Haaren (Shedding)
Shedding
General description
The recessive allele for shedding (sh-allele) is found in breeds that show heavy shedding (genotype sh/sh). Additionally, the shedding variant on the MC5R gene was found as a factor for the hair-length.
Order details
Test number | 8403 |
Sample material | 0.5 ml EDTA blood, 2x cheek swab, 1x special swab (eNAT) |
Test duration | 7-14 working days |
Test specifications
Inheritance | autosomal recessive |
Gene | MC5R |
Mutation | T-C |
Literature | OMIA:002750-9615 |
Detailed description
The dogs coat structure and length are influenced by several known genetic traits. A variant found in the MC5R gene is associated with the shedding of the hair, as well as the coat length.\nThe recessive allele for shedding (sh-allele) is found in breeds that show heavy shedding (genotype sh/sh). Dogs with at least one N-allele for non-shedding loose significantly less hair. \nThe furnishing variant of the RSPO2 gene influences the shedding too. Dogs that possess the homozygous dominant furnishing genotype F/F do not show heavy shedding, irrespective of the genotype on the MC5R gene.\nCoat length is mainly influenced by several recessive variants on the FGF5 gene (coat length locus) and the dominant furnishing variant on the RSPO2 gene. Additionally, the shedding variant on the MC5R gene was found as a factor for the hair-length.\nLonger coat is associated with the recessive l-allele (long-haired), the dominant F-allele (furnished) and the recessive sh-allele (shedding), while short hair correlates with the dominant L-allele (short-haired), the recessive f-allele (unfurnished) and the dominant N-allele (non-shedding).\nMedium hair-length in some genetically short-haired (FGF5 L/L or L/l) and unfurnished breeds from the shepherd or retriever group might be explained by the shedding variant of MC5R. \n