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The genetic changes underlying the evolution of new species are still poorly understood. Genetic studies in domestic animals can shed light on this process due to the rapid evolution they have undergone over the last 10,000 years. A new study published today describes how a complex genomic rearrangement causes a fascinating phenotype in chickens.
In the study published in PLoS Genetics researchers at Uppsala University, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, North
Carolina State University and National Chung-Hsing University have investigated the genetic basis of fibromelanosis, a breed
characteristic of the Chinese Silkie chicken (Image 1). This trait involves a massive expansion of pigment cells that not
only makes the skin and comb black but also causes black internal organs. Chickens similar in appearance to the Silkie were
described by Marco Polo when he visited China in the 13th century and Silkie chickens have a long history in Chinese cuisine
and traditional Chinese medicine.
- We have shown that the genetic change causing fibromelanosis is a complex
rearrangement that leads to increased expression of Endothelin 3, a gene which is known for promoting the growth of pigment
cells, explains Ben Dorshorst the post-doctoral researcher responsible for the work.
The research group led by
Leif Andersson has by now characterized a number of traits in domestic animals, and a clear trend is emerging, namely that
genomic rearrangements have contributed significantly to the rapid evolution of domestic animals. Other examples include Greying
with age in horses and mutations affecting the size and shape of the comb in chickens.
- We have good reason
to believe that such rearrangements have also played a significant role in the evolution of other species, including ourselves,
concludes Leif Andersson.
The researchers also studied other chicken breeds where fibromelanosis occurs, including
the Bohuslän-Dals svarthöna breed (Image 2) from Sweden, and they found that all fibromelanotic breeds carried the exact same
very unusual mutation. This finding is consistent with anecdotal evidence suggesting that this Swedish breed of chicken inherited
their black skin and internal connective tissue color from Asian chickens that were first brought to Norway by a sailor on
the East Asian trade routes centuries ago. This is a nice example of how humans have distributed a single novel mutation with
an interesting effect when they developed breeds of domestic animals around the world.
- It is obvious that humans
have had a strong affection for biological diversity in their domestic animals, says Leif Andersson.
For more information
contact: Professor Leif Andersson, Department of Medical biochemistry and microbiology, Uppsala university, phone: +46-18-471
4904, +46-70-514 4904, e-post: Leif.Andersson@imbim.uu.se
Explanatory
note: A genomic rearrangement constitutes an extra copy of a DNA fragment (duplication), a missing DNA fragment (deletion),
an inverted copy of a DNA fragment (inversion) or a DNA fragment that has been moved to a new place (translocation). A complex
rearrangement involves two or more such changes. The actual mutation in fibromelanotic chickens involves the duplication of
two different DNA sequences located in the vicinity of each other on chicken chromosome 20, where one of the copies has also
been translocated and inverted (see attached schematic illustration).
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