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* Faculty of Applied Biological Sciences, Gifu University, Gifu 501-1193, Japan,
Faculty of Agriculture, Shinshu University, Nagano 399-4598, Japan,
Graduate School of Bioagricultural Sciences, Nagoya University, Nagoya 464-8601, Japan and
UMR INRA/INA-PG Génétique et Diversité Animales, 78352 Jouy-en-Josas, France
1 Corresponding author: Faculty of Applied Biological Sciences, Gifu University, Gifu 501-1193, Japan.
E-mail: miho-i{at}gifu-u.ac.jp
| ABSTRACT |
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-MSH in the Y*RB allele. This is the first evidence that the ASIP gene, known to be involved in coat color variation in mammals, is functional and has a similar effect on plumage color in birds.
There are interesting similarities between the phenotypic effects and dominance relationships of mutations at the agouti locus in the house mouse (Mus musculus). In nonagouti mice, a black coat color phenotype (a/a) is caused by an autosomal recessive mutation at the agouti (ASIP) locus (SILVERS 1979). Embryonic lethality of a dominant homozygous yellow mutation (Ay/Ay) is associated with a deletion upstream of agouti that removes the coding exons of the Raly (hnRNP protein that is associated with the lethal yellow) gene (MICHAUD et al. 1993). The plumage color of the yellow (Y/+) Japanese quail is similar to the coat color of the yellow (Ay/+) mouse. The Y locus in the Japanese quail was mapped on the QL10 linkage group homologous to GGA20 in chicken (Gallus gallus) (MIWA et al. 2005), where an ASIP-like sequence was found (KLOVINS and SCHIÖTH 2005). Recently we studied the growth of yellow quails and found that they shared similar phenotypic characteristics (increased body fat, decreased body temperature) with lethal yellow mice (MINVIELLE et al. 2007). Because of these points, the ASIP gene was considered to be a candidate gene for the yellow mutation in the Japanese quail.
Mutations in the ASIP gene have been shown to cause a wide variety of coat colors in mammals. For instance, standard silver color in red foxes (Vulpes vulpes), nonagouti black in Norway rats (Rattus norvegicus), recessive black in horses (Equus caballus), and black coloration in cats (Felis catus) are all associated with deletions in exon 2 of ASIP that cause a loss of the agouti function (VÅGE et al. 1997; KURAMOTO et al. 2001; RIEDER et al. 2001; EIZIRIK et al. 2003). In dogs (Canis familiaris), separate substitutions in exon 3 are associated with nonagouti black (a) and fawn or sable (ay) colors (KERNS et al. 2004; BERRYERE et al. 2005). In the chicken, however, no plumage color variation was found to be associated with ASIP up to now, which has led to the hypothesis that birds had no functional agouti gene (BOSWELL and TAKEUCHI 2005).
In this study, we investigated whether rb was a fourth allele at the Y locus by segregation analysis and whether variation in the coding sequence of ASIP was associated with the Y, Yf2, and rb mutations. The Glu92Lys substitution (c.272G > A SNP) in MC1R, the specific missense mutation for the extended brown plumage, was also genotyped to confirm that this mutation was not involved in the recessive black phenotype.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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A reverse-transcription (RT) reaction was performed, using the first-standard cDNA synthesis kit (Amersham Biosciences, Piscataway, NJ) and a poly(T) primer with an anchor region (5'-AACTGGAAGAATTCGCGGCCGCAGGAAT18-3'). The chicken expressed sequence tags (ESTs) homologous to the ASIP and Raly genes have already been sequenced (BBSRC ChickEST database: http://www.chick.manchester.ac.uk/) and were mapped on GGA20 by BLAST search (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/genome/guide/chicken/). To sequence the whole coding region, PCR primers were designed against the 5'- and 3'-untranslated regions (UTR) of the ASIP-like gene in chicken (Table 2). Sequence reactions for RT–PCR products were performed with ASIP_F and ASIP_R, using an ABI Prism 3100 DNA sequencer (PE Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA).
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The Glu92Lys substitution (c.272G > A SNP) in MC1R, a specific missense mutation for E, was also genotyped in those samples, using allele-specific primers (Table 2). DNA samples were amplified by allele-specific primers named MC1R_F3-MC1R_92Glu and MC1R_F3-MC1R_92Lys. PCR products were analyzed by 1.5% agarose gel electrophoresis.
Quantitative RT–PCR:
Gene expression levels in the skin were compared among four phenotypes (wild type, yellow, fawn-2, and recessive black). cDNA of three chicks from each of the four phenotypes was amplified using the SYBR ExScript RT–PCR kit, including SYBR Premix Ex Taq with 0.2 µM each of ASIP_F2 and ASIP_R primers. The GAPDH gene was used as a control with GAPDH_F (5'-GGAGAAACCAGCCAAGTATGATG-3') and GAPDH_R (5'-AAAGGTGGAGGAATGGCTGTCA-3') primers. Three replications were carried out.
| RESULTS |
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Sequencing of ASIP cDNA:
cDNA of ASIP was successfully amplified from mRNA derived from skin samples of the Japanese quail using primers designed from the chicken ASIP ortholog. The cDNA was sequenced starting 13 bp upstream of the start codon (–13) and finishing 33 bp downstream of the stop codon (+426) for a total of 439 bp. Sequence identity between the Japanese quail and chicken was 95% for nucleotides of the coding region and 96% for the deduced 130 amino acids. From the comparison of sequences from one bird each of wild-type, yellow, fawn-2, and recessive black phenotype, no SNP was detected in yellow quail, two synonymous SNPs (c.31T > C and c.100C > T) were detected in fawn-2 quail, and an 8-bp deletion was detected in recessive black quail in the coding region (Figure 1). No amino acid substitutions corresponding to the yellow and fawn-2 phenotypes were found. The frameshift mutation (c.373_380del) specific to the recessive black mutation resulted in changes in amino acids from 125 to the end, located at the C-terminal cysteine residues domain, which is conserved in mammalian ASIP.
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13 times higher relative expression, whereas yellow and wild-type quail had similar relative expression.
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For the c.272G > A SNP in MC1R, all 7 extended brown quail showed the A/A SNP genotype, whereas the 7 wild-type and 34 recessive black quail had the G/G SNP genotype. Thus the recessive black mutation was associated with the deletion in ASIP, and it was not affected by MC1R.
| DISCUSSION |
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A deletion of 8 bases was found in ASIP in the recessive black allele (Y*RB). Genotyping from a large population confirmed that the deletion is associated with the recessive black allele. The frameshift caused by this mutation changed the last six amino acids and the stop codon. Among the 10 cysteine residues conserved in a wide range of animals, the last one was missing in the recessive black allele because of this mutation. Since the cysteine residues are important to build the disulphide bond, the deletion might cause dysfunction of ASIP as an antagonist of
-MSH in the Y*RB allele. Several studies of black coat color mutations in mammals have found an association of the coat color with mutations in the coding regions of ASIP. Among them, the black coat color of German shepherd dogs was associated with a SNP to cause an arginine to cysteine substitution at the C-terminal cysteine-rich residues (KERNS et al. 2004). In mice, several amino acid substitutions at cysteine-rich residues are known to be related to the black phenotype (MILTENBERGER et al. 2002), and an insertion in the first intron was reported in nonagouti mice (BULTMAN et al. 1994), but no deletion in the coding sequence has been reported yet.
The result of RT–PCR in this study showed that gene expression of recessive black quail was remarkably lower than that of wild-type quail, which was 13.3 times higher. Although this result might be an indication that there is another mutation at the promoter region of the Y*RB allele, it is rather unlikely that a second loss-of-function mutation would have accumulated in the same gene. It is much more likely that the suppression of the termination codon in the 3'-UTR of rb-ASIP due to the frameshift mutation was associated with mRNA decay and, consequently, low expression of rb-ASIP. Indeed, the existence of a mechanism to degrade mRNA lacking a termination codon was described by VAN HOOF et al. (2002), and nonstop mRNA decay was further confirmed as one way to safeguard the cell from abnormal mRNA function (ISKEN and MAQUAT 2007; ITO-HARASHIMA et al. 2007). Moreover, the absence of mutation in the ASIP sequence of yellow quail is consistent with the recent finding in an accompanying article by NADEAU et al. (2008, this issue) that the yellow mutation in quail was associated with a large deletion upstream of ASIP, placing its expression under the control of the Raly promoter, as is the case for the yellow coat color in Ay/+ mice (MICHAUD et al. 1993). Finally, the synonymous SNPs identified in all fawn-2 quail might indicate that they are in linkage disequilibrium with a still unknown regulatory mutation causing higher ASIP mRNA expression and therefore are dominant over the yellow mutation. In any case, this study has shown that the recessive black plumage color in quail was closely associated with the ASIP gene, and the results on the three alleles yellow, fawn-2, and recessive black are consistent with the existence of regulatory or structural mutations for this gene. Together with the study by NADEAU et al. (2008), we have given here the first evidence that ASIP is functional in birds and that its effects on plumage color parallel that of ASIP on mouse coat color.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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N. J. Nadeau, F. Minvielle, S. Ito, M. Inoue-Murayama, D. Gourichon, S. A. Follett, T. Burke, and N. I. Mundy Characterization of Japanese Quail yellow as a Genomic Deletion Upstream of the Avian Homolog of the Mammalian ASIP (agouti) Gene Genetics, February 1, 2008; 178(2): 777 - 786. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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