학술논문

Length variations within the Merle retrotransposon of canine PMEL: correlating genotype with phenotype
Document Type
Report
Source
Mobile DNA. August 3, 2018, Vol. 9 Issue 1
Subject
Physiological aspects
Genetic aspects
Research
Pigmentation disorders -- Research
Genetic variation -- Research
Dogs -- Genetic aspects -- Physiological aspects
Language
English
ISSN
1759-8753
Abstract
Author(s): Sarah C. Murphy[sup.1] , Jacquelyn M. Evans[sup.1] , Kate L. Tsai[sup.1] and Leigh Anne Clark[sup.1] Background Domesticated dogs (Canis lupus familiaris ) present with a unique pattern of pigmentation [...]
Background The antisense insertion of a canine short interspersed element (SINEC_Cf) in the pigmentation gene PMEL (or SILV) causes a coat pattern phenotype in dogs termed merle. Merle is a semi-dominant trait characterized by patches of full pigmentation on a diluted background. The oligo(dT) tract of the Merle retrotransposon is long and uninterrupted and is prone to dramatic truncation. Phenotypically wild-type individuals carrying shorter oligo(dT) lengths of the Merle allele have been previously described and termed cryptic merles. Two additional coat patterns, dilute merle (uniform, steely-grey coat) and harlequin merle (white background with black patches), also appear in breeds segregating the Merle allele. Results Sequencing of all PMEL exons in a dilute and a harlequin merle reveals that variation exists solely within the oligo(dT) tract of the SINEC_Cf insertion. In fragment analyses from 259 dogs heterozygous for Merle, we observed a spectrum of oligo(dT) lengths spanning 25 to 105 base pairs (bp), with ranges that correspond to the four varieties of the merle phenotype: cryptic (25-55 bp), dilute (66-74 bp), standard (78-86 bp), and harlequin (81-105 bp). Somatic contractions of the oligo(dT) were observed in 43% of standard and 51% of harlequin merle dogs. A small proportion (4.6%) of the study cohort inherited de novo contractions or expansions of the Merle allele that resulted in dilute or harlequin coat patterns, respectively. Conclusions The phenotypic consequence of the Merle SINE insertion directly depends upon oligo(dT) length. In transcription, we propose that the use of an alternative splice site increases with oligo(dT) length, resulting in insufficient PMEL and a pigment dilution spectrum, from dark grey to complete hypopigmentation. We further propose that during replication, contractions and expansions increase in frequency with oligo(dT) length, causing coat variegation (somatic events in melanocytes) and the spontaneous appearance of varieties of the merle phenotype (germline events). Keywords: SILV, Dilution, Pigmentation, Dog, SINE, Mononucleotide repeat, Slippage, Exonization, Coat pattern, Alternative splicing