Abstract

BackgroundThe coat colour of fallow deer is highly variable and even white animals can regularly be observed in game farming and in the wild. Affected animals do not show complete albinism but rather some residual pigmentation resembling a very pale beige dilution of coat colour. The eyes and claws of the animals are pigmented. To facilitate the conservation and management of such animals, it would be helpful to know the responsible gene and causative variant. We collected 102 samples from 22 white animals and from 80 animals with wildtype coat colour. The samples came from 12 different wild flocks or game conservations located in different regions of Germany, at the border to Luxembourg and in Poland. The genomes of one white hind and her brown calf were sequenced.ResultsBased on a list of colour genes of the International Federation of Pigment Cell Societies (http://www.ifpcs.org/albinism/), a variant in the MC1R gene (NM_174108.2:c.143 T > C) resulting in an amino acid exchange from leucine to proline at position 48 of the MC1R receptor protein (NP_776533.1:p.L48P) was identified as a likely cause of coat colour dilution. A gene test revealed that all animals of the white phenotype were of genotype CC whereas all pigmented animals were of genotype TT or TC. The study showed that 14% of the pigmented (brown or dark pigmented) animals carried the white allele.ConclusionsA genome-wide scan study led to a molecular test to determine the coat colour of fallow deer. Identification of the MC1R gene provides a deeper insight into the mechanism of dilution. The gene marker is now available for the conservation of white fallow deer in wild and farmed animals.

Highlights

  • The coat colour of fallow deer is highly variable and even white animals can regularly be observed in game farming and in the wild

  • Up to now, no scientific articles have been available on the colouring of fallow deer and nothing was known about the genes that are responsible for the white coat colour in this species

  • Whole genome sequencing of a white hind (Fig. 1) and her brown calf was performed to reveal the causative variant of colour dilution in fallow deer

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Summary

Introduction

The coat colour of fallow deer is highly variable and even white animals can regularly be observed in game farming and in the wild. White coat colour or dilution are commonly found within fallow deer in game farming and in the wild. It is important for the management of the white animals to identify the responsible gene variant and develop a gene marker. This is the only way to make informed statements about the distribution of the white gene allele in a population. A list of 256 genes involved in the white colour or dilution is available from the International Federation of Pigment Cell Societies (http://www.ifpcs.org/albinism/). The most important proteins are formed in melanocytes where they are involved in pigmentation on five independent levels: melanocyte development and migration, melanosome biogenesis, melanosome transport, biosynthesis of melanin and control of melanogenesis

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