A cis-Regulatory Mutation of PDSS2 Causes Silky-Feather in Chickens

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Abstract

Silky-feather has been selected and fixed in some breeds due to its unique appearance. This phenotype is caused by a single recessive gene (hookless, h). Here we map the silky-feather locus to chromosome 3 by linkage analysis and subsequently fine-map it to an 18.9 kb interval using the identical by descent (IBD) method. Further analysis reveals that a C to G transversion located upstream of the prenyl (decaprenyl) diphosphate synthase, subunit 2 (PDSS2) gene is causing silky-feather. All silky-feather birds are homozygous for the G allele. The silky-feather mutation significantly decreases the expression of PDSS2 during feather development in vivo. Consistent with the regulatory effect, the C to G transversion is shown to remarkably reduce PDSS2 promoter activity in vitro. We report a new example of feather structure variation associated with a spontaneous mutation and provide new insight into the PDSS2 function.

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Feng, C., Gao, Y., Dorshorst, B., Song, C., Gu, X., Li, Q., … Li, N. (2014). A cis-Regulatory Mutation of PDSS2 Causes Silky-Feather in Chickens. PLoS Genetics, 10(8). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004576

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