Anim Genet. 2009 May 6;:
19456317
Cit:2
Institute of Genetics, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Bern, Bremgartenstrasse 109a, 3001 Bern, Switzerland.
Summary White coat colour in horses is inherited as a monogenic autosomal dominant trait showing a variable expression of coat depigmentation. Mutations in the KIT gene have previously been shown to cause white coat colour phenotypes in pigs, mice and humans. We recently also demonstrated that four independent mutations in the equine KIT gene are responsible for the dominant white coat colour phenotype in various horse breeds. We have now analysed additional horse families segregating for white coat colour phenotypes and report seven new KIT mutations in independent Thoroughbred, Icelandic Horse, German Holstein, Quarter Horse and South German Draft Horse families. In four of the seven families, only one single white horse, presumably representing the founder for each of the four respective mutations, was available for genotyping. The newly reported mutations comprise two frameshift mutations (c.1126_1129delGAAC; c.2193delG), two missense mutations (c.856G>A; c.1789G>A) and three splice site mutations (c.338-1G>C; c.2222-1G>A; c.2684+1G>A). White phenotypes in horses show a remarkable allelic heterogeneity. In fact, a higher number of alleles are molecularly characterized at the equine KIT gene than for any other known gene in livestock species.
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Laboratory of Racing Chemistry, Utsunomiya City, Tochigi, Japan. h-kakoi@lrc.or.jp
In order to develop a genotyping method that can be used in the registration procedure for Thoroughbreds, we developed a method for simultaneously genotyping multiple coat colour genes on the basis of single nucleotide polymorphism typing by using the SNaPshot(TM) technique. This method enabled precise and reasonable detection of causal mutations; it was effective for genotyping of MC1R, ASIP, and SLC45A2 at the Extension (E), Agouti (A), Cream dilution (C) loci, and the possibility of identification of rare variants of MC1R, EDNRB and KIT at the E, Overo (O) and Sabino 1 (SB1) loci, respectively, was also indicated. It was considered that this genotyping method would provide information not only for the registration of Thoroughbreds but also for the preservation of phenotypic characters, such as coat colour, of endangered Misaki native horses in Japan. Therefore, genetic variations at the five coat colour loci were investigated in 1111 Thoroughbred and 99 Misaki native horses. Allele frequencies at the polymorphic E and A loci were estimated, and the proportions of basic coat colours that could be expected in the Thoroughbred population were bay, 0.662; black, 0.070; chestnut, 0.268. In the Misaki population, they were bay, 0.792; black, 0.129; chestnut, 0.080. The data presented were the first of its kind on genetic coat colour variation, and will be important with regard to the registration of Thoroughbreds and the management of Misaki horses.
Swiss College of Agriculture, Zollikofen BE, Switzerland. stefan.rieder@bfh.ch
Colour phenotypes may have played a major role during early domestication events and initial selection among domestic animal species. As coat colours mostly follow a relatively simple mode of Mendelian inheritance, they have been among the first traits to be systematically analysed at the molecular level. As a result of the number of genetic tools developed during the past decade, horse coat colour tests have been designed and are now commercially available for some of the basic phenotypes. These tests enable breeders to verify segregation within particular pedigrees, to select specific colour phenotypes according to market demand or studbook policies and to avoid complex inherited diseases associated with some of the colour patterns. This paper reviews the relevance of the topic, describes all currently available tests for coat colours in horses and addresses also ongoing research in this field.
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Science. 2009 Nov 6;326 (5954):865-7
19892987
C M Wade,
E Giulotto,
S Sigurdsson,
M Zoli,
S Gnerre,
F Imsland,
T L Lear,
D L Adelson,
E Bailey,
R R Bellone,
H Blöcker,
O Distl,
R C Edgar,
M Garber,
T Leeb,
E Mauceli,
J N MacLeod,
M C T Penedo,
J M Raison,
T Sharpe,
J Vogel,
L Andersson,
D F Antczak,
T Biagi,
M M Binns,
B P Chowdhary,
S J Coleman,
G Della Valle,
S Fryc,
G Guérin,
T Hasegawa,
E W Hill,
J Jurka,
A Kiialainen,
G Lindgren,
J Liu,
E Magnani,
J R Mickelson,
J Murray,
S G Nergadze,
R Onofrio,
S Pedroni,
M F Piras,
T Raudsepp,
M Rocchi,
K H Røed,
O A Ryder,
S Searle,
L Skow,
J E Swinburne,
A C Syvänen,
T Tozaki,
S J Valberg,
M Vaudin,
J R White,
M C Zody,
E S Lander,
K Lindblad-Toh
Broad Institute, 7 Cambridge Center, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA. c.wade@usyd.edu.au
We report a high-quality draft sequence of the genome of the horse (Equus caballus). The genome is relatively repetitive but has little segmental duplication. Chromosomes appear to have undergone few historical rearrangements: 53% of equine chromosomes show conserved synteny to a single human chromosome. Equine chromosome 11 is shown to have an evolutionary new centromere devoid of centromeric satellite DNA, suggesting that centromeric function may arise before satellite repeat accumulation. Linkage disequilibrium, showing the influences of early domestication of large herds of female horses, is intermediate in length between dog and human, and there is long-range haplotype sharing among breeds.
Anim Genet. 2008 Apr 10;:
18410476
Cit:1
Institute of Genetics, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Berne, Berne, Switzerland.
The tobiano white-spotting pattern is one of several known depigmentation phenotypes in horses and is desired by many horse breeders and owners. The tobiano spotting phenotype is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait. Horses that are heterozygous or homozygous for the tobiano allele (To) are phenotypically indistinguishable. A SNP associated with To had previously been identified in intron 13 of the equine KIT gene and was used for an indirect gene test. The test was useful in several horse breeds. However, genotyping this sequence variant in the Lewitzer horse breed revealed that 14% of horses with the tobiano pattern did not show the polymorphism in intron 13 and consequently the test was not useful to identify putative homozygotes for To within this breed. Speculations were raised that an independent mutation might cause the tobiano spotting pattern in this breed. Recently, the putative causative mutation for To was described as a large chromosomal inversion on equine chromosome 3. One of the inversion breakpoints is approximately 70 kb downstream of the KIT gene and probably disrupts a regulatory element of the KIT gene. We obtained genotypes for the intron 13 SNP and the chromosomal inversion for 204 tobiano spotted horses and 24 control animals of several breeds. The genotyping data confirmed that the chromosomal inversion was perfectly associated with the To allele in all investigated horses. Therefore, the new test is suitable to discriminate heterozygous To/+ and homozygous To/To horses in the investigated breeds.
Anim Genet. 2009 Nov 16;:
19917047
Institute of Genetics, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Berne, Berne, Switzerland.
We recently mapped the belt mutation in Brown Swiss cattle to a 922 kb interval on BTA3. In this study, we analysed two additional cattle breeds with the belted phenotype: Galloway and Dutch Belted (Lakenvelder). By genotyping microsatellites in solid-coloured and belted Galloways, we confirmed that the belt mutation in Galloways is strongly associated with the same chromosomal locus as in Brown Swiss cattle. Subsequently, we analysed 36 SNPs in the belt interval in three breeds. We identified a single belt-associated haplotype for each of the analysed breeds. The three breed-specific belt haplotypes share alleles in four blocks. Three of these blocks comprise only one single or two consecutive markers, while the largest shared haplotype block encompasses nine consecutive SNPs in a 336 kb interval. The large shared haplotype across divergent breeds suggests a common mutation for the belt phenotype in all three breeds. We identified a potential candidate gene within this interval coding for the developmental transcription factor HES6. We re-sequenced the complete HES6 coding sequence in belted and solid-coloured cattle but did not find belt-associated polymorphisms. In conclusion, our data provide strong evidence in favour of a common founder for the belt phenotype in different cattle breeds and have resulted in an improved fine-mapping of the causative mutation.
Anim Genet. 2009 Sep 10;:
19744145
Institute of Veterinary Medicine, Georg-August University, Burckhardtweg 2, 37077 Goettingen, Germany.
Summary Endogenous prion proteins (PrP) play the central role in the pathogenesis of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies. The carbohydrate N-acetylgalactosamine 4-O sulfotransferase 8 (CHST8) promotes the conversion of the cellular PrP(C) into the pathogenic PrP(d). Six sequence variants within the CHST8 gene were identified by comparative sequencing and genotyped for a sample of 623 animals comprising bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE)-affected and healthy control cows representing German Fleckvieh (German Simmental), German Holstein (Holstein-Friesian) and Brown Swiss. Significant differences in the allele, genotype and haplotype frequencies between BSE-affected and healthy cows indicate an association of sequence variant g.37254017G>T with the development of the disease in Brown Swiss cattle.
J Hered. 2009 Mar 23;:
19307297
M Welle,
U Philipp,
S Rüfenacht,
P Roosje,
M Scharfenstein,
E Schütz,
B Brenig,
M Linek,
L Mecklenburg,
P Grest,
M Drögemüller,
B Haase,
T Leeb,
C Drögemüller
the Institute of Genetics, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Berne, Bremgartenstrasse 109a, 3001 Berne, Switzerland.
Coat color dilution in dogs is a specific pigmentation phenotype caused by a defective transport of melanosomes leading to large clumps of pigment. It is inherited as a Mendelian autosomal recessive trait and may be accompanied by hair loss, the so-called color dilution alopecia (CDA), or black hair follicular dysplasia (BHFD). We previously identified the noncoding c.-22G>A transition in the melanophilin gene (MLPH) as a candidate causative mutation for the dilute phenotype. We have now extended our study and genotyped 935 dogs from 20 breeds segregating for dilute coat color. The dilute-associated A allele segregates in many different breeds suggesting an old mutation event. We also investigated skin biopsies of dogs suspected of having either CDA or BHFD, and our data clearly indicate that the dilute mutation is required but not sufficient to develop clinical signs of the disease. The risk to develop CDA/BHFD seems to be breed specific. Interestingly, 22 out of 29 dogs with clinical signs of CDA/BHFD have clumped melanin in the epidermis, the follicular epithelium, and the hair shafts, whereas in dilute dogs without clinical disease, clumped melanin is only found in the follicular epithelium and the hair shafts but not in the epidermis.
Anim Genet. 2009 Jan 21;:
19159407
Cit:1
Institute of Genetics, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Berne, Berne, Switzerland.
The white belt pattern of Brown Swiss cattle is characterized by a lack of melanocytes in a stretch of skin around the midsection. This pattern is of variable width and sometimes the belt does not fully circle the body. To identify the gene responsible for this colour variation, we performed linkage mapping of the belted locus using six segregating half-sib families including 104 informative meioses for the belted character. The pedigree confirmed a monogenic autosomal dominant inheritance of the belted phenotype in Brown Swiss cattle. We performed a genome scan using 186 microsatellite markers in a subset of 88 animals of the six families. Linkage with the belt phenotype was detected at the telomeric region of BTA3. Fine-mapping and haplotype analysis using 19 additional markers in this region refined the critical region of the belted locus to a 922-kb interval on BTA3. As the corresponding human and mouse chromosome segments contain no obvious candidate gene for this coat colour trait, the mutation causing the belt pattern in the Brown Swiss cattle might help to identify an unknown gene influencing skin pigmentation.
T Raudsepp,
A Gustafson-Seabury,
K Durkin,
M L Wagner,
G Goh,
C M Seabury,
C Brinkmeyer-Langford,
E-J Lee,
R Agarwala,
E Stallknecht-Rice,
A A Schäffer,
L C Skow,
T Tozaki,
H Yasue,
M C T Penedo,
L A Lyons,
K A Khazanehdari,
M M Binns,
J N MacLeod,
O Distl,
G Guérin,
T Leeb,
J R Mickelson,
B P Chowdhary
Department of Veterinary Integrative Biosciences, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843, USA. traudsepp@cvm.tamu.edu
A comprehensive second-generation whole genome radiation hybrid (RH II), cytogenetic and comparative map of the horse genome (2n = 64) has been developed using the 5000rad horse x hamster radiation hybrid panel and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). The map contains 4,103 markers (3,816 RH; 1,144 FISH) assigned to all 31 pairs of autosomes and the X chromosome. The RH maps of individual chromosomes are anchored and oriented using 857 cytogenetic markers. The overall resolution of the map is one marker per 775 kilobase pairs (kb), which represents a more than five-fold improvement over the first-generation map. The RH II incorporates 920 markers shared jointly with the two recently reported meiotic maps. Consequently the two maps were aligned with the RH II maps of individual autosomes and the X chromosome. Additionally, a comparative map of the horse genome was generated by connecting 1,904 loci on the horse map with genome sequences available for eight diverse vertebrates to highlight regions of evolutionarily conserved syntenies, linkages, and chromosomal breakpoints. The integrated map thus obtained presents the most comprehensive information on the physical and comparative organization of the equine genome and will assist future assemblies of whole genome BAC fingerprint maps and the genome sequence. It will also serve as a tool to identify genes governing health, disease and performance traits in horses and assist us in understanding the evolution of the equine genome in relation to other species.
V Gerber,
J E Swinburne,
S C Blott,
P Nussbaumer,
A Ramseyer,
J Klukowska-Rötzler,
G Dolf,
E Marti,
D Burger,
T Leeb
Departement für klinische Veterinärmedizin, Vetsuisse-Fakultät Universität Bern, Schweiz, Pferdeklinik. pferdeklinik@knp.unibe.ch
Recurrent airway obstruction (RAO) is a multifactorial and polygenic disease. Affected horses are typically 7 years of age or older and show exercise intolerance, increased breathing effort, coughing, airway neutrophilia, mucus accumulation and hyperreactivity as well as cholinergic bronchospasm. The environmental factors responsible are predominantly allergens and irritants in haydust, but the immunological mechanisms underlying RAO are still unclear. Several studies have demonstrated a familiar predisposition for RAO and it is now proven that the disease has a genetic basis. In offspring, the risk of developing RAO is 3-fold increased when one parent is affected and increases to almost 5-fold when both parents have RAO. Segregation analysis in two high-prevalence families demonstrated a high heritability and a complex inheritance with several major genes. A whole genomescan showed chromosome-wide significant linkage of seven chromosomal regions with RAO. Of the microsatellites, which were located near atopy candidate genes, those in a region of chromosome 13 harboring the IL4R gene were strongly associated with the RAO phenotype in the offspring of one RAO-affected stallion. Furthermore, IgE-levels are influenced by hereditary factors in the horse, and we have evidence that RAO-affected offspring of the same stallion have increased levels of specific IgE against moldspore allergens. The identification of genetic markers and ultimately of the responsible genes will not only allow for an improved prophylaxis, i.e. early identification of susceptible individuals and avoidance of high-risk matings, but also improve our ability to find new therapeutic targets and to optimize existing treatments.
Pferdeklinik der Universität Bern.
Many of the important diseases of sport and pleasure horses are thought to have a genetic component. The majority of these diseases, however, are multifactorial and are influenced not only by genetics, but also by environmental factors. In this review some of the most important multifactorial diseases are described and the current evidence for a genetic background is discussed.
Pferdeklinik der Universität Bern.
Overall, monogenetic hereditary diseases are less important for the breeding industry than polygenetic diseases because they are relatively rare. For the individual animal, however, these diseases have often a dramatic outcome and many of these diseases presently known are lethal. For several of them the exact pathogenesis is known and DNA-tests are available to confirm the exact diagnosis.






