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| Scientific literature written on coat colour genetics |
Compounded by Fred Petrij and Karin van Veen
ASSORTMENT OF COAT COLOR GENES IN THE MONGOLIAN GERBIL.
Allan, D. and Robinson, R. 1988. Journal of Heridity 79(5): 386-7
MALIGNANT MELANOMA IN A BLACK GERBIL (MERIONES
UNGUICULATUS).
Cramlet, S.H., Toft II, J.D. & Olsen, N.W. 1974. Laboratory Animal Science, 24,
545-547.
* Second report on a coat colour mutation in the Mongolian gerbil. The first
black Mongolian gerbil was born in January 1971 in the U.S.A.
INFLUENCE OF COAT COLOR GENES ON SEIZURE BEHAVIOR IN
MONGOLIAN GERBILS.
Gray-Allan, P., Wong, R.
* Seizure tendencies of three separate lines of Mongolian gerbils Meriones
unguiculatus carrying three different coat color alleles were investigated. These
alleles were agouti (A/-), black or nonagouti (a/a), or sandy (pink-eyed dilution
p/p). Each animal was stroked on the back and then placed in a novel cage for
5 min while its seizure activity was measured in terms of latency, duration, and
severity (grade). The results indicate that gerbils which are homozygous
recessive at the pink-eyed dillution locus (sandy) exhibit less severe and shorter
seizures than others. However, gerbils which are homozygous recessive at the
agouti gene locus (black) show a shorter latency to manifest seizures than the
other animals. These results indicate that the genetic mechanism determining
coat color in Mongolian gerbils may also influence the susceptibility of these
animals to seizure arising from novel situations.
NON-AGOUTI AND PINK-EYED DILUTION IN THE MONGOLIAN
GERBIL
Henley, M. & Robinson, R. 1981. The Journal of Heredity, 72, 60-61.
*Analysis of the pink-eyed dilution mutation in the Mongolian gerbil. First
Argente golden animal occurred in 1977 in London. Combination experiments
with non-agouti (aa) were performed, leading to the first lilacs (they were not
described as such in the article).
A CASE OF DOMINANCE MODIFICATION IN THE MONGOLIAN
GERBIL.
Leiper, B.D. & Robinson, R. 1984. The Journal of Heredity, 75, 323.
* Combining the three (not spot) colour mutations in the Mongolian gerbil
known at that time, leading to new colors as the Argente creme, the
pseudo-albino and the silver (now named 'dove' by fanciers).
GRAY MUTANT IN THE MONGOLIAN GERBIL.
Leiper, B.D. & Robinson, R. 1985. The Journal of Heredity, 76, 473.
* colour mutant discovered in England in 1976. Resembles the chinchilla
mutants of the albino series of alleles in mice and other mammals. When gray
animals were mated to animals homozygous for acromelanic albino, only agouti
animals were born. The gray mutant is not an allele of the albino locus and it's
gene symbol designation is 'g'. Combinations with already known coat colour
genes were made, leading to:
- dark sepia (fanciers call this colour 'slate' [previously 'blue'])
- pale cream or ivory (fanciers call this colour 'white bellied cream')
- off-white (fanciers call this colour 'Ruby Eyed White (REW)'
LINKAGE OF ALBINO AND PINK-EYED DILUTION GENES IN THE
MONGOLIAN GERBIL AND OTHER RODENTS.
Leiper, B.D. & Robinson, R. 1986. The Journal of Heredity, 77, 207.
* In this paper it was shown that the c-locus and the p-locus are linked, which
means that they are located on the same chromosome. The colour now known
to fanciers as lilac was called 'dove', and the colour now known to fanciers as
dove was called 'silver'.
THE GENETICS OF COAT COLORS IN THE MONGOLIAN GERBIL
(MERIONES UNGUICULATUS).
Matsuzaki, T., Yasuda, Y. & Nonaka, S. 1989. Experimental Animals, 38, 337-341.
* In this paper three coat colour controlling loci are presented: a-locus, b-locus
and c-locus. A well established colony of agouti animals was kept; 1855 animals
were bred between 1949 and 1988. No coat colour variants were found in this
colony. They introduced 4 white animals from a pet shop in Yokohama. In later
generations it was proven that the white animals were carrying the black allele
(a). From different mating experiments they showed that both white and black
are autosomal recessive traits. The authors claim this is the first report of black
coat colour in the Mongolian gerbil, which is not true because Cramlet et al.
already described the blacks in 1974 and they were further analyzed by Waring
et al. in 1980. Furthermore the authors claim that the white animals are true
albino's and not acromelanistic as the animals described by Robinson in 1973.
Because of this difference the authors designated the allele symbol as 'c' (not
ch). Because of the high density of melanin in the black animals the authors
hypothesize there will be a b-locus controlling this. Unfortunately, no brown
coat colour controlled by an allele of the brown locus has been found.
ACROMELANIC ALBINISM IN MAMMALS.
Robinson, R. 1973. Genetics, 44, 454-458.
* First report on a coat colour mutant in the Mongolian gerbil. The himalayan
mutation (Dark Tailed White) is described and compared to similar mutations in
other species of mammals. This mutation is found in Britain since 1970.
THE 'HAIRLESS' GERBIL: A NEW MUTANT.
Swanson, H.H. 1980. Laboratory Animals, 14, 143-147.
* Three hairless animals were born to a couple of Mongolian gerbils. Two did
not survive past 5 weeks. The third animal (a female) survived and produced
three litters, the first two died within two days after birth, the third was
fostered. The pups of the fostered nest were examined after one week, all
seemed to be growing hair. Although the hairless animal looks bald, the smooth
warm skin is covered by fine stubble. The vibrissae also appear broken off
short.
GENETIC ANALYSIS OF THE BLACK PIGMENT MUTATION IN THE
MONGOLIAN GERBIL.
Waring, A.D. & Poole, T.W. 1980. The Journal of Heredity, 71, 428-429.
*The black pigment mutation of the Mongolian gerbil is inherited in an
autosomal recessive way and is not linked to the pigment mutation spotted (Sp).
Black gerbils have deep glossy black coats, yellow perineal hairs, and small
white patches under the chin and across the front feet. The black hairs are
pigmented entirely with eumelanin including numerous cortical granules. The
similarities between the black gerbil mutant and various black pigment
mutations in mice are discussed.
WHITE SPOTTING IN THE MONGOLIAN GERBIL.
Waring, A.D., Poole, T.W. & Perper, T. 1978. The Journal of Heredity, 69,
347-349.
*White spotting accompanied by some dilution of coat colour. White spots on
the crown of the head, nape of the neck, and tip of the nose. Dominant
inheritance, lethal when homozygous. The first spotted Mongolian gerbil was
born in January 1976 in New Jersey, U.S.A.
A SECOND ACROMELANISTIC ALLELOMORPH AT THE ALBINO LOCUS
OF THE MONGOLIAN GERBIL (MERIONES UNGUICULATUS).
Petrij F, van Veen K, Mettler M, Bruckmann V. 2001. J Hered, Jan-Feb;92(1):74-8
*A new autosomal recessive coat color mutant in the Mongolian gerbil (Meriones
unguiculatus) is described: chinchilla medium (symbol c(chm)). The mutant has
typical acromelanistic features similar to those of several acromelanistic c
locus mutants of other species of mammals. Previously a more severe form of
acromelanism (c(h)c(h)) has been described in the Mongolian gerbil. The new
allele shows to be allelic with this form. On a nonagouti background compound
heterozygotes (aac(chm)c(h)) show an intermediate phenotype that is very similar
to that of the Siamese mouse (Mus musculus) and rat (Rattus norvegicus).
Homozygotes (aac(chm)c(chm)) display a very dark acromelanistic phenotype
reminiscent of that of the sable rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus). The gray
phenotype (gg) in the Mongolian gerbil resembles the albino locus phenotype
chinchilla (c(ch)c(ch)) in mice. We show that the new mutant is not allelic with
gray. Fertility and viability of the new mutant are within normal range.
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