Abstract

BackgroundSeven donkey breeds are recognized by the French studbook and are characterized by a black, bay or grey coat colour including light cream-to-white points (LP). Occasionally, Normand bay donkeys give birth to dark foals that lack LP and display the no light points (NLP) pattern. This pattern is more frequent and officially recognized in American miniature donkeys. The LP (or pangare) phenotype resembles that of the light bellied agouti pattern in mouse, while the NLP pattern resembles that of the mammalian recessive black phenotype; both phenotypes are associated with the agouti signaling protein gene (ASIP).FindingsWe used a panel of 127 donkeys to identify a recessive missense c.349 T > C variant in ASIP that was shown to be in complete association with the NLP phenotype. This variant results in a cysteine to arginine substitution at position 117 in the ASIP protein. This cysteine is highly-conserved among vertebrate ASIP proteins and was previously shown by mutagenesis experiments to lie within a functional site. Altogether, our results strongly support that the identified mutation is causative of the NLP phenotype.ConclusionsThus, we propose to name the c.[349 T > C] allele in donkeys, the anlp allele, which enlarges the panel of coat colour alleles in donkeys and ASIP recessive loss-of-function alleles in animals.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12711-015-0112-x) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Seven donkey breeds are recognized by the French studbook and are characterized by a black, bay or grey coat colour including light cream-to-white points (LP)

  • Accession numbers Genomic coding sequences of agouti signaling protein gene (ASIP) from bay LP and no light points (NLP) Normand donkeys were submitted to GeneBank

  • Because whole-genome mapping tools are still lacking for donkey, we decided to screen directly for variants that affect ASIP function in two NLP and two LP control Normand donkeys that originated from a comprehensive panel of 127 donkeys from six breeds

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Summary

Introduction

Seven donkey breeds are recognized by the French studbook and are characterized by a black, bay or grey coat colour including light cream-to-white points (LP). Background Mutations in the gene ASIP (agouti signaling protein) result in various coat patterns in domestic mammals (http://omia.angis.org.au) including mouse (www.informatics.jax.org), dog [1], cat [2], rabbit [3], horse [4], sheep [5-8], rat [9] and alpaca [10]. For the seven French donkey breeds (Pyrenean, Berry Black, Poitou, Cotentin, Provence, Bourbonnais and Normand), the NLP pattern is not officially recognized.

Results
Conclusion
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