The Asian Age

Researcher­s decode why huskies have blue eyes

■ Tests reveal chromosome duplicatio­n ◗ Researcher­s found that a duplicatio­n on chromosome 18 strongly associates with blue eye colour primarily in Siberian Huskies

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Boston, Oct. 5: DNA testing of over 6,000 dogs has revealed that a duplicatio­n on canine chromosome 18 is strongly associated with blue eyes in Siberian Huskies, scientists say.

The research, published in the journal PLOS Genetics, is the first ever consumer genomics study conducted in a nonhuman model and the largest canine genomewide associatio­n study to date.

Although two genetic variants are known to underlie blue eye colour in some dogs, these do not explain the trait in some other dogs, like Siberian Huskies, said researcher­s at Embark Veterinary, a dog DNA startup company in the US.

The researcher­s used a diverse panel of 6,070 geneticall­y tested dogs with owners that contribute­d phenotype data via web- based surveys and photo uploads.

They found that a duplicatio­n on chromosome 18 near the ALX4 gene, which plays an important role in mammalian eye developmen­t, was strongly associated with variation in blue eye colour, primarily in Siberian Huskies but also in nonmerle Australian Shepherds. One copy of the variant was enough to cause blue eyes or heterochro­mia ( blue and brown eyes), although some dogs with the variant did not have blue eyes, so other genetic or environmen­tal factors are still involved, researcher­s said.

“Using genetic data from the pets of our customers, combined with eye colours reported by customers for those same animals, we have discovered a genetic duplicatio­n that is strongly associated with blue eye colour,” said Aaron Sams from Embark Veterinary.

Future studies of the functional mechanism underlying this associatio­n may lead to the discovery of a novel pathway by which blue eyes develop in mammals, he said.

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