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Coat colour in dogs: identification of the Merle locus in the Australian shepherd breed

BACKGROUND: Coat colours in canines have many natural phenotypic variants. Some of the genes and alleles involved also cause genetic developmental defects, which are also observed in humans and mice. We studied the genetic bases of the merle phenotype in dogs to shed light on the pigmentation mechan...

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Autores principales: Hédan, Benoit, Corre, Sébastien, Hitte, Christophe, Dréano, Stéphane, Vilboux, Thierry, Derrien, Thomas, Denis, Bernard, Galibert, Francis, Galibert, Marie-Dominique, André, Catherine
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1431520/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16504149
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1746-6148-2-9
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author Hédan, Benoit
Corre, Sébastien
Hitte, Christophe
Dréano, Stéphane
Vilboux, Thierry
Derrien, Thomas
Denis, Bernard
Galibert, Francis
Galibert, Marie-Dominique
André, Catherine
author_facet Hédan, Benoit
Corre, Sébastien
Hitte, Christophe
Dréano, Stéphane
Vilboux, Thierry
Derrien, Thomas
Denis, Bernard
Galibert, Francis
Galibert, Marie-Dominique
André, Catherine
author_sort Hédan, Benoit
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Coat colours in canines have many natural phenotypic variants. Some of the genes and alleles involved also cause genetic developmental defects, which are also observed in humans and mice. We studied the genetic bases of the merle phenotype in dogs to shed light on the pigmentation mechanisms and to identify genes involved in these complex pathways. The merle phenotype includes a lack of eumelanic pigmentation and developmental defects, hearing impairments and microphthalmia. It is similar to that observed in microphthalmia mouse mutants. RESULTS: Taking advantage of the dog as a powerful genetic model and using recently available genomic resources, we investigated the segregation of the merle phenotype in a five-generation pedigree, comprising 96 sampled Australian shepherd dogs. Genetic linkage analysis allowed us to identify a locus for the merle phenotype, spanning 5.5 megabases, at the centromeric tip of canine chromosome 10 (CFA10). This locus was supported by a Lod score of 15.65 at a recombination fraction θ = 0. Linkage analysis in three other breeds revealed that the same region is linked to the merle phenotype. This region, which is orthologous to human chromosome 12 (HSA12 q13-q14), belongs to a conserved ordered segment in the human and mouse genome and comprises several genes potentially involved in pigmentation and development. CONCLUSION: This study has identified the locus for the merle coat colour in dogs to be at the centromeric end of CFA10. Genetic studies on other breeds segregating the merle phenotype should allow the locus to be defined more accurately with the aim of identifying the gene. This work shows the power of the canine system to search for the genetic bases of mammalian pigmentation and developmental pathways.
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spelling pubmed-14315202006-04-06 Coat colour in dogs: identification of the Merle locus in the Australian shepherd breed Hédan, Benoit Corre, Sébastien Hitte, Christophe Dréano, Stéphane Vilboux, Thierry Derrien, Thomas Denis, Bernard Galibert, Francis Galibert, Marie-Dominique André, Catherine BMC Vet Res Research Article BACKGROUND: Coat colours in canines have many natural phenotypic variants. Some of the genes and alleles involved also cause genetic developmental defects, which are also observed in humans and mice. We studied the genetic bases of the merle phenotype in dogs to shed light on the pigmentation mechanisms and to identify genes involved in these complex pathways. The merle phenotype includes a lack of eumelanic pigmentation and developmental defects, hearing impairments and microphthalmia. It is similar to that observed in microphthalmia mouse mutants. RESULTS: Taking advantage of the dog as a powerful genetic model and using recently available genomic resources, we investigated the segregation of the merle phenotype in a five-generation pedigree, comprising 96 sampled Australian shepherd dogs. Genetic linkage analysis allowed us to identify a locus for the merle phenotype, spanning 5.5 megabases, at the centromeric tip of canine chromosome 10 (CFA10). This locus was supported by a Lod score of 15.65 at a recombination fraction θ = 0. Linkage analysis in three other breeds revealed that the same region is linked to the merle phenotype. This region, which is orthologous to human chromosome 12 (HSA12 q13-q14), belongs to a conserved ordered segment in the human and mouse genome and comprises several genes potentially involved in pigmentation and development. CONCLUSION: This study has identified the locus for the merle coat colour in dogs to be at the centromeric end of CFA10. Genetic studies on other breeds segregating the merle phenotype should allow the locus to be defined more accurately with the aim of identifying the gene. This work shows the power of the canine system to search for the genetic bases of mammalian pigmentation and developmental pathways. BioMed Central 2006-02-27 /pmc/articles/PMC1431520/ /pubmed/16504149 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1746-6148-2-9 Text en Copyright © 2006 Hédan et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hédan, Benoit
Corre, Sébastien
Hitte, Christophe
Dréano, Stéphane
Vilboux, Thierry
Derrien, Thomas
Denis, Bernard
Galibert, Francis
Galibert, Marie-Dominique
André, Catherine
Coat colour in dogs: identification of the Merle locus in the Australian shepherd breed
title Coat colour in dogs: identification of the Merle locus in the Australian shepherd breed
title_full Coat colour in dogs: identification of the Merle locus in the Australian shepherd breed
title_fullStr Coat colour in dogs: identification of the Merle locus in the Australian shepherd breed
title_full_unstemmed Coat colour in dogs: identification of the Merle locus in the Australian shepherd breed
title_short Coat colour in dogs: identification of the Merle locus in the Australian shepherd breed
title_sort coat colour in dogs: identification of the merle locus in the australian shepherd breed
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1431520/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16504149
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1746-6148-2-9
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