Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Equine Coat Color Genetics Jenny Ingwerson Basic Principles 32 pairs of chromosomes Genes control expression of traits and are located along chromosome Each parent contributes 50% of genetic makeup Pairs of genes at the same physical location (locus) on a chromosome are called alleles Basic Principles When paired alleles are not identical, the horse is heterozygous at that locus When paired alleles are identical, the horse is homozygous at that locus Qualitative Coat Color More than 10 loci involved Many epistatic effects At any one locus, effects are generally due to dominance Two types of skin pigmentation Eumelanin (black or brown) Pheomelanin (red or yellow) Coat Color – Extension: E e E e Black pigmented horses Either black as points or black as entire coat color blacks, browns and bays, buckskins, duns, etc Black pigment in skin but not in hair Hair appears red chestnuts, red duns, palominos, etc. E dominant to e EE or Ee = black or bay (or brown) ee = chestnut Coat Color - AGOUTI: A a Controls the distribution pattern of black hair Restricts dark pigment to points with E Only effects eumelanin (black and brown pigmentation) A dominant to a E_A_ = bay or brown E_aa = black eeA_ or eeaa = chestnut **Chestnuts like any recessive, will always breed true chestnut x chestnut = chestnut Coat Color – Dilution Genes 2 main loci responsible - C and D C locus - “Palomino dilution” Ccr gene is partially dominant Ccr - red pigmentation is diluted to yellow Dilutes only pheomelanin, so black horses are unaffected For a chestnut horse: CC : chestnut C Ccr : palomino Ccr Ccr : cremello For a bay horse: CC : bay C Ccr : buckskin Ccr Ccr: perlino Sire of cremello Cremello Coat Color DILUTION GENES (cont.) C locus - “Palomino dilution” This is why palominos do not breed true! CCcr x CCcr 25%CC Not diluted 50% CCcr Palomino or buckskin 25% Ccr Ccr Cremllo or Perlino Coat Color D locus - “dominant dilution” Dun dilution D dominant to d Dilutes both black and red pigment on body but not points of horse Common to see dark points, dorsal stripe, shoulder stripe and leg barring Black base coat: D_ = grulla dd = black Bay base coat: D_ = dun dd = bay Coat Color D locus Chestnut base coat: D_ = red dun dd = chestnut Duns usually have a dorsal stripe, buckskins do not White – W w Inability to form pigment in skin & hair Epistatic to all other colors True albinos have a white coat, mane, and tail, with pink skin and pink eyes WW = lethal (in utero) Ww = white ww = normal color All white horse are born white and have pink skin Eyes can either be dark or blue Coat Color – Gray G g G_ = gray gg = normal color Born colored Hairs progressively replaced by white hairs Must have at least one gray parent Horses continue to gray with age Coat Color – Roan Rn rn Rn Rn = “lethal theory” Rn rn = roan rn rn = normal color Roan horses are born roan - the number of white hairs does not increase Must have at least one roan parent Coat Color – White Patterns Tobiano (T locus) Overo (frame) T_ = spotted tt = nonspotted Any base color can be spotted Can test for allele Was thought to be recessive, but now determined dominant Appaloosa - unclear inheritance Markings - probably due to many genes Rules It usually takes at least one light-colored parent to produce a light-colored foal. Chestnut and sorrel, when mated to one another, can produce only more chestnuts and sorrels. Bay mated to bay, black or chestnut/sorrel can produce bay, chestnut, sorrel, and, rarely, black. Black mated to black produces black (or, rarely, chestnut or sorrel). Black mated to bay will usually produce a bay, fairly commonly produces chestnut or sorrel, and only rarely produces black. Black mated to chestnut will usually produce bay, but also chestnut or sorrel, and, rarely, black. Color prediction is never 100 percent accurate.