Sub-Aortic Stenosis, also known as sub-valvular aortic stenosis, is a
polygenic dominant disease, although some of the data is equivocal regarding
whether it is incomplete penetrance or modifying factors. Data on a study of
Newfoundlands clearly showed that the disease was dominant, most probably
polygenic, and uncertain what the other factors were.
Currently, research is being done on a significant incidence in Bouviers,
where the pedigrees indicate that it is polygenic dominant.
The carrier modes, although "somewhat" similar between polygenic-dominant
and recessive--in that a series of genes (multiple individual alleles in
recessive, multiple single dominant loci in polygenic dominant) are
required--is different in polygenic dominant inheritance in that one set of
genes gets transmitted as carrier or affected genes, and the other may get
transmitted as clear (whereas in recessive, both are carriers if bred to a
clear, or are affected if bred to another affected or carrier).
In polygenic dominant, if one of the parents of the litter were not
individually affected (which is possible in a sub-clinical affected status),
the BOTH of the lines are probably carriers. The disease shows up when you
have a combination of the critical genes loci brought in from both sides of
the lines, where if the lines were separated, the disease would not be
expressed. That is one of the unique factors of polygenic dominant
expression.....you need a series of gene loci ALL to be there for the disease
to be expressed.
References to read: Ettinger, Veterinary Internal Medicine, SECTION VIII,
Chapter 74, "The Cardiovascular System/Congenital Heart Disease"; R.L. Pyle &
D.F. Patterson, et.al., American Heart Journal, Sept 1976, Vol 92, No 3, pp.
324-334).
(Source: David J. Sheckler, DVM,
Saratoga, CA)