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Four Independent Mutations in the Feline Fibroblast Growth Factor 5 Gene Determine the Long-Haired Phenotype in Domestic Cats.

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N°spécial
H

Kehler, J.S. ; David, V.A. ; Schaffer, A.A. ; Bajema, K. ; Eizirik, E. ; Ryugo, D.K. ; Hannah, S.S. ; O'Brien, S.J. ; Menotti-Raymond, M.

Journal of heredity

2007

pp 555-566

0022-1503

Génétique-030 (P+R)

Génétique ; Mutation ; Phénotype ; Fibroblaste ; Robe ; Poil ; Chat

Url / Doi : http://jhered.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/98/6/555

Localisation : Env Alfort (Bibliothèque)

Collection : Génétique Moléculaire

N° de collection : Session 2009-2010

Type de fond : Fonds contemporain

To determine the genetic regulation of "hair length" in the domestic cat, a whole-genome scan was performed in a multigenerational pedigree in which the "long-haired" phenotype was segregating. The 2 markers that demonstrated the greatest linkage to the long-haired trait (log of the odds >or= 6) flanked an estimated 10-Mb region on cat chromosome B1 containing the Fibroblast Growth Factor 5 (FGF5) gene, a candidate gene implicated in regulating hair follicle growth cycle in other species. Sequence analyses of FGF5 in 26 cat breeds and 2 pedigrees of nonbreed cats revealed 4 separate mutations predicted to disrupt the biological activity of the FGF5 protein. Pedigree analyses demonstrated that different combinations of paired mutant FGF5 alleles segregated with the long-haired phenotype in an autosomal recessive manner. Association analyses of more than 380 genotyped breed and nonbreed cats were consistent with mutations in the FGF5 gene causing the long-haired phenotype in an autosomal recessive manner. In combination, these genomic approaches demonstrated that FGF5 is the major genetic determinant of hair length in the domestic cat.

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