Ψ KRT86 - Tursiops truncatus

Reference Gene:
Job_ID:
Curator:
GlossID Species Gene Loss Mechanism Loss Type Lineage Specific Evidence Accession Nr.
GL_6XXDNF Tursiops truncatus LOF (frameshift, premature stop, ss) Full No Genomic & Synteny maps

Statements

Type Excerpt DOI
Functional "The major components of hair are alpha-keratins and keratin-associated proteins (KAPs), each of which is encoded by separate gene families [4,5]. (...)All hair-keratins are expressed in the hair shaft, and a subgroup of them is also expressed in claws and nails [4]. The critical role of hair-keratins in hair biology is revealed by the fact that a variety of epidermal diseases are caused by mutations in single hair-keratin genes [5]." 10.1186/1471-2164-15-869
Mutation Description "In cluster II, whereas cow, dog, bat, horse, mouse and human present all hair-type keratin genes, two out of seven hair-type genes (K83 and K82) were exclusively lost in cetacean lineage, and one more (K86) exclusively in dolphin lineage (Figure 1)." 10.1186/1471-2164-15-869
Methodology & Validation "In order to characterize the gene repertoire present in the keratin gene clusters in laurasiatherian mammals, we manually annotated keratin genes in the genomes of representative species of all major lineages for which genomic information was available." 10.1186/1471-2164-15-869
Phenotypic "Interestingly, some of the gene losses we observed are shared by both species examined in this study, suggesting that they are the most likely candidates to explain the hairless phenotype in this group of mammals." 10.1186/1471-2164-15-869