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COLOUR GENES IN THE POODLE
 

Pigmentation in most mammals is primarily due to the presence of melanin, which is synthesized in specialized cells called melanocytes. Melanocytes come from a population of cells, called the neural crest, that is located on the dorsal mid-line of the early embryo. (Neural crest cells also contribute to a wide variety of other cell populations in the animal.)

There are two related types of melanin, dark melanin (black or brown) and light melanin (tan or reddish). In the hair, melanin is found in minute pigment granules. The genetics of coat color is largely concerned with the genes that affect the number, shape, arrangement or position of these granules, or the type of melanin they contain.

In poodles, the most common color is black. However, there is no black gene, but rather a number of genes that work together to produce black.

Specification and migration of the neural crest

The first event that could be altered is the correct specification of cells in the neural crest. If the subpopulation that would normally give rise to melanocytes never forms, the result would be an animal without pigmentation in the skin or hair. However, mutations affecting this process generally affect other neural crest derivatives and are lethal. To my knowledge, there are no known mutants of this type in the poodle.

There are also genes that affect the pathways of migration of the cells destined to form pigment. This can result unpigmented (white) areas. Two such genes have been described in dogs, S (spotting) and M (Merle). Mutant alleles of the Merle gene have not been reported in the poodle. The S alleles include:

  • S ... self (complete pigmentation; dominant)
  • si ... Irish spotting
  • sp ... piebald spotting
  • sw ... extreme white piebald

Dogs homozygous for Irish spotting have irregular white patches. The number and size of these patches is extremely variable. This is probably the allele that produces mismarks.

The piebald allele produces a fairly well defined pattern of dark and white areas. The traditional parti-colored black and white poodle, once common, and accepted for show, is likely spsp. Now, inexplicably, only solid colored poodles are accepted for conformation showing. [see also The Truffle Dog]

The extreme white piebald allele is thought to be responsible for all-white animals in some breeds, but not in the poodle.

 

Synthesis of melanin (the C gene)

One thing almost universally agreed upon by geneticists is that true albinos, lacking all melanin-based pigments, result from a deficiency in the enzyme tyrosinase. Albinos are homozygous for the recessive mutant allele cCC or Cc dogs have full color, as determined by the other genes carried. Albinos (cc) have no pigment in the nose, eyes, hair or skin - and are very rare.

In many mammals, there is a third allele, chinchilla (cch). In mice, this allele produces defective tyrosinase which cannot synthesize the normal amounts of melanin. For some reason, the melanin that is made is primarily the dark eumelanin. The degree to which the coat is lightened depends on the species. The eyes and nose generally remain dark.

In dogs, most authorities classify a chinchilla-like mutation as an allele in the C series, but I have seen no studies establishing that it directly affects the activity of tyrosinase. Chinchilla is said to have no noticeable effect on eumelanin, but reduces the color to cream in dogs that would otherwise be tan, apricot or yellow (golden). If this is correct, then a black or brown poodle should be unaffected, but a "chinchilla-apricot" (cchcchee) would be cream. However, I can't help wondering whether the chinchilla allele may account for so-called "bad" blacks.

Genes affecting the relative proportion of the two melanins (A and E)

A dog carrying both an A (agouti) and an E (extension) allele will have the dark melanin (as both are dominant, only one copy of each is necessary), whereas a dog that is either aa or ee will have the lighter melanin. Generally, when all breeds are considered, aa more often produces yellowish-tan and ee the more reddish tones. Apricot poodles likely fall into the second group. Though Willis says that the at allele (black and tan bicolor) is found in the poodle, it is certainly rare, and would be a fault.

Genes affecting the structure of the pigment granule (B and D)

These genes do not affect the synthesis of melanin, but rather the structure and organization of the pigment granules.

The B gene (brown) determines whether the dark melanin-containing granules appear black (BB or Bb) or brown (bb). A true brown must have no black pigment anywhere including the eyes and nose.

The D (dilute) gene affects the apparent intensity of the pigmentation, but not through an actual reduction in the amount of melanin present. There are two alleles described in the literature, D, which is dominant and gives full color, and d, which leads to a clumping of the pigment granules in a homozygous (dd) animal. This leads to reduced light absorption.

In an otherwise black animal, the d allele is supposed to produce a "Maltese" blue (slate grey) animal, and possibly cafe-au-lait when acting on a brown. Confusion between the effects of this gene and that of the greying and silvering genes (see below) is common. The Maltese blues are said to be born blue. However, these seem to be much less common than the silver-blues, at least among the Standard poodles.

Unknown action: rufus (R), silver (V) and grey (G)

Red poodles are rare, generally appear in apricot lines, and appear to be the result of a separate gene. Willis, citing Robinson, talks about "rufus"genes, that are poorly characterized, but may act to darken an apricot or brown coat. As the poodle pedigrees for reds suggest only one such gene, I propose that it be called F (rufus; R is already used for roan). The recessive allele, f, produces red in an apricot (i.e. eeff), and may also affect brown, but is supposed to have no effect on black.

Most authorities describe a dominant allele (G) for graying; non-grey would be gg. Some also consider it to be the gene for silver, in which case it would have to be a partial dominant. Willis (1989), however, says that silvers are dilute greys (ddG); he does not indicate whether ddGG and ddGg would be the same. Searle (1968) says simply that "this dominant gene apparently leads to a progressive greying in coat-color throughout life and seems to be present in poodles."

My own study of standard poodle pedigrees is consistent with the interpretation that grey and silver are separate genes. To avoid confusion, lets call the silver allele V. It is given a capital letter because it is a partial dominant. In other words, if a poodle is alleles, vv would be black, Vv would be a dark blue-grey (but is commonly called blue, leading to confusion with blues caused by the dilution factor, d) and VV would be silver. Both blues and silvers are born black and "clear" during the first year, or sometimes even later. Consequently, many are registered as black and this is never changed in the official records. In addition, some are registered as grey. (However, knowledgeable breeders say they can recognize a silver shortly after birth.)

This gene also affects brown and apricot, as follows:

BBEEvv

black

...Vv

blue

...VV

silver

bbEEvv

brown

...Vv

silver-beige

...VV

champagne

BBeevv

apricot

...Vv

cream

...VV

white

The greying gene, in contrast, leads to a gradual accumulation of silver-grey hairs in the coat, generally beginning around 4-5 years of age, much as in humans. The dam of one of my own poodles (a black Mini) is two years younger than the sire, but looks older as she is turning grey and he is holding his color.

If you have managed to stick with me this far, you will likely have noticed that two different genotypes have been mentioned as possibilities for cream: eeVv and cchcchee. Evidence for the first comes from crosses between silvers and apricots, which produce blues and creams. Lets take a look at this more closely:

Silver, EeVV x apricot, eevv => 1/2 blue, EeVv, and 1/2 cream, eeVv. (If the silver is not carrying the e allele, only blues will be obtained.)

However, creams are also obtained in crosses between two blacks, often at close to the expected 1/4 for a recessive trait, and with no other colors than black and cream appearing. These cannot be silvered apricots, as at least one of the parents would have to be blue, and both blue and apricot progeny would be expected in addition to black and cream.

In summary

A black poodle should be A-B-C-D-E-F-ggS-vv. Except for V, all these genes show normal dominance as far as we know. Writing the genotype as A-, for example, is to be interpreted as meaning that the second allele make no difference to the phenotype. The effects of the genes, singly, are as follows:

bb

brown

cch cch

"bad" blacks? (supposedly only affects light melanins)

dd

"Maltese blue" dilution (affects all colors)

ee

apricot

ff

intensifies red tones in apricot and brown

GG or Gg

progressive greying later in life (dominant)

si si

Irish spotting (mismark)

sp sp

piebald spotting (Parti-color; black & white)

VV or vv

silver or blue (partial dominant)

 

 

 

The Origin of Red Poodles

There are two genetic mechansims by which dogs can be reddish in coat color. The first one is inherited as a recessive, "e/e" at the E locus which is the MC1R gene. This is the yellow of Labrador Retrievers and also the red of Irish Setters, so the shade can vary tremendously. "e/e" dogs are "clear red" without a single black hair or even whisker.

http://homepage.usask.ca/~schmutz/Molly.jpg

Some Poodles are e/e at MC1R and in the case of these dogs, one can not predict their K genotype. Such e/e dogs could be KB/KB or KB/ky and still not be black since the e/e genoytpe prevents black pigmentation of hairs in dogs (but not nose leather or pads). Poodles that are e/e are often cream or apricot, such as Molly. Such paler shades of red are caused by another, as yet unidentified gene.

 

The other form of red is "fawn red", called "sable" in a few breeds of dogs, such as Shetland Sheep Dogs. This fawn red is caused the the dominant allele "ay" at the agouti or A locus. This form of red also occurs in the Poodle. Some dogs have black whiskers or some black hairs intermingled in their coat, but not all with this genotype have black hairs. Shay is an example of a red Poodle that is caused by "ay" that does not have any black hairs but did have hints of black tips on her hairs as a pup. This type of red seems to be more common in small Poodles and necessitates a ky/ky genotype as well as an ay allele.

http://homepage.usask.ca/~schmutz/Shay.jpg

 

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