Title: | Monogenic Traits Associated with Structural Variants in Chicken and Horse |
Author: | |
Date: | 2015 |
Language: | English |
University/Institute: | Uppsala Universitet |
ISBN: | 978-91-554-9295-3 |
Series: | Digital Comprehensive Summaries of Uppsala Dissertations from the Faculty of Medicine;1124 |
ISSN: | 1651-6206 |
Subject: | Húsdýr; Erfðafræði; Arfgengi; Hestar; Hænsni; Genarannsóknir; Hestalitir |
URI: | https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/1486 |
Abstract:Domestic animals have rich phenotypic diversity that can be explored to advance our
understanding of the relationship between molecular genetics and phenotypic variation. Since
the advent of second generation sequencing, it has become easier to identify structural variants
and associate them with phenotypic outcomes. This thesis details studies on three such variants
associated with monogenic traits.
The first studies on Rose-comb in the chicken were published over a century ago, seminally
describing Mendelian inheritance and epistatic interaction in animals. Homozygosity for the
otherwise dominant Rose-comb allele was later associated with reduced rooster fertility. We
show that a 7.38 Mb inversion is causal for Rose-comb, and that two alleles exist for Rose-comb,
R1 and R2. A novel genomic context for the gene MNR2 is causative for the comb phenotype,
and the bisection of the gene CCDC108 is associated with fertility issues. The recombined R2
allele has intact CCDC108, and normal fertility.
The dominant phenotype Greying with Age in horses was previously associated with an
intronic duplication in STX17. By utilising second generation sequencing we have examined the
genomic region surrounding the duplication in detail, and excluded all other discovered variants
as causative for Grey.
Dun is the ancestral coat colour of equids, where the individual is mostly pale in colour, but
carries intensely pigmented primitive markings, most notably a dorsal stripe. Dun is a dominant
trait, and yet most domestic horses are non-dun in colour and intensely pigmented. We show that
Dun colour is established by radially asymmetric expression of the transcription factor TBX3 in
hair follicles. This results in a microscopic spotting phenotype on the level of the individual hair,
giving the impression of pigment dilution. Non-dun colour is caused by two different alleles,
non-dun1 and non-dun2, both of which disrupt the TBX3-mediated regulation of pigmentation.
Non-dun1 is associated with a SNP variant 5 kb downstream of TBX3, and non-dun2 with a 1.6
kb deletion that overlaps the non-dun1 SNP. Homozygotes for non-dun2 show a more intensely
pigmented appearance than horses with one or two non-dun1 alleles. We have also shown by
genotyping of ancient DNA that non-dun1 predates domestication.
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