Quick Summary
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Phenotype: Non-agouti cats do not have alternating pigments in their hair and appear solid aka self-colored.
Mode of Inheritance: Autosomal recessive
Alleles: A = agouti, a = non-agouti
Breeds appropriate for testing: Most breeds
Explanation of Results:
- Cats with A/A genotype will have agouti banded hair. They will transmit this agouti variant to all of their offspring, and all of their offspring will have banded hair.
- Cats with A/a genotype will have agouti banded hair. They will transmit this agouti variant to 50% of their offspring, and the offspring of an A/a genotype cat can be agouti or non-agouti depending on the genotype of the mate.
- Cats with a/a genotype will have self-colored (solid) hair. If bred to another non-agouti cat (a/a genotype), all offspring will also have non-banded, solid-colored hair.
Note: Overall appearance of the cat's coat also depends on expression of and complex interactions with other genes.
Cat Coat Color Panel
$57 per animal
Cat Coat Color + White Gloves (Birmans) Panel
$57 per animal
Bengal Coat Color Panel
$57 per animal
Bengal Coat Color + White Gloves (Birmans) Panel
$57 per animal
Sample Collection:
Cat DNA tests are carried out using cells collected from your cat's cheeks and gums using household cotton swabs.
The cat DNA submission form with instructions, pricing, and a place to tape the cotton swabs can be printed from your home computer after signing up for a MyVGL account and placing an order. Test kits are not mailed.
Step-By-Step Instructions:
1.
Purchase regular household cotton swabs for cat DNA collection (the cotton swabs can be purchased at a pharmacy or drug store)
2.
Use both ends of the two cotton swabs for a total of four swabs.
3.
Collect the DNA sample by swabbing the cheek and gums of the cat.
4.
After swabbing the cheek and gums, tape the cotton swabs to the bar-coded submission form printed from your MyVGL account.
The agouti signaling protein (ASIP) gene, or Agouti, interacts with the melanocortin 1 receptor (MC1R) to regulate the switch from eumelanin (present as black, brown, cinnamon, or their respective dilutions) to phaeomelanin (present as red or yellow or their respective dilutions) pigment deposition in the hair shaft at certain points in the growth cycle of the hair. This results in individual banded hairs with the visual effect of an intermediate color between the two pigments. The length of the respective bands modulates the visual effect as well.
In domestic cats, a 2 bp deletion (c.123delCA) in the agouti signaling protein disrupts protein function. This mutation has an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance, thus when two copies are present, pigment switching is prevented from occurring. This results in a hair of uniform color (often called solid or “self-colored”). A separate gene causes patterns of dark stripes or blotches (tabby patterns) to be interspersed with lighter hairs. Hairs in the darker stripes do not undergo the shift between black and red-yellow pigment production during their growth, and thus remain uniformly dark. The areas outside of the dark tabby stripes are composed of agouti-banded hairs. In a non-agouti cat (a/a), the tabby pattern is still present, but it is just not visible since all the hairs in the pattern and outside the pattern are a uniform color.
There are instances where the tabby pattern can be seen despite a homozygous recessive (a/a) genotype at the agouti locus. A sex-linked red/orange cat will exhibit the tabby pattern regardless of whether it is agouti (A/A or A/a) or non-agouti (a/a). Under certain lighting conditions, faint tabby patterns are occasionally observed on the body in a/a cats, especially in kittens with the dilution variant. Lastly, melanistic (a/a) Bengal cats will often exhibit a faint tabby pattern as well.