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The feather pattern <i>autosomal barring</i> in chicken is strongly associated with segregation at the <i>MC1R</i> locus

Doreen Schwochow, Susanne Bornelöv, Ting‐Xin Jiang, Jingyi Li, David Gourichon, Bertrand Bed’Hom, Ben Dorshorst, Cheng‐Ming Chuong, Michèle Tixier‐Boichard, Leif Andersson

2021Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Color patterns within individual feathers are common in birds but little is known about the genetic mechanisms causing such patterns. Here, we investigate the genetic basis for autosomal barring in chicken, a horizontal striping pattern on individual feathers. Using an informative backcross, we demonstrate that the MC1R locus is strongly associated with this phenotype. A deletion at SOX10, underlying the dark brown phenotype on its own, affects the manifestation of the barring pattern. The coding variant L133Q in MC1R is the most likely causal mutation for autosomal barring in this pedigree. Furthermore, a genetic screen across six different breeds showing different patterning phenotypes revealed that the most striking shared characteristics among these breeds were that they all carried the MC1R alleles Birchen or brown. Our data suggest that the presence of activating MC1R mutations enhancing pigment synthesis is an important mechanism underlying pigmentation patterns on individual feathers in chicken. We propose that MC1R and its antagonist ASIP play a critical role for determining within-feather pigmentation patterns in birds by acting as activator and inhibitor possibly in a Turing reaction-diffusion model.

Topics & Concepts

FeatherLocus (genetics)GeneticsBiologyEvolutionary biologyZoologyGenemelanin and skin pigmentationCell Adhesion Molecules ResearchPlant Reproductive Biology