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Merle allele variations in the Mudi dog breed and their effects on phenotypes

Authors :
András Gáspárdy
László Zöldág
Nóra Ninausz
Petra Zenke
Xénia Lénárt
Zsófia Pelles
László Varga
Source :
Acta Veterinaria Hungarica. 67:159-173
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Akademiai Kiado Zrt., 2019.

Abstract

A retrotransposon insertion in the SILV gene is associated with a peculiar phenotype of dog, known as a merle. It is characterised by various areas of their coat colour becoming diluted due to a malfunction in the eumelanin-producing pigment cells. Recent studies have shown that the exact size of the short interspersed element (SINE) insertion is in correlation with specific phenotypic attributes, but was not able to absolutely confine dogs to a certain colour pattern. Our study focused on the merle variations occurring in the Mudi breed. Altogether, 123 dog samples from 11 countries were tested and genotyped. The exact length of the merle alleles were determined by automated fluorescent capillary fragment analysis. The most frequent merle genotype in this Mudi sample collection was the ‘classic’ merle (m/M: 61.8%), whereas other variants, such as atypical (m/Ma and m/Ma+: 5.7%), harlequin (m/Mh: 13.8%), double merle (M/M: 0.8%) and mosaic profiles (17.9%) were also observed. The practical significance of testing this mutation is that, phenotypically, not only merle dogs are carriers of this insertion, but also the so-called hidden merle individuals (where the merle phenotype is fully covered by the pheomelanin-dominated colouration) are potentially capable of producing unintentionally homozygous ‘double merle’ progeny with ophthalmologic, viability and auditory impairments.

Details

ISSN :
15882705 and 02366290
Volume :
67
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acta Veterinaria Hungarica
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....79cb1b5ac50de86689d9767ead961355
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1556/004.2019.018