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A single locus regulates a female-limited color pattern polymorphism in a reptile

Nathalie Feiner, Miguel Brun‐Usan, Pedro Andrade, Robin Pranter, Sungdae Park, Douglas B. Menke, Anthony J. Geneva, Tobias Uller

2022Science Advances34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Animal coloration is often expressed in periodic patterns that can arise from differential cell migration, yet how these processes are regulated remains elusive. We show that a female-limited polymorphism in dorsal patterning (diamond/chevron) in the brown anole is controlled by a single Mendelian locus. This locus contains the gene CCDC170 that is adjacent to, and coexpressed with, the Estrogen receptor-1 gene, explaining why the polymorphism is female limited. CCDC170 is an organizer of the Golgi-microtubule network underlying a cell’s ability to migrate, and the two segregating alleles encode structurally different proteins. Our agent-based modeling of skin development demonstrates that, in principle, a change in cell migratory behaviors is sufficient to switch between the two morphs. These results suggest that CCDC170 might have been co-opted as a switch between color patterning morphs, likely by modulating cell migratory behaviors.

Topics & Concepts

Locus (genetics)BiologyAlleleGeneticsGeneMendelian inheritanceCell biologyDevelopmental Biology and Gene RegulationNeurobiology and Insect Physiology Researchmelanin and skin pigmentation
A single locus regulates a female-limited color pattern polymorphism in a reptile | Litcius