Hairless Pigmented Guinea Pigs: A New Model for the Study of Mammalian Pigmentation

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Abstract

A stock of hairless pigmented guinea pigs was developed to facilitate studies of mammalian pigmentation. This stock combines the convenience of a hairless animal with a pigmentary system that is similar to human skin. In both human and guinea pig skin, active melanocytes are located in the basal layer of the interfollicular epidermis. Hairless albino guinea pigs on an outbred Hartley background (CrI:IAF/HA(hr/hr)BR; designated hr/hr) were mated with red‐haired guinea pigs (designated Hr/Hr). Red‐haired heterozygotes from the F1 generation Hr/hr were then mated with each other or with hairless albino guinea pigs. The F2 generation included hairless pigmented guinea pigs that retained their interfollicular epidermal melanocytes and whose skin was red‐brown in color. Following UV irradiation, there was an increase in cutaneous pigmentation as well as an increase in the number of active epidermal melanocytes. An additional strain of black hairless guinea pigs was developed using black Hr/Hr animals and a similar breeding scheme. These two strains should serve as useful models for studies of the mammalian pigment system. Copyright © 1990, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved

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BOLOGNIA, J. L., MURRAY, M. S., & PAWELEK, J. M. (1990). Hairless Pigmented Guinea Pigs: A New Model for the Study of Mammalian Pigmentation. Pigment Cell Research, 3(3), 150–156. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0749.1990.tb00280.x

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