently, Joy and Bluebird are is roommates and hopefully
not playing hard to get! |
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Three other Persian cats that has produced blind kittens
are scheduled to join our team! |
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Hissy Missy is cranky but a great mom. Kittens are expected
any minute that have the blind male as the sire. Thus, half her kittens
may go blind and the others are definite carriers. Missy and her kittens
will be long-term colony teammates. |
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This site is under construction. Please
visit again soon! We hope to have most of the site finish by November,
2000. Many of the current pages are the place holders for future information.
Please provide suggestions to the webmaster:
felinegenome@ucdavis.edu
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