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A Nucleotide Substitution Responsible for the Tawny Coat Color Mutation Carried by the MSKR Inbred Strain of Mice
Author(s) -
Adumi Wada,
Tetsuo Kunieda,
Mikio Nishimura,
Y. Kakizoe-Ishida,
Naohiro Watanabe,
Kiyoshi Ohkawa,
Masaoki Tsudzuki
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
journal of heredity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 92
eISSN - 1471-8505
pISSN - 0022-1503
DOI - 10.1093/jhered/esi022
Subject(s) - biology , coat , strain (injury) , genetics , substitution (logic) , mutation , inbred strain , nucleotide , gene , anatomy , ecology , computer science , programming language
"Tawny" is an autosomal recessive coat color mutation found in a wild population of Mus musculus molossinus. The inbred strain MSKR carries the mutation. The causative gene Mc1r(taw) of the tawny phenotype is the second recessive allele at the melanocortin 1 receptor locus and is dominant to the first recessive allele, "recessive yellow" (Mc1r(e)). The Mc1r(taw) gene has six nucleotide substitutions, and its forecasted transcript has three amino acid substitutions (i.e., V101A, V216A, W252C). Though the nucleotide substitutions leading to V101A and V216A exist in various mouse strains, the nucleotide substitution leading to W252C exists in only tawny-colored mice. Thus this substitution is considered to be responsible for the expression of the tawny coat color. The frequency of the allele having this nucleotide substitution was 9.21% in the wild M. m. molossinus population inhabiting Sakai City, Osaka Prefecture, Japan, where the ancestral mice of the MSKR strain were captured.

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