Genetics of Sex-linked yellow in the Syrian hamster

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Abstract

Alternating patches of black and yellow pigment are a ubiquitous feature of mammalian color variation that contributes to camouflage, species recognition, and morphologic diversity. X-linked determinants of this pattern - recognized by variegation in females but not in males - have been described in the domestic cat as Orange, and in the Syrian hamster as Sex-linked yellow (Sly), but are curiously absent from other vertebrate species. Using a comparative genomic approach, we develop molecular markers and a linkage map for the euchromatic region of the Syrian hamster X chromosome that places Sly in a region homologous to the centromere-proximal region of human Xp. Comparison to analogous work carried out for Orange in domestic cats indicates, surprisingly, that the cat and hamster mutations lie in nonhomologous regions of the X chromosome. We also identify the molecular cause of recessively inherited black coat color in hamsters (historically referred to as nonagouti) as a Cys115Tyr mutation in the Agouti gene. Animals doubly mutant for Sly and nonagouti exhibit a Sly phenotype. Our results indicate that Sly represents a melanocortin pathway component that acts similarly to, but is genetically distinct from, Mc1r and that has implications for understanding both the evolutionary history and the mutational mechanisms of pigment-type switching. Copyright © 2009 by the Genetics Society of America.

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Alizadeh, A., Hong, L. Z., Kaelin, C. B., Raudsepp, T., Manuel, H., & Barsh, G. S. (2009). Genetics of Sex-linked yellow in the Syrian hamster. Genetics, 181(4), 1427–1436. https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.108.095018

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